Arthur Collins nightclub attack trial: TOWIE star's ex-boyfriend 'thought acid was date rape drug', he tells court

Arthur Collins, left, is on trial over an acid attack in a London nightclub. He is the ex-boyfriend of reality TV personality Ferne McCann
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TV star Ferne McCann’s ex-boyfriend has admitted dousing clubbers with acid but claims he thought it was a date rape drug.

Arthur Collins, 25, who is the father of The Only Way Is Essex star's unborn child, said he threw the liquid following an argument with two men in Mangle E8 nightclub in Dalston, east London.

Giving evidence at Wood Green Crown Court, he told jurors he had snatched a small bottle off one of them after overhearing them planning to spike a girl's drink.

But he insisted he had no idea it contained a corrosive substance when he threw its contents two or three times in the air in the early hours of April 17.

Asked about his intentions by his barrister George Carter-Stephenson QC, Collins said: "I wanted to show them the drugs was gone so they wouldn't spike any girl's drink and show them there was nothing left in the bottle."

CCTV footage showed victims clutching their faces and running off the dancefloor after Collins was seen dousing revellers with the unidentified substance later found to have contained a liquid with a rating of pH1 - indicating a strong acid.

But Collins told jurors: "I was never aware no-one was hurt or anything."

He is standing trial alongside Andre Phoenix, 21, over the alleged attack, in which more than a dozen people were injured.

Collins told jurors he had been in a serious relationship with McCann for around a year at the time of the incident, and had found out the TV personality was pregnant just weeks earlier.

"It was the happiest I have ever felt. We were both really happy," he said.

Collins, who entered the club wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with the words "Candy Killer", said he knew a lot of people in the club and he and his group were "having a good time".

He denied being drunk when he heard two males he had never seen before saying: "You spike her, you do it."

"I called them dickheads. I thought they was going to spike a girl's drink," said Collins.

"I knew a lot of girls in that night in the club. That's why I said what I thought of them.

"I have got four sisters and I was brought up to respect women. There's some things you don't do."

Collins, who has a previous conviction for assault over a 2015 incident in a nightclub, said a row erupted before he saw a "tiny, mini water bottle" in one of the men's left hands.

"I thought that was the date rape drug they was on about spiking girls' drinks with," he said.

"I snatched it out of his hand ... my friend Andre kept telling him to 'calm down'."

He said the men were "really aggressive" as they came towards him in an attempt to get the bottle back.

Before Collins gave evidence on Wednesday, jurors were told that a number of the charges against him and Phoenix have been dropped following legal argument.

Collins, of Broxbourne, Hertfordshire, denies five counts of grievous bodily harm (GBH) with intent, and nine counts of actual bodily harm (ABH) against 14 people.

Phoenix, of Clyde Road, Tottenham, north London, denies four counts of GBH and two counts of (ABH).

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