Moment drunk trucker demolished his girlfriend’s home by reversing into her living room [VIDEO]

A video shows the moment a trucker repeatedly rammed his lorry into his girlfriend’s living room in a drunken rage while her children were at home. 

Derek Wellington, told his then-partner, Sara Cassidy, 33: ‘I’m going to park my lorry in your living room’ before driving into her property in East Kilbride, Lanarkshire, about 12 miles south of Glasgow. 

The footage, filmed from an upstairs window, shows the shocking moment the driver reversed his Eddie Stobart lorry into the front of the house.

A loud crash, swearing and shouts of ‘oh my god!’ and ‘call the police!’ can be heard before the huge vehicle leaves the driveway.  

Wellington, from Ayrshire, had been dating the mother-of-two since earlier in 2021 before the incident on September 6 that year. 

He was sentenced to ten years in prison yesterday.  

Mother-of-two Sara Cassidy (pictured), 33, broke down in hysterics when she saw her home 'completely caved in' after Wellington drove his Eddie Stobart lorry into her living room

Derek Wellington, left, told Sara Cassidy, right: ‘I’m going to park my lorry in your living room’ before he drove into her property in Lanarkshire

Ms Cassidy's house (pictured) suffered £425,000 worth of damage and had to be demolished. A neighbouring property was also destroyed and a total of seven homes were evacuated

Ms Cassidy’s house (pictured) suffered £425,000 worth of damage and had to be demolished. A neighbouring property was also destroyed and a total of seven homes were evacuated 

The 34-year-old was jailed yesterday for ten years after 24 previous convictions, including several for assault and threatening behaviour. 

The lorry driver was on a bail order not to go near Ms Cassidy after he headbutted and pinned her against a wall in an Edinburgh hotel a month earlier, leaving her needing hospital treatment. 

He flew into a drunken rage after she refused to meet him and screamed down the phone, threatening to drive into her house, the High Court in Stirling heard. 

Wellington rang Ms Cassidy multiple times begging her to see him, shouting, swearing and calling her obscene names, according to prosecutor Lisa Gillespie.

Ms Cassidy said he was not allowed to visit under any circumstances because the children were at home but agreed to meet him on a street nearby when he said he was coming round anyway. 

She spotted him in his truck at around 11pm and ran back to her house, terrified, where she heard a loud banging noise and windows smashing. 

Wellington repeatedly reversed his truck into her living room, causing £425,000 worth of damage, and then threatened to return to finish the job.

Ms Cassidy broke down in hysterics when she saw her home completely ‘caved in’ and a pile of rubble as its remains. 

An Eddie Stobart lorry was later found in a supermarket car park and cordoned off by police

An Eddie Stobart lorry was later found in a supermarket car park and cordoned off by police 

The neighbouring house was also completely destroyed and a total of seven properties had to be evacuated. 

Miss Cassidy’s two children, 14 and 11, and a friend who were inside at the time escaped unhurt. 

Neighbour Allan Reddick, 37, helped rescue the children seconds before the house collapsed, using a ladder to help them out through an upstairs window. 

He said they were ‘really shaken up’.  

The truck was left abandoned in a supermarket car park the next day with Wellington’s wallet still inside and he was later arrested.  

Wellington appeared by video link for his court sentence and pleaded guilty to the charges, which included culpable and reckless endangerment of lives, earlier this month. 

He also pleaded guilty to assaulting Miss Cassidy in the Edinburgh incident, breaching bail, assaulting a police officer by spitting, and statutory breach of peace.

Solicitor-advocate Iain Paterson, defending, said Wellington was ‘remorseful’ and had genuinely believed that there was no-one in the house at the time.

He added: ‘If he could turn back the clock he would’ as Ms Cassidy sat emotionless on the benches during the hearing. 

He said Wellington had been an HGV driver ‘for a decade or so’ and the incident might mean he could never return to the profession. 

Judge Lord Armstrong said his actions meant Ms Cassidy lost the home she had lived in for five years and its £25,000 contents.  

Clyde Valley Housing Association ended up with a bill totalling £475,000 due to damage and loss of rental income.  

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