London: A man appeared in court Wednesday after being suspected of entering the land of Windsor Castle who was armed with arrows, stating he planned to kill Queen Elizabeth II.
The 20 -year -old man, Jaswant Singh Chail, from Southampton in Southern England, appeared in court in London, had been charged with betrayal earlier this month.
He appeared in the Westminster Magistrates court through video-link from psychiatric hospitals with high security broadmoor, confirming its name and location.
The prosecutor told the court that Chail was held in the land of Windsor Castle, where the king lived, early Christmas last year.
Wearing a hood and a mask and carrying a rod arrow that was loaded with a safety citch off, Chail came in a landscape line of the Queen Apartment, said prosecutor Kathryn Selby.
Chail allegedly told the protection officer: “I am here to kill the queen.”
The most serious accusation he faced under the actions of 180 -year -old betrayal was “intention … to injure people who are the majesty of Queen Elizabeth II, or to worry about His Majesty”.
In the last case, British citizen Marcus Sarjeant was jailed for five years in 1981 after claiming to be guilty of firing empty shots to the king when he was in a parade.
Chail is also accused of making threats to kill and have offensive weapons.
Former idle supermarket workers are not required to enter the request.
– Not considered ‘terrorism’-
Chail was investigated by the Terrorism Command against Metropolitan Police, but his actions were not treated as “terrorism”, the prosecutor said.
The prosecutor said he had previously tried to join the Ministry of Defense and Infantry Police Guard Grenadier, to be closer to the royal family.
He allegedly planned an attack as a revenge for the treatment of Indians and sent a video that said he would kill the Queen.
Chail will be detained until the next court’s performance, in London’s Old Bailey, on September 14.
The incident occurred when the queen spent Christmas in the castle with his eldest son and heir, Prince Charles, and his wife Camilla.
Although the intruder was intercepted quickly, he remembered an earlier intrusion, more serious in 1982.
On that occasion, a man in his 30s entered Ratu’s private room in Buckingham’s palace when he was in bed before the police arrested him.
In the summer of 2019, a man was arrested after climbing the Buckingham Palace gate.
In 2018, a homeless man enhanced his walls and slept on the ground before being captured.