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Court finds Roscommon man's suspended jail sentence for assaulting ex-partner unduly lenient

Sep 28, 2020 16:00 By Shannonside News
Court finds Roscommon man's suspended jail sentence for assaulting ex-partner unduly lenient
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A Roscommon man is facing 18 months in prison for assaulting his former partner and threatening her with a knife at their Letterkenny home after

A Roscommon man is facing 18 months in prison for assaulting his former partner and threatening her with a knife at their Letterkenny home after the Court of Appeal ruled the original suspended sentence he was given was unduly lenient.

Stephen Connor, (43) a father of one of Tuam, Kilrooskey, Co Roscommon, must now serve a prison sentence after the DPP successfully appealed the decision of Judge John Aylmer to fully suspend a two and a half year sentence imposed at Letterkenny Circuit Criminal Court last November.

Connor, a trained accountant who works as a bricklayer, had pleaded guilty in July 2019 to one count of assault causing harm, one count of false imprisonment and one count of producing a knife in the course of a dispute during an incident at a house at Forwell, Letterkenny, Co Donegal on May 5, 2018.

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Gardaí who called to the house met Connor’s victim, whom they said was dishevelled and visibly injured with blood pouring down her face, with the house in a mess.

The woman showed gardai a zip-locked bag containing some of her blonde hair which she said had been ripped from her head by Connor.

The couple had been living together from January 2018 until March 2018 when the relationship ended but Connor continued to live in the house as a tenant.

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On the morning of the incident the woman had asked Connor to leave the house and return his key as there had been a disagreement over the non-payment of rent and food bills.

When he returned to the house that evening, Connor forced his way through the front door after being told he no longer lived there.

The Court of Appeal heard Connor had picked up a small knife, saying “this isn’t a knife,” before throwing it in the sink. He then picked up a serrated bread knife saying “this is a knife.”

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Connor proceeded to throw things around the kitchen before knocking a phone out of the woman hand and pushing her up against a cooker while making stabbing actions to her face and head.

He then held her in a corner and began banging her head against a press.

As the victim tried to make for the door, he caught her and started punching her in the face with a closed fist until she fell to the ground.

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Connor only stopped the assault after he punched the woman so hard that he lost his balance and fell over which enabled her to escape.

Connor, who admitted to being extremely drunk, called to Letterkenny Garda station within 20 minutes of the incident to report his role in the assault.

Counsel for the DPP, Fiona Crawford BL, claimed the decision of the sentencing judge to fully suspend the two and a half year sentence imposed on Connor constituted a significant departure from the norm for such offending behaviour given the judge had described the incident as “a protracted and fairly brutal onslaught.”

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Ms Crawford also said Judge Aylmer had failed to incorporate any element of deterrence in his sentence and failed to reflect society’s abhorrence of such offences.

Opposing the appeal, counsel for Connor, Róisín Lacey SC, had argued that the sentence had fallen within the legitimate range of a sentencing judge’s discretion.

Outlining the court of appeal’s ruling, Ms Justice Úna Ní Raifeartaigh, sitting with Mr Justice George Birmingham and Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy, said it was clear from the woman's victim impact statement that the attack had a severe and lasting impact on her.

Ms Justice Ní Raifeartaigh said offences of such a nature may normally expect to attract some custodial sentence to mark society’s strong condemnation of such behaviour and to send out a clear message of deterrence.

The judge said Connor’s case did not contain any exceptional circumstances that could warrant a fully suspended sentence.

The Court of Appeal ruled that the sentencing judge had erred in principle by placing too much weight on mitigating factors in Connor’s favour including handing himself into gardaí and an early guilty plea.

Ms Justice Ní Raifeartaigh said the appropriate custodial sentence would be one of two and half years.

However, as it was the court’s practice to exercise extra clemency where a person’s sentence was converted from being fully suspended to a custodial one on appeal, she said the final year of the sentence would be suspended.

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