logo
Van ram man jailed for punching driver and smashing her partner's car vows to clear name

Van ram man jailed for punching driver and smashing her partner's car vows to clear name

Sunday World7 hours ago

Attacker claimed someone slashed tyres and scraped vehicle before he was beaten by woman's partner and another man after vicious assault
A man jailed for repeatedly punching 'Ulster's angriest driver' and ramming her partner's car through a fence has vowed to clear his name.
Paul Dunstan was pictured arriving at Downpatrick courthouse on Friday where he launched his appeal against his conviction and seven-month jail sentence for assaulting his former neighbour Tammy Sparkes.
Sparkes was dubbed the country's angriest driver earlier this year when she appeared in court to face her THIRD shocking road rage attack – none of which had anything to do with Mr Dunstan.
Those hat-trick of separate incidents saw the 29-year-old mum tear clumps of hair from a terrified woman, punch a police officer, repeatedly kick-a-car causing almost £2,000 worth of damage and grab a neighbour by the hair while driving her car – dragging the woman along.
Paul Dunstan
News in 90 Seconds - June 20th
But last month she gave evidence as the victim of an attack by Paul Dunstan of Drumglass Avenue in Bangor after the 43-year-old went berserk after someone slashed the tyres of his van and scraped the side of the £40,000 vehicle.
The pair lived beside each other for three years in Loverock Close in Bangor and had not got on well together.
Dunstan, who had 17 previous convictions, claimed he reacted after discovering someone had stabbed his tyres and keyed his car – something Tammy Sparkes and Stephen Elliott say had nothing to do with them.
Footage was shown to the judge at Ards Magistrates' Court which showed Dunstan, who ironically runs a car body repair business, repeatedly ramming Stephen Elliott's Peugeot 208 car – forcing it back over 30 yards through a corrugated iron fence and into the back garden of another house.
CCTV captures the altercation between Paul Dunstan, Stephen Elliott and Tammy Sparkes
CCTV footage
CCTV footage
Dunstan is seen in an altercation seconds later with Tammy Sparkes who went over to the van to remonstrate with him.
During the tussle he's seen swinging and connecting with several punches on Sparkes.
Her partner Stephen Elliott, who owned the car rammed by Dunstan, then intervenes and is seen repeatedly punching Dunstan in what he told the court was an act of self-defence and sticking up for his partner.
The Sunday World obtained the full video footage, taken by a neighbour across the road, which Mr Dunstan believes shows he was not the only person who should have been in court.
'Look, I know what I did was very wrong,' said Paul Dunstan on the steps of Downpatrick Court.
'I shouldn't have rammed the car like that but I was under major stress at the time because both my parents had been in and out of hospital and I needed the van for work and to go to hospital.
'When I discovered someone had slashed my tyres and scraped the van – causing thousands of pounds of damage – I lost it.
'But what happened afterwards was not all one-sided. I never wanted a fight. Tammy grabbed me out of the van and had me by the throat. I couldn't get free. I was swinging to get free. I know that part of the video didn't look good but there's context to it all. I'm not a violent person.'
He says he accepts he was guilty of careless driving but say he was beaten excessively before the police were even called.
'Watch the video – Stephen Elliott punches me repeatedly until I hit the pavement. I'm knocked unconscious and then both of the them continue to kick and punch me. I had no idea what was going on. I'm lying there for ages.
'Watch the video – Tammy comes back and can be seen taking photos of me lying there on her phone then she starts hitting me with her phone.'
Paul Dunstan
And the video shows two more males, who appear to arrive from the back garden Dunstan has just deposited Beattie's car, who remonstrate with a prone Dunstan.
One of these men is then seen delivering a sickening kick to the head of Mr Dunstan who is still lying on the ground.
'There was no need for that level of violence against me. The man who kicked me in the head – I have no idea who he was – wasn't even arrested even though I made a statement to the police,' says Paul Dunstan.
'I have a new legal team and I want the judge to see all of the video. I feel I was discriminated against by the PSNI and the PPS.
'When I was first arrested the police told me they had seen the video and they said it looked like I was the victim in this. I made statements but never heard anything back.
'All I'm saying is I shouldn't have been the only one standing in court. That's why I am going to try and get this overturned.'
Speaking to the Sunday World last month, Tammy Sparkes said: 'It was around 9.30pm when I heard all this revving and screeching and went out to see Paul Dunstan reversing his big van into Stephen's car over and over again.
'He just kept going, the car alarm was going off, and the car was getting forced backwards towards this metal fence.
'He was out of his mind. When I went out he got out of his van he just sat down on the pavement and then he got up and started punching me repeatedly in the head. It was really scary. 'I had a black eye and a concussion as well as cuts and bruises.'
Stephen Elliott told this paper he admitted he punched Dunstan when he came out and saw him attacking Tammy.
'I decked him, of course I did, what else could I do? But then some people came from over the fence from when he'd rammed my car into and they gave him a bad doing.'
The video footage shows only one other man attack Dunstan – the thug who kicked him in the head while he was already on the ground.
Dunstan had contested a charge of dangerous driving but his lawyer said the defendant was admitting careless driving.
He was convicted at an earlier court sitting of charges of dangerous diving, assault, and failing to provide a breath sample.
Judge Magill said at a previous hearing, 'It is obvious that he (Dunstan) launched a determined assault upon the woman. He struck her multiple times with both fists to her head and face'.
The judge said it was 'ludicrous' for the defendant to claim the driving had been careless driving as it was 'obviously dangerous driving' and convicted him of the charges.
A defence barrister said the defendant runs a car body repair shop and the loss of his licence would impact on the business. She said the defendant said his vehicle had been 'attacked' and he reacted. He had 'acted in self-defence'.
Judge Magill said it had been 'utterly appalling behaviour'.
He jailed Dunstan for seven months and banned him from driving for two years as well as issuing a two-year restraining order before releasing him on bail so he could appeal both conviction and sentence.
On Friday at Downpatrick County Court Paul Dunstan had his appeal adjourned until October 17th for contest.
Tammy Sparkes with her partner Stephen Elliott speaking to reporter Steven Moore
In March Tammy Sparkes was handed a three-month sentence, suspended for two years, as District Judge Peter Magill said her behaviour was 'utterly unacceptable' but spared her jail because of her child.
He gave her a year to compensate her latest victim, whose car cost £1,868 to fix, warning that if she did not make a significant hole in the debt, she would go to jail.
Last year, in an unrelated attack, she entered guilty pleas to six offences arising from a minor shunt including careless driving, causing actual bodily harm, causing criminal damage, using disorderly behaviour, assaulting a police officer and breaching a suspended jail sentence.
The driver of a Jaguar, which Sparkes had driven into, told police how she pulled up at the junction but was struck by Sparkes' Audi. When they got out to swap insurance details, Sparkes 'began assaulting her by grabbing her by the hair and pulling out clumps of hair'.
'Officers at the scene looked down and could see a large clump of hair lying on the ground,' the court heard, adding that at the time Sparkes was subject to a suspended sentence imposed in a different court but for a similar offence.
In July 2022 at Newtownards Magistrates Court, Sparkes was handed a four-month prison sentence suspended for three years along with a £400 compensation order after she entered guilty pleas to careless driving and causing actual bodily harm to a woman on May 6, 2021.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ex-Ukrainian soldier sparked security alert at US ambassador's Dublin residence
Ex-Ukrainian soldier sparked security alert at US ambassador's Dublin residence

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Ex-Ukrainian soldier sparked security alert at US ambassador's Dublin residence

"The accused crossed a moat and climbed an eight-foot wall into the property' Former Ukrainian war vet Oleksandr Kucherenko triggered a security alert at the official residence of the US ambassador to Ireland in Phoenix Park, Dublin. Pic credit: Tom Tuite Gardai await confirmation that a former Ukrainian soldier who sparked a security alert at the US ambassador to Ireland's official residence in Dublin has left the country, a court has heard. Oleksandr Kucherenko, 33, claimed to be sight-seeing on June 13 after "wandering" into the grounds and scaling the walled moat and perimeter of the Deerfields residence in Phoenix Park. He pleaded guilty the following day at Dublin District Court to trespassing in a manner likely to place another person in fear. Judge Michele Finan had ordered him to donate to the Red Cross and adjourned his case, with bail and a daily signing on condition. Kucherenko, of no fixed address, had claimed he could give €50 to the humanitarian charity. Otherwise, Judge Finan said she would convict and fine him €200 if he had left the State. She noted yesterday/today that Gardai still had to confirm whether he had gone and was continuing their enquiries. Former Ukrainian war vet Oleksandr Kucherenko triggered a security alert at the official residence of the US ambassador to Ireland in Phoenix Park, Dublin. Pic credit: Tom Tuite News in 90 Seconds - June 20th He did not attend the resumption of his court case, and defence solicitor Niall O'Connor said he had not received further instructions. He consented to a two-week adjournment of Kucherenko's case, which will resume on July 4. At his earlier hearing, Garda Martin Curley said the accused's reply to the charge was, "My behaviour would not have scared anyone; I was not drunk". He had arrived in the country hours before his arrest but intends to leave as soon as possible. A victim impact statement was not required. The court heard the Ukrainian national tripped the perimeter alarm at 3.30pm. Garda Curley said, "The accused crossed a moat and climbed an eight-foot wall into the property." Security personnel detained the former soldier minutes later. Defence barrister Kevin McCrave, instructed by Mr O'Connor, said Mr Kucherenko had been in the Ukrainian army and came to Ireland to visit friends in Claremorris, Co Mayo. He did not address the court but briefed his barrister that he had "just landed, was sight-seeing and taking photographs around the city". Counsel said the man "ended up in Phoenix Park and wandered into the grounds inadvertently", and he was apologetic. The court heard his father also served in the military and was killed in action in the war against Russia, which led to the accused being allowed to leave the army. He hoped to join other family members in Spain. The judge had ordered the accused, who was to stay in hostel accommodation, to sign on daily at a garda station, stay away from the ambassador's residence and have no direct or indirect contact with any of the occupants or by social media. Legal aid was granted.

Dog walker jailed for brandishing knife at asylum seeker in Dublin migrant camp
Dog walker jailed for brandishing knife at asylum seeker in Dublin migrant camp

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Dog walker jailed for brandishing knife at asylum seeker in Dublin migrant camp

He alleged: "This man came around chasing everybody in the place with a knife". A dog walker was sentenced to three months in jail after being convicted of brandishing a knife at an asylum seeker in a Dublin migrant camp. Raymond Lawless, 63, of St Andrew's Court, was found guilty of the production of a knife at Sandwith Street, both in Dublin 2, on May 8, 2023. He denied the offensive weapon charge but was found guilty by Judge John Hughes at Dublin District Court, handed a sentence, and fined €500. In evidence, the complainant said he was an asylum seeker who had been living in a tent in the encampment. He alleged: "This man came around chasing everybody in the place with a knife". Raymond Lawless. Photo: News in 90 Seconds - June 20th He described it as a kitchen knife and recalled Lawless had his small Yorkshire terrier with him. However, he said the accused threatened to return later with two bigger dogs to "chase us back to wherever we came from". The witness said he called gardai to report the man coming into the camp to attack "me and two or three guys". He stated he tried to rescue his friends from Lawless. Cross-examined, he agreed he was intimidated not by the little dog with Lawless but because he said he would come back with two big dogs. Challenged over his knife claim, the defence barrister told the witness that Lawless had a trowel for cleaning up after his dog. "It was a knife", he replied. Garda Alan Cawley obtained CCTV footage from the area and took statements. The video evidence was played during the hearing. Rejecting the accusation when he took the stand, Lawless insisted he just went out to walk his dog and had a small garden trowel to clean up after his pet. He said he vaguely remembered the day and denied having anything on him to frighten anyone. Reacting to the complainant's evidence, Lawless said, "That's a complete lie; I deny that," adamant that he never went around carrying a knife. Questioned by the prosecutor, he confirmed he knew there was a refugee camp there because he lived across the road. He said he no longer had the trowel because the dog had died and got rid of all his pet's things. When told the item looked like a knife, he replied, "It may do, but I was not carrying a knife." He added that he never spoke to anyone in the camp. Judge Hughes did not accept his account and said it was "abundantly clear" in the CCTV footage that he was carrying a silver, chrome, and long knife distinct from a garden trowel. He noted that the accused had one previous conviction for assault causing harm, which led to a Circuit Court imposing an 18-month suspended sentence in 2012. The court heard he had been receiving cancer treatment. Judge Hughes imposed the fine and a nine-month sentence but suspended the final six months on condition he did not reoffend in two years, had no contact with the complainant, stayed away from Sandwith Street, and completed an anger-management course. Lawless was released after lodging appeal bail.

Drug dealer dubbed Albus Dumbledore jailed over cannabis haul
Drug dealer dubbed Albus Dumbledore jailed over cannabis haul

Sunday World

time5 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Drug dealer dubbed Albus Dumbledore jailed over cannabis haul

The judge commended him for writing a 'candid' letter to the court A drug dealer who nicknamed himself 'Albus Dumbledore' has been jailed after he was caught on camera picking up a shopping bag full of cannabis. Jacob Flavin (29) used the name of the famous Harry Potter character on the encrypted communication app, Signal. He was described in court as a 'significant figure' in a five-man gang of drug dealers who sold wholesale amounts of cannabis on Signal, Manchester Evening News reports. Jacob Flavin News in 90 Seconds - June 20th Manchester Crown Court heard how Flavin advertised 500 grams of 'super skunk' for £1,000 on November 3, 2023. He also included a photograph of the product being held in a latex-gloved hand. When his potential buyer said 'leave it with me', the 29-year-old replied, 'Can do nothing but make money. Soon as these main ones land, I will send a list.' Flavin also advertised other kinds of cannabis, including 'Tropical', 'Gelato' and 'Banana' with prices ranging from £2,800 to £3,100 per kilo. He was ultimately caught when undercover police photographed him collecting an Aldi shopping bag that he believed was full of cannabis. Cops were monitoring the gang as part of 'Operation Global'. During his arrest at his deluxe apartment in Salford, Manchester, police seized a Rolex worth between £6,000 and £8,000 as well as small bags of cannabis. Detectives also found menus, price lists and two mobile phones. They also found a ledger with details of debtors and how much they owed. Examination of his mobile phone found he was also involved in the sale of cocaine, heroin and ketamine with other 'unknown conspirators'. It's estimated that the gang were involved in the supply of approximately 180kg of cannabis in a period of seven weeks. Neil Fryman, for the prosecution, told the court that Flavin could be linked to the sale of 3.5kg of cocaine, 2.5kg of heroin and 5kg of ketamine. The court heard that he had six previous convictions for 10 offences, including possession of cannabis with intent to supply, for which he spent nine months behind bars. At sentencing, Judge Sarah Johnson said the damage done to communities by drugs was 'far reaching', adding: "So much of the suffering we see in these courts has its roots in this trade and those who seek to profit from it." She told the court that Flavin had written a 'commendably candid' letter detailing his "first-hand experience of the dreadful consequences of this evil trade". "It appears to be to your eternal shame that you sought to profit from other's misery,' she said. Flavin was handed down nine years in prison after pleading guilty to four counts of conspiracy to supply cannabis, cocaine, heroin and ketamine.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store