
Fife baby shower ends in violence as families feud
A baby shower attended by feuding families in Fife ended in violence.
There was hostility between the relatives of the couple having the baby as light-hearted games such as 'Baby Bingo' were ruined by offensive comments fired back and forward across the hall, Dunfermline Sheriff Court heard.
The bad feeling between the families escalated to violence outside the hall in Lochore.
The mum and sister of the mother-to-be landed ended up in the dock on assault charges.
Sarah Wilson, 45, of Kirkcaldy, admitted punching the other mum after grabbing her hair.
Chardonnay Wilson, 20, also from Kirkcaldy, was found guilty of assaulting another woman.
Chardonnay Wilson told the court the baby shower for her sister Chantelle, had started at 1pm.
She said the two families were sitting at different tables and 'at first it was fine'.
However, bad feeling began to escalate during a game called 'Would Mummy Rather'.
She explained there was a question, 'would mummy rather put a bottle on for the baby or open a bottle of wine'.
She said someone from the father-to-be's family shouted out the new mum would open a bottle of wine.
'Chantelle got upset and everything started to escalate from there,' she said.
She described how her mum Sarah and the other mother were 'arguing back and forward'.
'My mum told her they could speak any other day but not to spoil the occasion,' she said.
The court was told there was more arguing during a game of 'Baby Bingo' and allegations about sexual comments being heard.
There were then claims about an abusive comment, 'F***ing fools', aimed at the Wilsons, being written on a paper plate.
Wilson said she had also written a good wishes message in the baby book and someone had ripped it out.
Gino Gambale, solicitor for Chardonnay Wilson, asked for his client to be given an absolute discharge, as a conviction would end her three-year career as a carer.
Sheriff Susan Duff said it would 'not be proportionate' to impose a sentence which would end a young person's career and agreed to the defence request, meaning the offence will not go on Wilson's record.
Sarah Wilson will be sentenced on June 4 after the sheriff called for reports.

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The Courier
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Friday court round-up — Sudocrem chaos and porn obsession
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Defence lawyer Aime Allan said Justice, of Mackie Place, Dunfermline, was struggling with his mental health at the time but is now on treatment and feeling better and has paid to fix the damage. Ms Allan said Justice and his mother are still talking but he is not allowed to enter the property and is staying with another family member. Sheriff Susan Duff deferred sentence for six months for Justice to demonstrate good behaviour, at which point he will be admonished if he has stayed out of trouble. A brazen drug dealer caught pushing street Valium in Dundee city centre has been jailed. Police CCTV captured , 53, exchanging wraps of etizolam and cash on High Street and City Square on multiple occasions. A young man with a pornography 'obsession' was shopped to police by his own parents after they discovered a secret hard drive containing indecent images of children. , 24, appeared at Perth Sheriff Court and admitted possessing illicit files featuring youngsters as young as 10, on May 2 2021. Fiscal Douglas Thompson said: 'At the time of the offence, the accused was living at home with his parents. 'There were difficulties within the family, in regards to his obsession with pornography.' He said Copland was not allowed to connect to the home wi-fi in an effort to stop him downloading X-rated video and images. His mum and dad also routinely searched his electronic devices. On May 2 2021, with Copland out of the house his parents searched his bedroom and found a hard drive of which they had previously been unaware. It contained multiple adult images but also a folder titled 'Young' which contained indecent images of children thought to be between 10 and 13. 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Earlier this year, McKay pled guilty to injuring the woman in a domestic assault on June 17 last year, then again after abducting her on July 6 and sentencing was deferred for McKay to be interviewed by social workers. At Dundee Sheriff Court, he appeared by video link from HMP Perth to be sentenced to 27 months in prison, backdated to the start of his remand. His solicitor John Boyle said there is 'an acceptance that he requires assistance to regulate his temper'. Sheriff Tim Niven-Smith also made a five-year non-harassment order and told him to complete nine months of post-release supervision. A bogus psychiatrist who treated scores of patients while working in Tayside has been ordered to pay back the NHS more than £400,000 or face two-and-a-half more years in prison. , 62, who faked the completion of her qualifications, was jailed in February 2023 for seven years after she committed a string of fraud offences. 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Daily Mirror
28-05-2025
- Daily Mirror
Mystery question that led to punch up at baby shower with family of darts star
Relatives of darts star Jocky Wilson were involved in a family punch up at a Fife baby shower which saw one grandmother claim she had her feeding tube dislodged Relatives of an all-star darts player became embroiled in a baby shower brawl after a 16-word, initially innocent-seeming question was floated during the celebration. A party thrown at Lochore Miners' Welfare Social Club in Fife, Scotland, held on May 18 last year to celebrate the impending arrival of Chantelle Wilson's baby daughter had gotten off to a good start, with family members happily chattering and playing games. But the event turned sour when some of the games were used to throw insults. A punch-up at the club landed the expectant mum's mother Sarah Wilson and her sister Chardonnay - both relatives of Scots darts legend Jocky Wilson - in court after the expectant dad's mum was punched and his grandmother claimed her essential feeding tube was dislodged. The hearing at Dunfermline Sheriff Court in Lochore, Fife, heard all was "fine" at first as the two families sat at different tables, but moods soured during a gave of "Would Mummy Rather". One baby shower attendee brazenly asked: "Would mummy rather put a bottle on for the baby or open a bottle of wine?". The question, Chardonnay Wilson told the court, left her sister "upset" and "everything started to escalate from there" with arguments being traded back and forth before her mum Sarah said: "They could speak any other day but not to spoil the occasion." The arguments came to a head when allegations of abusive sexual comments were made during a game of "Baby Bingo", with rows only increasing in intensity until they broke out into a fully-fledged assault outside the shower venue. Chardonnay was found guilty of assaulting Yvonne Ritchie, the grandma of father-to-be Ben, who alleged her essential feeding tube was dislodged during the violence. The court also heard that Sarah Wilson of Kirkcaldy allegedly assaulted Pamela Ritchie by grabbing her hair and repeatedly punching her on the body. She reacted angrily when asked about her relation to Jocky Wilson by the Daily Record, saying: "I'm Jocky Wilson's niece and Chardonnay is his great niece but that has nothing to do with any of this." Chardonnay, who was found guilty of assault, was handed an absolute discharge by a sheriff after her solicitor Gino Gambale argued the conviction would end her career as a carer. She denies having ever assaulted Ms Ritchie, saying she "didn't touch her feeding tube and I didn't pull her feeding tube out. I didn't do anything. It took three of them to try and attack me". Sarah admitted to assaulting Pamela Ritchie by seizing her by the hair and repeatedly punching her on the body. Chantelle Wilson broke her silence on the events at her baby shower last year in a post earlier this month. Writing on Facebook, she said she had "kept my mouth closed for nearly a year", and that "finally this nightmare is over with". She added that she is still with her partner, saying: "Me and my family KNOW THE TRUTH!!! I can say a lot more but I don't need to explain myself to anyone just shows though me and Ben are still together even after all of this."


The Courier
27-05-2025
- The Courier
Fife baby shower ends in violence as families feud
A baby shower attended by feuding families in Fife ended in violence. There was hostility between the relatives of the couple having the baby as light-hearted games such as 'Baby Bingo' were ruined by offensive comments fired back and forward across the hall, Dunfermline Sheriff Court heard. The bad feeling between the families escalated to violence outside the hall in Lochore. The mum and sister of the mother-to-be landed ended up in the dock on assault charges. Sarah Wilson, 45, of Kirkcaldy, admitted punching the other mum after grabbing her hair. Chardonnay Wilson, 20, also from Kirkcaldy, was found guilty of assaulting another woman. Chardonnay Wilson told the court the baby shower for her sister Chantelle, had started at 1pm. She said the two families were sitting at different tables and 'at first it was fine'. However, bad feeling began to escalate during a game called 'Would Mummy Rather'. She explained there was a question, 'would mummy rather put a bottle on for the baby or open a bottle of wine'. She said someone from the father-to-be's family shouted out the new mum would open a bottle of wine. 'Chantelle got upset and everything started to escalate from there,' she said. She described how her mum Sarah and the other mother were 'arguing back and forward'. 'My mum told her they could speak any other day but not to spoil the occasion,' she said. The court was told there was more arguing during a game of 'Baby Bingo' and allegations about sexual comments being heard. There were then claims about an abusive comment, 'F***ing fools', aimed at the Wilsons, being written on a paper plate. Wilson said she had also written a good wishes message in the baby book and someone had ripped it out. Gino Gambale, solicitor for Chardonnay Wilson, asked for his client to be given an absolute discharge, as a conviction would end her three-year career as a carer. Sheriff Susan Duff said it would 'not be proportionate' to impose a sentence which would end a young person's career and agreed to the defence request, meaning the offence will not go on Wilson's record. Sarah Wilson will be sentenced on June 4 after the sheriff called for reports.