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Miss Randall said: “He intended to let off the smoke in celebration if Chelsea scored a goal. He said he did not know what happened to the third grenade.
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He admitted buying three grenades at a shop in Camden, London, before travelling to Swansea. Police later found a second grenade in a Volkswagen van Greenwood had driven to the match. He told a police officer who was called to the scene it was “a stupid thing to do”. Prosecutor Catrin Jenkins said the grenade was discovered by a match day steward who “patted down” Jamie Greenwood as he made his way into the ground. Helen Randall, for Jamie Greenwood, argued the smoke grenade was at the “bottom end” of the list of devices supporters were banned from taking into stadiums. Possession of the grenade was an offence under the Sporting Events (Control of Alcohol etc) Act 1985.Ĭhelsea have revoked the pair’s season tickets. It ended goalless but Swansea progressed to this month’s Carling Cup Final having won the first leg at Chelsea’s Stamford Bridge. Jamie Greenwood and his cousin Harry Greenwood, 19, of Bernhardt Crescent, London, were both given a month’s jail and a six year ban from watching football by Swansea Magistrates last month for possessing Enola Gay make twist-top smoke grenades at the match. He said:“The sentence in this case was justified and appropriate.” The judge added the authorities in charge of football matches had to keep public safety in the foremost of their minds because of “well publicised tragedies involving football stadiums”. “It was not going to be let off in the middle of a field but in a confined situation that could have caused a great deal of panic.” Turning down the appeal, Judge Paul Thomas sitting with two magistrates told Greenwood: “You accept, as we feel you must, that what you did was utterly foolish but more importantly it was potentially very dangerous.