logo
Man jailed for seven years after crash which killed two teenagers

Man jailed for seven years after crash which killed two teenagers

BreakingNews.ie14-05-2025

A man has been sentenced to seven years' imprisonment after pleading guilty to dangerous driving causing the deaths of two teenagers.
Anthony McGinn, 61, from Drumloo, Newbliss, Co Monaghan, was sentenced on Wednesday.
Advertisement
Kiea McCann, 17, and Dlava Mohamed, 16, died in the crash on July 31st 2023.
The girls, who were being driven to their Debs ball when they died, had been close friends since Dlava's family arrived in Clones as part of a resettlement programme for Syrians.
Dlava's sister Avin was also injured in the crash.
Speaking after the sentencing at Monaghan Courthouse on Wednesday, Kiea's mother Teresa McCann said: 'There is no justice in this. My child's life is gone and never coming back.'
Advertisement
Inspector Ann Marie Lardner said gardai support the families 'in their suffering'.
'Kiea and Dlava were looking forward to celebrating their Debs on the night of the 31st of July, 2023 – they had their entire lives and bright futures in front of them.
'They were killed in a devastating road traffic collision and never came home.'
Ms Lardner said gardai stand 'united in grief' with the families following the recent death of Garda Kevin Flatley, from the roads policing unit, who was struck by a high-powered motorcycle.
Advertisement
She said: 'Garda Kevin Flatley went to work last Sunday, an ordinary day, he never came home.
'They are just three of the 418 killed in our roads since the start of 2023.
'An Garda Siochana and all our road safety partners continuously repeat and repeat and repeat: Speeding kills.
'Kiea and Dlava were killed because of excessive speed. Kevin was on duty detecting and preventing speeding on our roads when he was killed.'
Advertisement
Frankie and Teresa McCann, parents of Kiea McCann, arrive at Monaghan Circuit Criminal Court. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA.
She added: 'As a society, Ireland needs to reset in our collective attitude towards road safety. As a society, we need to slow down. As a society, we need to have a conversation with those who we know drive too fast, either in excess of the speed limit or too fast for the road conditions.
'The only people who can drive slower are drivers. But everybody can influence a driver. Slow down, make our roads safer.
'Get home safe to your families every day.'
During the sentencing hearing, Judge John Aylmer said he was considering the charges in relation to the two deaths and the dangerous driving causing serious bodily harm to Avin to be in the same act of driving.
Advertisement
In handing down the sentence, Mr Aylmer said he had to consider where the offence fell on the scale of offending by examining aggravating and mitigating circumstances.
He said the aggravating circumstances of the incident were that McGinn was travelling at almost twice the speed limit in an 80km/h zone, with evidence establishing he was travelling at up to 151km/h on the stretch of road.
Mr Aylmer said McGinn had also 'ignored the pleas – and somewhat angry pleas – to desist from two of the frightened young passengers', referring to Avin and another passenger – Oisin Clerkin – who sustained less serious injuries in the crash.
He said the road was wet which made the speeding even more dangerous.
Garda Inspector Ann Marie Lardner speaks to the media outside Monaghan Circuit Criminal Court. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA.
Mr Aylmer noted McGinn had been a friend of Kiea's father at the time and had 'committed an extraordinary breach of trust' which had been placed in to drive the young people to debs.
He said the 'devastating impact' of his actions was the loss of life and the life-altering injuries suffered by Avin.
He said the court had heard 'harrowing victim-impact statements'.
Mr Aylmer said representations for McGinn had pointed out he never had any intention to injure anyone, but the judge added he had a 'very determined' intention to drive at a 'grossly excessive speed', having a 'reckless disregard' for the potential of death or serious injury to arise.
He said this put the offence at the upper end of severity, but the judge said other aggravating factors, which often appear in these cases, were not present.
He said there was no question of the consumption of drugs or alcohol, or that the car was in disrepair.
This resulted in a headline sentence of nine years on each count, before mitigating factors reduced the sentence.
In mitigation, the judge said McGinn had no previous convictions nor any other charges pending.
He said the driver was fully co-operative with the investigation to the extent that he could be given his apparently genuine 'little recollection of events' having suffered very severe injuries himself.
Anthony McGinn was sentenced on Wednesday. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA.
McGinn spent a number of months in a coma after the crash, the court heard.
The judge said he had entered a very early plea of guilty but added that was in the face of an 'overwhelming case' brought by the prosecution, considering the entire event was captured on dashcam.
He said the value of the early plea is in 'sparing the families' further trauma of a trial which would have arisen.
Mr Aylmer said McGinn's injuries cannot be ignored but they provide little mitigation because 'they were self imposed'.
The court heard he has lost his marriage due to circumstances arising out of the tragedy and his relationship with his children has become distant.
The judge also said he had received reports that McGinn displayed appropriate victim empathy and his sense of responsibility for the deaths and the injuries suffered 'weighs heavily' on him.
McGinn is also considered to present a low risk of reoffending.
Mr Aylmer reduced the sentence to seven years on each count, to run concurrently from Wednesday.
McGinn was also disqualified from driving for a period of 15 years.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

My daughter Lauren Patterson was raped and murdered in Qatar - she had wanted to leave the country and we still don't know what has happened to her killer
My daughter Lauren Patterson was raped and murdered in Qatar - she had wanted to leave the country and we still don't know what has happened to her killer

Daily Mail​

time38 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

My daughter Lauren Patterson was raped and murdered in Qatar - she had wanted to leave the country and we still don't know what has happened to her killer

The mother of a woman who was murdered in Qatar still has no idea whether her killer has been released more than a decade on from the tragedy. Lauren Patterson was teaching at a primary school in the Qatari capital Doha when she went missing after going to a party in October 2013. Her body was found in the desert after she was raped and murdered by Badr Hashim Khamis Abdallah al-Jabr in a brutal attack. Lauren's family were told he would face a death sentence after being jailed for the 'heinous and shocking' attack in 2014. But in May 2018, the decision was overturned and he was instead given only ten-and-a-half years in jail, while Lauren's family were offered just £200,000 compensation. More than seven years on, Lauren's mother Alison, 60, is clueless as to what has happened to her daughter's killer - most crucially, if he has been freed. The loving mother, who lives in Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, has tried for years to find answers from Qatar's authorities, but has been blocked at every turn and was even accused of plotting to kill al-Jabr. This wall of silence has left Alison unable to move on from Lauren's death, while the situation has also been a burden on the 24-year-old's friends still living in Qatar and fearing they could bump into al-Jabr at any moment. 'We have written personally to the Emir but never had a reply. We gave letters to the Qatari embassy but heard nothing,' Alison told The Sun. 'You don't move on, but you're putting a line under one part of it, you're coming to terms with he's out.' She has asked the Foreign Office and the Qatari Government to tell her whether al-Jabr is still behind bars but has been met with a 'stonewall of silence'. Alison was even accused of plotting to kill al-Jabr after she received a text message from her lawyers in Doha, saying: 'Good morning, we were accused to set up a trap to kill him when will be released.' The outlandish suggestion is rendered the more ridiculous, as she said she did not want him to face the death penalty when he was convicted of Lauren's murder. But she was later horrified when the charge was dropped to manslaughter and al-Jabr was sentenced to just ten-and-a-half years in jail for killing her and burning her body before hiding in the desert outside Doha. She and her husband Kevin, 62, believe he was released in the months leading up to the 10th anniversary of his crime and is enjoying his freedom. The couple fear he could easily run into Lauren's friends who still live in the capital - or worse, he could kill again. In the months before her death, Lauren had been thinking about moving jobs to another country as she had become 'uncomfortable' living in Qatar. 'She was feeling a little bit apprehensive, there were things she wasn't comfortable with. The school was good, she really enjoyed that. It was other things,' Alison said. When Alison's mother became seriously ill, Lauren had sought to leave the country to visit her, but was denied permission to leave by Qatari authorities. Sadly, the young teacher missed the opportunity to say goodbye and was eventually granted leave to attend her funeral. She flew back to Qatar the day after on October 11 and immediately after arriving back in her flat, her friend suggested they go out for a few drinks. Lauren barely had time to unpack her suitcase and planned to do so the next day. Tragically, she would never get the chance, as later that night she was abducted by al-Jabr and his accomplice, Muhammad Abdullah Hassan Abdul Aziz. The pair had offered to drive Lauren and her friend home after they were unable to find a taxi. The two women were on friendly terms with them both and had no idea of their vile intentions. Lauren's friend was dropped off at her home first, despite living further away than her. Lauren was raped, stabbed multiple times then taken out into the desert where she was burnt beyond recognition. Alison began to worry when she nor Lauren's friends had heard from her. They began a desperate search for the 24-year-old, which sickeningly al-Jabr also joined in with. Her body was eventually found when two falconers noticed something odd when their birds failed to return to them in the desert miles outside Doha. They went to investigate and found Lauren's burned remains with a knife still in her body. Her killer and his accomplice used petrol to set her on fire before fleeing back to the city believing their crime would never be discovered. Al-Jabr was already a suspect - he was the last person to see Lauren alive and had scratches on his face. But Qatar police believed in the adage that a killer always returns to the scene of his crime and staked out the desert spot where Lauren was found. Jabr and his Rayban-wearing accomplice Mohamed Abdallah Hassan Abdul Aziz were arrested when they drove out to the desert to check on their gruesome handiwork. While she may never get any answers, Alison is adamant to shine a light on what she believes to be an example of Qatar's shameful human rights record. She made headlines in 2022 after criticising former England soccer captain David Beckham who was paid tens of millions to back the World Cup in Qatar. Then she wrote to every footballer in the squad along with manager Gareth Southgate asking them to highlight Lauren's death by making an L-shape with their hands on the pitch. She did not receive a reply. But she and Kevin, who live near Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, remain unrelating in the quest for justice for Lauren no matter how long it takes.

UK judge warns of risk to justice after lawyers cited fake AI-generated cases in court
UK judge warns of risk to justice after lawyers cited fake AI-generated cases in court

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

UK judge warns of risk to justice after lawyers cited fake AI-generated cases in court

Lawyers have cited fake cases generated by artificial intelligence in court proceedings in England, a judge has said — warning that attorneys could be prosecuted if they don't check the accuracy of their research. High Court justice Victoria Sharp said the misuse of AI has 'serious implications for the administration of justice and public confidence in the justice system.' In the latest example of how judicial systems around the world are grappling with how to handle the increasing presence of artificial intelligence in court, Sharp and fellow judge Jeremy Johnson chastised lawyers in two recent cases in a ruling on Friday. They were asked to rule after lower court judges raised concerns about 'suspected use by lawyers of generative artificial intelligence tools to produce written legal arguments or witness statements which are not then checked,' leading to false information being put before the court. In a ruling written by Sharp, the judges said that in a 90 million pound ($120 million) lawsuit over an alleged breach of a financing agreement involving the Qatar National Bank, a lawyer cited 18 cases that did not exist. The client in the case, Hamad Al-Haroun, apologized for unintentionally misleading the court with false information produced by publicly available AI tools, and said he was responsible, rather than his solicitor Abid Hussain. But Sharp said it was 'extraordinary that the lawyer was relying on the client for the accuracy of their legal research, rather than the other way around.' In the other incident, a lawyer cited five fake cases in a tenant's housing claim against the London Borough of Haringey. Barrister Sarah Forey denied using AI, but Sharp said she had 'not provided to the court a coherent explanation for what happened.' The judges referred the lawyers in both cases to their professional regulators, but did not take more serious action. Sharp said providing false material as if it were genuine could be considered contempt of court or, in the 'most egregious cases,' perverting the course of justice, which carries a maximum sentence of life in prison. She said in the judgment that AI is a 'powerful technology' and a 'useful tool' for the law. 'Artificial intelligence is a tool that carries with it risks as well as opportunities,' the judge said. 'Its use must take place therefore with an appropriate degree of oversight, and within a regulatory framework that ensures compliance with well-established professional and ethical standards if public confidence in the administration of justice is to be maintained.'

Murdered sheep farmer remembered as loving relative and proud Kerry man
Murdered sheep farmer remembered as loving relative and proud Kerry man

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

Murdered sheep farmer remembered as loving relative and proud Kerry man

A murdered sheep farmer has been remembered as a loving relative and proud Co Kerry man. The town of Kenmare was rocked last month when following the disappearance of Michael Gaine, human remains found on his land were confirmed to be his. Mourners packed Holy Cross Church in the town on Saturday morning to pay their final respects to the 56-year-old and support his family. His remains were brought into the church in a wood box topped with sheep's wool. Speaking on behalf of the family ahead of the funeral service, Mr Gaine's cousin Eoghan Clarke remembered him as a 'proud Kerry man and an even prouder Kenmare man'. He said he will be missed terribly. Mr Clarke said his cousin was known for his incredible work ethic, personality and humour, and was a loving son, sibling and uncle. He recalled his passion for rallying, farming, current affairs, holidays and music. 'As we all know, Michael was generous. Incredibly generous. He had time for everyone and would chip in to help any time and any place,' he said. 'Michael seemed to always find the time to do the work of three men on his own farm, help out friends, family and neighbours, keep up to speed on current affairs and enjoy himself. 'He loved life, he always made the most of it and he truly lived every single moment. Whether you met him during lambing or while on a trip away to a car show or rally event, he always had the iconic twinkle in his eye – the 'I'm delighted to see you', 'I'm in great form', 'let's go and enjoy ourselves' glint in his eye.' He also said that Mr Gaine's wife Janice and sisters knew his soft caring side. 'Caring and affectionate. Kind and considerate. He was not afraid to show his emotions. He was also brave, fearless and strong,' he said. 'We will all miss Michael terribly. I know I'll miss our phone calls the most, as well as that happy feeling that Michael gave you when you were with him. 'He was always the glue that held the Rally of the Lakes weekend together and I will always look back very fondly on our adventures to the best spectating spots in Kerry.' Last month, a man aged in his 50s was arrested on suspicion of Mr Gaine's murder. He was held for questioning for one day before being released without charge from Killarney garda station.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store