A ROAD rage driver who was filmed screaming at a woman motorist after she beeped him for cutting her up was today ordered to take an anger management course.
Peter Abbott got out of his car and approached frightened Samantha Isaacs following the minor incident outside a Tesco petrol station.
Mrs Isaacs locked her doors and began filming the irate 60-year-old who banged on her windscreen with his fists and unleashed a foul-mouthed tirade.
Abbott called Mrs Isaccs, who runs a TV production company and has worked with Prince William and Alan Titchmarsh, a f****** tart, a 'sl**' and a 'wh***'.
He was spared prison when he was sentenced at Poole Magistrates' Court on May 24 for using threatening words or behaviour to cause alarm, distress or fear of violence.
District judge Orla Austin ordered Abbott to attend an anger management programme called Creating Positive Connections and pay Mrs Isaacs £300 compensation.
She said: "I take the view this was an extremely serious matter. Mrs Isaacs was a lone female in her car, it was a sustained incident, your level of anger and aggression was extremely high and your language was extremely offensive.
"You put her in significant fear and it has had an ongoing effect on her life and bystanders who intervened."
The road rage incident happened on August 25 last year when Mrs Isaacs, who is aged in her late 50s, was leaving the petrol station at Tesco Extra in Bournemouth, Dorset, just before lunchtime.
Abbott, who had been shopping in the main store, pulled out in front of her causing her to slam on her brakes.
The mother of three honked her horn prompting Abbott to make rude gestures at her before stopping his Toyota car and getting out.
Video footage filmed by Mrs Isaacs showed he shouted at her "can you f**king see me you f**king tart?" He then called her a 'slag' and a 'whore' and put his head up against the windscreen.
A male motorist went to intervene and called Abbott a bully. The Good Samaritan told him "what is wrong with you, it's a woman on her own" to which Abbott replied "she's a f**king bloody annoying woman".
During the trial Mrs Isaacs told the court: "I had just pulled out and a car came out of the shopping area and completely cut me up to the point where I had to slam on my brakes so hard all my belongings came off the passenger seat onto the floor.
"I beeped my horn as if to say 'look out' type of thing. He turned round in the car and started gesticulating, then he got out of the car and started shouting at me.
"He was banging with both his fists on the windscreen and my door. I was frightened so I started videoing it."
Robert Salame, prosecuting, read a victim impact statement from Mrs Isaacs which said: "I don't trust any motorist now, my confidence in driving has taken a huge knock. Considering I drove 30,000 miles a year for work, I am now turning away work that is further afield.
"I am so angry he has taken my job pleasure away from me. I am scared all the time when I drive now."
Abbott, a self employed translator, was described as a 'bookish' man in court but he accepted that he also had a problem with his temper that needed addressing.
Representing himself, he said: "I have been isolated for quite a long time due to the nature of my work. I'm a translator, written documents only so I spend a large number of hours, days and weeks, holed up in my apartment in front of the computer.
"Since I have been back in the UK I have noticed that my relationships with people have been an issue. At the time of the incident I didn't have any contact with friends or family.
"I knew I had a problem with my temper before this, if I had been sensible I would have sought some kind of counselling before but I have always put my work ahead of everything else."
He said he regretted his part in the incident, but claimed the media coverage of the case had "destroyed" his professional career.
A reference from a long-term friend who is a professor, described Abbott as a "peaceful, introverted and bookish man".
Abbott, from Bournemouth, had denied using threatening words or behaviour to cause alarm, distress or fear of violence but was found guilty after a trial.
He was given a 12-week prison sentence suspended for 18 months.
Abbott was also banned from driving for 18 months and ordered to pay £300 trial costs.
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