Donegal man has sentence doubled for breaking woman's jaw

ireland
Donegal Man Has Sentence Doubled For Breaking Woman's Jaw
Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy said the court found that the sentence imposed on Kelly for the assault on Ms Mitchell was unduly lenient
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Paul Neilan

A Donegal man who twice rammed his neighbour's home with his car, broke her jaw and tried to escape gardaí by swimming to Tyrone has had his jail sentence doubled by the Court of Appeal.

Leon Kelly had been sentenced to two-and-a-half years with 12 months suspended for criminal damage and assault causing harm to Ann Mitchell (62) in November of last year by Letterkenny Circuit Court.

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The Director of Public Prosecutions had submitted to the Court of Appeal that an 18-month jail sentence was unduly lenient in the case.

The court heard that Kelly caused €13,000 worth of damage after ramming his vehicle into an Audi car owned by the Mitchells and caused criminal damage to their home before he broke Ms Mitchell's jaw.

Guilty plea

Kelly pleaded guilty at Letterkenny Circuit Criminal Court last November to assault causing harm on Ms Mitchell and criminal damage to her home at Beechwood Grove, Lifford, Co Donegal on April 13th, 2019.

Kelly (34) a father of three from The Close, Raphoe, Co Donegal, fled the scene and tried to escape gardaí by swimming across the River Finn to Strabane, Co Tyrone, where he was arrested by the PSNI and returned across the Border.

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He subsequently rammed Ms Mitchell’s home again with his Volkswagen Passat eight days later, on April 21st, 2019, in what the court heard was a row over money that Kelly claimed he was owed by his victim’s son for a car.

Outlining the appeal, counsel for the DPP, Patricia McLaughlin BL, had said that the 18-month sentence imposed on Kelly did not reflect the gravity of the offences or the harm he had done, given that Ms Mitchell suffered a broken jaw and lost a tooth during an unprovoked assault.

While it was a drunken, rage-fuelled offence, it was also a very deliberate and conscious attack, said Ms McLaughlin.

Leniency

Counsel had told the Court of Appeal that Kelly’s use of his vehicle as a weapon when under the influence of alcohol was an aggravating factor as was the second attack, eight days after the first incident.

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However, counsel for Kelly, Peter Nolan BL, said that the sentencing judge, Judge John Aylmer, had been impressed with his client’s probation report and his potential for rehabilitation.

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While Mr Nolan said the sentence might be considered lenient, he argued it was not "unduly lenient".

He claimed Kelly’s attempts at swimming across a river into Northern Ireland was “a pointless exercise” as the PSNI were alerted and waiting for him on the other riverbank. Mr Nolan added: “He’s lucky he didn’t drown.”

On Wednesday at the Court of Appeal, Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy said the court found that the sentence imposed on Kelly for the assault on Ms Mitchell was unduly lenient and would increase it to three years.

The judge said that the level of violence used by Kelly in the first offence on Ms Mitchell had a significant effect on her and that this aggravated the second offence.

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