A 33-year-old man has been charged with twice trespassing on the grounds of Buckingham Palace

A 33-year-old man has been charged with twice trespassing on the grounds of Buckingham Palace

A 33-year-old man is accused of twice trespassing on Buckingham Palace grounds.

Tomorrow, Daniel Brydges of Portsmouth will appear in court at Westminster.

He is charged with breaking into the royal residence’s grounds on December 18 and December 22 of last year.

A member of the court staff verified that he is also charged with criminal damage for allegedly damaging the property’s barbed wire fence on December 18.

It happens only a few months after 25-year-old American Joseph Huang Kang was charged with breaking into the stables at Buckingham Palace.

In a February court appearance, Kang admitted to trespassing on a designated area in the Royal Mews on December 10 of last year.

He was sentenced to a £200 fine, £85 in costs, and a £34 victim surcharge.

As a result of Kang disobeying signs warning him that he was on a protected location, his attorney’s request for a conditional discharge was denied.

In another incident, a juvenile was detained in December of last year on suspicion of ascending Windsor Castle while carrying a crossbow in an effort to “assassinate the Queen in retaliation for the 1919 Amritsar massacre.”

On Christmas Day at 8:06 am, Jaswant Singh Chail, 19, uploaded a pre-recorded video on Snapchat, 24 minutes before a man was detained by police in the Windsor Castle grounds.

The estate has launched a thorough internal security study to see how someone may have gotten so deeply into the grounds.

Chail was later photographed while his father, Jasbir Singh Chail, said something had “gone horribly wrong with our son and we are trying to figure out what.”

Chail was raised in a £500,000 semi-detached house on an exclusive estate in North Baddesley, Southampton.