Man pleads guilty to egg attack on King Charles III

The magistrate said he accepted that May was not trying to hit the king with the egg but said the attack was 'planned' and 'targeted' Charles.


A 21-year-old man was fined on Friday after he admitted throwing an egg towards King Charles III during a royal walkabout last year.

Harry May, 21, of Luton, north of London, was fined £100 ($122) and ordered to pay £85 costs after pleading guilty to a public order offence.

The incident happened when Charles, 74, was in Luton on December 6 to meet community leaders and open a new Sikh temple.

This video is no longer available.

Charles visit in ‘bad taste’

Prosecutor Jason Seetal said the egg thrown by May landed near Charles as he chatted to locals.

He said May told police he threw it because “he believed the king visiting a town like Luton, which is a deprived and poor area, was in bad taste”.

“Whatever disagreement you have with somebody, the way to resolve it is not to throw projectiles at them,” chief magistrate Paul Goldspring told May during a hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court.

WATCH: King Charles narrowly avoids being hit by eggs in York

The magistrate said he accepted that May was not trying to hit the king with the egg but said the attack was “planned” and “targeted” Charles.

The attack came less than a month after several eggs were thrown at Charles and his wife Camilla in the city of York, in northern England, in November.

None of the eggs hit Charles, and he was ushered away by minders.

This video is no longer available.

Next court appearance

Police detained the alleged attacker, 23-year-old university student Patrick Thelwell.

He was later released on bail on condition that he did not carry eggs in public except when shopping.

Thelwell will appear in court in York in northern England next Friday.

Charles became king on the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, in September. She was buried after a state funeral and 10 days of national mourning.

But there were some protests against the hereditary principle of monarchy under which Charles took over as head of state.

ALSO READ: King Charles expresses ‘love and sympathy’ in his first Christmas message

For more news your way

Download our app and read this and other great stories on the move. Available for Android and iOS.