Watch machete-wielding masked man smash up car during drunken rampage in Bassingbourn

A machete-wielding masked man who went on a drunken rampage, smashing cars and demanding money from his terrified victims, has been jailed for more than five years.

Wearing a balaclava and gloves, Nathan Smith, of Old North Road, Whaddon, smashed the windscreen of a Peugeot van parked in Cambridge Crescent in Bassingbourn at about 2.40am on 21 November last year.

The highly intoxicated 33-year-old then barged his way through a garden gate and walked up the path to a side door, before smashing the glass and demanding the occupants hand over money.

As the victims inside called police, Smith continued to cause damage from the outside, shattering the kitchen window, leaning inside and waving the machete, before leaving a few moments later.

Nathan Smith, 33, of Old North Road, Whaddon, wore a balaclava and wielded a machete during his November 2023 rampage

He also used the machete to break the glass of a Citroen Nemo and a Renault Capture that were also parked in the street.

Smith was found by armed officers a short distance from the home, asleep on the ground, with the machete lying next to him.

Damage caused to a van by a machete-wielding Nathan Smith, 33, of Old North Road, Whaddon

Smith was sentenced at Huntingdon Law Courts on Tuesday (25 June) to five years and 10 months in prison after pleading guilty to aggravated burglary, possession of an offensive weapon and three counts of criminal damage.

Det Con Zoe Bramley, from the southern acquisitive crime team, who investigated, said: “Smith’s actions cannot be blamed on his intoxication at the time. His actions demonstrated a level of planning as he was wearing gloves, a balaclava and was wielding a machete.

Nathan Smith, 33, of Old North Road, Whaddon, wielding a machete on 21 November, 2023

“He went on a rampage using extreme violence damaging three vehicles in the street before terrorising the occupants of the property he targeted.

“I hope that following this sentence, the victims can now feel safe within their community.”