A man who tried to murder a friend in a drink and drug fuelled scissors attack in Ayrshire was jailed for four years today.
Paul Mason repeatedly struck his victim Sean Kerrigan on the head and body with the weapon.
A judge told Mason, 24, at the High Court in Edinburgh: "You used a bladed weapon and struck him at least five times with it after he had attacked you."
Lord Burns said Mason had been prepared to use the weapon repeatedly on his victim with "devastating effects which could have killed him".
Mason, of High Street, Airdrie, North Lanarkshire, had earlier denied attempting to murder Mr Kerrigan, 27, at Limonds Wynd, in Ayr, on May 29 in 2019, but was convicted of the offence.
A jury convicted him of assaulting the victim to his severe injury and the danger of his life in the murder bid by repeatedly punching and kicking him and striking him with the weapon.
Lord Burns pointed out that the jurors had rejected Mason's claim that he acted in self-defence and under provocation.
The judge said it seemed to him that there was no evidence to support the contention that the victim ever had a weapon.
He said that Mason was assessed as posing a medium to high risk of re-offending.
The judge ordered that he should be supervised and monitored for a further three-year period.
Defence counsel Allan Macleod said: "Prior to this he would have called the victim a friend."
He told the court: "There is a recognition that had he not taken the drugs and alcohol prior to this offence then he may have acted in a different way."
He said that Mason appeared younger than his age and had been through a "chaotic" childhood.
Mr Macleod said that Mason has no previous convictions for violence and added: "This is essentially his first custodial sentence and he has found that to be a sobering experience."
Mason's co-accused, Cameron Hill, 25, from Calder Court, Coatbridge, North Lanarkshire was cleared of the murder bid, but found guilty of assaulting Mr Kerrigan by punching and kicking him.
Lord Burns told him that taking into account his age, the limited violence he was involved in and that he disassociated himself from the offence as it escalated he could be dealt with by a non-custodial disposal.
He was given a community payback order and told to carry out 300 hours of unpaid work.
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