A MAN who carried out vicious separate attacks on his elderly aunt and mother because they would not give him money for alcohol has been jailed.

Brian Sawers smothered his 79-year-old aunt with a cushion and battered his 81-year-old mum, leaving her with two black eyes and a dislodged tooth.

Sawers, 40, of Peebles Street, Kirkcaldy, carried out the violent assaults in Crossgates, where he was living with his aunt, and his mum’s home in Hill of Beath.

He appeared for sentencing at Dunfermline Sheriff Court having previously admitted two charges.

On January 6 at an address in Crossgates, he assaulted his aunt, then aged 79, by demanding money from her, pushing her on the body and holding a pillow over her face, thereby restricting her breathing to her injury.

On August 14, at an address in Hill of Beath, he assaulted his mother, then aged 81, demanded money from her, forcibly seized and squeezed her face, punched her repeatedly on the head and body, stamped on her feet, shouted and screamed at her, threatened her with violence, pushed her on the body, causing her to fall to the ground, and thereafter punched her on the body, all to her injury.

The first attack took place on his aunt, who brought him up as a mother from a very young age, said depute fiscal Sarah Lumsden.

She had been at home watching TV on a Saturday night at 7.30pm when a “heavily-intoxicated” Sawers appeared in the house.

He went to his bedroom but then came back into living room shortly afterwards.

“He demanded that she gave him money. He pushed her on the chest and she pushed him back. He then grabbed a cushion from the sofa where she was sitting,” said the depute.

“He placed the cushion over her face, effectively smothering her. She began to struggle and started to feel light-headed.

“She was able to escape and was extremely frightened,” added the depute. The victim fled from her home dressed in her pyjamas and went to her daughter’s house.

When detained for this offence, Sawers gave a ‘no comment’ interview to police.

The second incident occurred when his mother was at home watching TV between 6 and 7pm and a drunk Sawers turned up demanding money for more alcohol.

“He sat down next to her and then grabbed either side of her face and squeezed her cheeks together with such force that it caused a tooth to dislodge in her upper jaw," Ms Lumsden told the court.

“She was then punched to the head about six or seven times. She shouted for him to stop.

“He then told her he wanted his tea and stamped on her foot. She pleaded with him to stop.”

He then hit her again, causing her to fall on the kitchen floor and began punching her repeatedly before leaving the house.

A neighbour heard screaming from the house and then saw Sawers “staggering past, carrying a tin of beer”.

The victim sustained several large areas of bruising, including two black eyes and a dislodged tooth.

Defence solicitor Elaine Buist conceded her client had not shown much insight for the impact on the victims and said this was because of “learning difficulties”.

Sheriff Charles MacNair told Sawers: “Both of these incidents were because you wanted money to buy alcohol. Even now, you haven’t stopped drinking. You only cut down because you didn’t have enough money to buy it.”

He jailed Sawers for 18 months and also imposed a nine-month supervised release order.