'He broke a bottle and threatened to stab me': Security guard tells how Reading terror suspect attacked him during Sainsbury's shoplifting spree

  • Sydney McDonald, 65, witnessed the terror attack on Saturday evening
  • He revealed man arrested over the incident had assaulted him a year ago
  •  Khairi Saadallah, 25, was jailed over that attack, but later freed on appeal
A stunned eyewitness to the Reading terror attack was assaulted by suspect Khairi Saadallah in a bottle attack a year earlier.
Sainsbury's security guard Sydney McDonald, 65, was the victim in the court case that put Saadallah behind bars until just 16 days ago.
Mr McDonald was on the scene in Forbury Gardens on Saturday when he saw the terror attack - which killed three people - and the suspect looking like he had put his hands “in a big bucket of red paint”.
Sainsbury's security guard Sydney McDonald, 65, who was attached by the Reading terror suspect last year
Khairi Saadallah, 25, who is the suspect in the Reading terror attack
Security guard Sydney McDonald, 65, witnessed the Reading terror attack and revealed he had been assaulted by the suspect Khairi Saadallah last year
Incredibly he went on to reveal he had been assaulted by the suspect last year when he stopped him from shoplifting from his store in Reading town centre.
He said: “I am sure he is the same bloke, he’s grown a beard but he’s the same height, same build, same age, same everything.”Saadallah had been sentenced to 28 months for breaching a suspended jail term, racially aggravated assault, criminal damage and affray.
But he was released from HMP Bullingdon, Oxfordshire, just over a fortnight ago after serving less than half of his sentence.
The Reading terror suspect Khairi Saadallah, 25, was jailed for an assault at Sainsbury's in Reading last year
The Reading terror suspect Khairi Saadallah, 25, was jailed for an assault at Sainsbury's in Reading last year
This was despite him having offences stretching back to November 2018.
His previous included racially aggravated common assault - after he called a police officer a "slave" and spat in her face - carrying a bladed article and assaulting an emergency worker.
He had his overall sentence for the Mr McDonald attack reduced to 17 months and 20 days' imprisonment through the Court of Appeal in March this year.
One of the appeal judges who gave the judgment, Mr Justice Goss, noted Saadallah's various mental health issues in reducing the sentence. 
Mr Justice Goss had reduced Khairi Saadallah's sentence for assaulting Mr McDonald
Mr Justice Goss had reduced Khairi Saadallah's sentence for assaulting Mr McDonald
Mr McDonald said he recognised the man from when he had attacked him in January 2019 by rushing at him with a broken wine bottle and whipping him with a belt.
Describing the previous incident, Mr McDonald said: 'When he attacked me outside the shop he broke a bottle and threatened to stab me and I defended myself. I put him to the floor, held him there ... and he couldn't get away from me and I held him until the police came.'
He added: 'If I couldn't have defended myself he probably would have killed me. But I knew how to handle it.
'He pulled the bottle of alcohol out that he had nicked from Sainsbury's then he smashed the bottle and came at me. He punched me in my face and I hit him back, his nose was bleeding. I kept him down on the floor until the police came.
Police were called to Forbury Gardens in Reading on Saturday after reports people were being stabbed
Police were called to Forbury Gardens in Reading on Saturday after reports people were being stabbed
'I thought he had a knife because of the way he was behaving.'
The Reading Chronicle said the trial saw CCTV footage of Saadallah, wearing a cap and a backpack, taking a bottle of wine from his jacket.
He emptied it in front of Mr McDonald before smashing it on the ground in front of him, Reading Crown Court heard.
The security guard had told the jury minutes before he had been ‘flat as a pancake’ when he came in and tried to leave the store after acting suspiciously in the alcohol aisle and a bottle shaped bugle having appeared in his jacket.
Tributes left at Forbury Gardens today after the terror attack in Reading on Saturday
Tributes left at Forbury Gardens today after the terror attack in Reading on Saturday
Police rushed to the scene in Forbury Gardens in Reading at 7pm on Saturday after getting a number of people had been stabbed.
Thames Valley Police said a suspect was apprehended and arrested within five minutes and is still being held by detectives.
Saadallah was initially arrested on suspicion of murder but was later re-arrested under the Terrorism Act 2000. 
Three people were killed in the attack and a further three taken to hospital for treatment.
This morning a one-minute silence was held to remember those who lost their lives.

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