A 90-year-old retired boxer chased a burglar out of his house, followed him into a nearby ASDA, and hit him in the face until he returned what he had stolen. The man, who has asked not to be named, was at home when a stranger came to his door pretending to have hurt his leg.
When the pensioner went to get Nicholas Norton a cloth to clean his 'wound', Norton grabbed his wallet and ran out of the house. The pensioner, once a middleweight boxing champion in the Navy reserves, followed Norton in his car then followed him into ASDA before punching him in the face.
The pensioner said: "When he stole my wallet, I just wanted to get it back. I know that pensioners are being robbed all the time and it's not right. I have problems with my blood pressure, my legs and my hands but I still went after him to get my wallet back."
Norton had already bought a 44p bar of chocolate using the pensioner's card. He was arrested and told police: "I'm going back to prison. That's five years for me."
Speaking to Hull Live, the pensioner said: "After he'd run out with my wallet, I got into my car and went to go look for him. I had a drive down the nearby streets, before going into the ASDA car park to turn around - that's when I saw him walking into the supermarket.
"I followed him in and said to the security guard 'I've just had my wallet stolen and I've come to get it back'. I found him at the till with a bottle of whisky and I grabbed him by the scruff of the neck and smacked him on the chin.
"I asked him where my wallet was and he said he didn't have it, so I said to him, 'do you want me to hit you again? Then he quickly emptied his pockets and gave me it.
"I noticed my cards weren't in there, so I said, 'where are they?' and he said that he'd hidden them outside, so I smacked him again. Then he turned out his pockets and gave me my cards back.
"I used to be a middleweight boxing champion in the Navy reserve, so I know how to punch. I keep myself fit for a 90-year-old because I fell out of a car a while ago and I have to do the exercises to stay strong.
"My daughter called me a 'silly bugger' and said, 'you're too old to be doing stuff like that'. I'm not sure why I did it, it was just instinctive - it's the principle of the thing. Hopefully now he'll think twice before he robs another pensioner."
Rachel Scott, prosecuting, told Hull Crown Court that Norton had walked into the pensioners back garden limping and said that he had fallen off his bicycle. "He asked for a damp cloth because his leg was bleeding," said Miss Scott.
"The complainant went and got him a cloth and, as he was standing at a sink, turned round and saw the defendant in his living room. The defendant took his wallet and ran out of the address.
"The complainant got into his car and drove around trying to find the defendant. He saw the defendant going into Asda so he went in after him. He caught the defendant with his bank card in his hand and a bottle of spirits in the other.
"He took hold of him and the defendant dropped the bottle, smashing it. The complainant was concerned about what he would do with the bottle so punched him on the chin. He then held the defendant by the scruff of his neck while the defendant emptied his pockets and returned the bank cards."
Burglar Nicholas Norton had convictions for 80 previous offences, including 44 for theft. He was sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison.