
Thug jailed for 8.5 years after assault and car-jacking described as a suicide mission
Father-of-four Dylan Poynton, 27, pleaded guilty at Mullingar Circuit Criminal Court to assault causing harm" to another man
Dylan Poynton
Father-of-four Dylan Poynton, 27, pleaded guilty at Mullingar Circuit Criminal Court to assault causing harm" to another man at an apartment in River Village Athlone, Co. Westmeath on October 13, 2022.
The court heard yesterday/today that Poynton was highly intoxicated in his partner's home and attacked the man by striking him with a bottle.
He followed up by kicking him in the head, "stamping on his face" as he was defenceless. The victim suffered a fractured skull and needed urgent medical attention, but made a full recovery.
Poynton had also admitted violently hijacking a woman's car, dangerous driving and criminal damage on November 14 last year, while out on bail for the earlier assault.
The violent car seizure, described as a "suicide mission", was carried out by Poynton and his accomplice, 21-year-old David Marshall from Newtown Lawns, Mullingar, Co. Westmeath.
Marshall, a father of two, was handed a seven-year sentence in April.
The jobless duo, who never worked consistently and have had drink and drug problems since their early teens, had been "off their heads" at the time,
Detective Garda Conor Murphy told the court that the victim had driven into a car park near Athlone rail station just after 7 am to get a train to Dublin for work.
However, two men in balaclava masks opened the front doors of her Nissan Micra, shouting, "Get out".
Poynton grabbed her and pulled her out, screaming. She tried to get the car keys but was pushed and fell to the ground. She has suffered anxiety, panic attacks, "depression and PTSD since then, attends counselling and was at a loss of €6,500.
Poynton's 24 prior convictions included drugs and assault offences as well as dangerous driving, and he had a two-year road ban already.
In tears, the victim opened up in court and revealed how she held down two jobs and had bought the car and a house, but she no longer drives in the dark and has lost her independence.
The pair took turns driving her car and filmed each other for a series of Snapchat posts, laughing and jeering while blaring music as they sped along the M4 to Dublin.
One video played in court showed the driver holding a beer bottle, and another clip focused on the speedometer at 160 km/h.
The Micra crashed into the wall of a house in Lucan, Co. Dublin, causing €2500 damage to the property. Judge Johnson branded the pair's actions as despicable and said the footage showed a rampage and the worst incidents of dangerous driving he had ever seen.
The two men seemed as if they were on a "suicide mission", and it was a miracle they did not cause carnage during the drive, he remarked.
Their phones were found in the car, and gardaí later unlocked them to recover their Snapchat videos.
Andrew Callan BL told the sentence hearing yesterday that Poynton began abusing cannabis from the age of 11 and then moved onto ecstasy and cocaine addiction while working occasionally in a family business providing marquees. However, he was welcome to return to living with his mother and working with his father upon release.
Yesterday/today, Judge Johnson imposed consecutive three and seven-year sentences but suspended the final 18 months.
Judge Johnson warned Poynton, who showed no emotion during the hearing, that, following his release, he must refrain from using alcohol and illicit drugs, remain on supervised probation, engage in addiction treatment and not reoffend for five years.
Otherwise, the suspended portion of the sentence would be activated.
Dylan Poynton
Today's News in 90 Seconds - July 9th

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The Irish Sun
4 days ago
- The Irish Sun
My beloved cat Morris was mutilated & killed by sick torture cult – how psychos target YOUR pets to abuse in vile videos
A shocking online abuse ring that began in China is now taking root in the UK, with faceless, cowardly thugs charging for horrific torture videos inspired by a notorious killer KITTEN SLAYERS My beloved cat Morris was mutilated & killed by sick torture cult – how psychos target YOUR pets to abuse in vile videos EXCITEDLY opening a video sent from an unknown number, Caroline Prater's heart fluttered as she believed her beloved missing cat Morris had finally been found. Within moments she was 'completely destroyed' as the footage revealed her pet's lifeless body, having been all but decapitated and subjected to hours of torture for the pleasure of a demented online cult. 11 Caroline Prater has been scarred for life by the horrific torture and killing of her 11-year-old cat Morris Credit: SWNS:South West News Service 11 Footage of the beloved pet's mutilated corpse was sent to Caroline and shared amongst ghouls online Credit: SWNS 11 Vile murderer Luke Magnotta is feared to have inspired a growing online cult of cat abusers A shocking new investigation has discovered how thousands of sickos across the world - including Brits and children as young as ten - are sharing videos of cats being mutilated in vile online torture groups. Chillingly, it is claimed the depraved international network is so prolific that an execution or torture video has been uploaded every 14 hours over the space of a year. Among the most chilling discoveries were a three-month-old kitten allegedly impaled by children and another caged cat lowered to its death in boiling water. And now, experts have warned The Sun of potential links between the abominable abuse ring and a famous cat torturer and killer, warning such attacks could even escalate to murder in extreme cases. The sick snuff films are typically created by animal abusers in China, but increasingly police are investigating troubling links to the UK, too, after a spate of animal violence. This week, two Londoners, 16 and 17, who can't be named for legal reasons, were sentenced after cutting and stringing up cats in a grisly scene that involved knives, blowtorches and scissors. Caroline, 55, from Cadbury Heath, Bristol, knows the trauma such attacks can cause all too well after the 'absolutely horrific' videos of her 11-year-old therapy cat were posted to Snapchat for the 'thrill' of viewers. She tells The Sun: 'It's so harrowing. Who in their right minds would do that to an innocent animal. What do they get out of doing it? 'What they did to Morris is still raw nearly six years on. I had to quit my job as an animal therapist because people kept asking where he was and what happened to him. 'It completely destroyed me. You never get over it, I visualise him screaming in my head. The Sun's Alex West confronts murderer Luka Magnotta with photos the killer claims are 'photoshopped' "His head was hanging on by a piece of string. I had to go on tablets because I couldn't cope. 'Torture is going around everywhere. Animals are being skinned alive on social media, why can that be shown? It's horrendous.' '100 kill competitions' Activists from the international charity Feline Guardians Without Borders went undercover to expose the horrors of the cat abuse rings. Ghouls were found to be sharing vile videos for 'thrills' and even receiving payment from other twisted acolytes. Chillingly, UK-based members were found discussing how to adopt kittens from the RSPCA, with one monster posting a picture of an advert of cats for sale, saying they wanted to "torture them so bad", according to the BBC. Feline Guardians discovered 24 active groups this year alone, with the largest boasting more than 1,000 members. The most prolific user is said to have filmed 200 videos. We never found Morris, we don't know what happened to his body, all we found was blood and lots of fur stuck to the road Caroline Prater "I'm 10 years old and I like to torture cats," the member of one of these twisted forums proclaimed. Inside the groups, the discussions were described as 'the depths of evil' by activist Lara, of Feline Guardians, who went undercover. She found posts encouraging users to guess how long a cat could survive without food and others claimed they electrocuted animals to resuscitate them during torture sprees, prolonging their agony. 11 Kittens are being purchased to be tortured online, a new investigation has found Credit: BBC 11 Georgina Barnes and her cat Bubba, who was mutilated by a cat killer Credit: Damien McFadden 11 Murderer Scarlet Blake pictured in a cat-killing video Credit: PA 11 The monster was found guilty last year of murdering Jorge Martin Carreno Credit: PA Another self-proclaimed 'cat-lover community' urged members to 'submit your work' and some only allowed entry if they submitted evidence of them abusing pets. One particularly twisted group held a '100 cat kill competition' in September 2023 to see how quickly they could reach their target. Netflix killer The cases bear worrying similarities to videos filmed by Canadian Luka Magnotta, who was jailed for 25 years in 2014 for the murder of a Chinese lover. After an investigation by The Sun, he was unmasked as the man behind videos online that depicted kittens being killed in chilling ways and was the focus of 2019 Netflix documentary Don't F*** With Cats. His crimes have since inspired 'copycats' including Scarlet Blake, who was jailed in the UK last year after live-streaming herself mutilating a cat just four months before the brutal murder of stranger Jorge Martin Carreno. Teemu Saarenpää, 41, who runs true crime blog Forenseek, interviewed remorseless Magnotta after his conviction and fears these current killers are his 'soulmates'. 'Someone does it first and that opens the doors for others. There may be an epidemic nature to this and unfortunately animal torture seems to be a fetish for those like Magnotta,' he tells The Sun. 'Whether Magnotta directly or indirectly influenced them is tough to say… but the longing to inflict pain on a living being may link them to Magnotta, they may be his 'soulmates' in that sense." 11 Killer Luka Magnotta tortured cats in at least three twisted videos Credit: Collect 11 One of Magnotta's gruesome videos involved a kitten being fed to a python Credit: Netflix 11 The Sun covered the twisted footage shared online by Magnotta Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd When Teemu interviewed Magnotta, he insisted he wasn't an animal abuser, claiming he had been set-up or the videos were fake. The killer's motivation was fame, following failed stints as a model, and Teemu fears his acolytes may crave similar notoriety. He tells us: 'He was unreflective of his deeds and is clearly a wannabe celebrity who wanted to be famous and a glamorous god. 'Because he wasn't able to obtain that fame through any real talent, he decided to become infamous instead.' 'They tortured and killed him' Pet lover Caroline is horrified by the rising popularity of the online cult, especially after the horrors her cat Morris was subjected to in September 2019. Two days after he went missing, she watched the gut-wrenching videos and raced out to where the killing had been filmed - a road just a few doors from her home. 'We never found Morris, we don't know what happened to his body,' she tells us. 'All we found was blood and lots of fur stuck to the road, which I scraped off and still have to this day. 'Morris was absolutely wonderful, very loving, very friendly. He loved everybody. He was a therapy cat who helped children with cancer and adults with dementia. 'I had to give up my job, despite training for four years, because people would ask 'Where's Morris?' I'm still hoping someone comes forward. They tortured and killed him. Someone must know something.' There may be an epidemic nature to this and unfortunately animal torture seems to be a fetish for those like Magnotta Teemu Saarenpää No one has faced justice for the attack and Caroline, now a support worker, claims a further six cat decapitations happened in the area. It's not known whether Morris's killing was linked to the groups in China, but she says it is evidence of an escalating trend of abusing animals for fun and sharing it online. And PETA Vice President Mimi Bekhechi warns it's not just cats that are at risk but humans, too - as those who abuse animals often escalate to killing people. 'Anyone capable of inflicting such violence on a vulnerable animal poses a danger to the whole community if they're not urgently apprehended,' she told The Sun. Johanna Baxter MP, chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group on Cats, agrees that animal torture is often 'a gateway, making future acts of violence easier to rationalise and commit'. Lara, from Feline Guardians, also fears cat abuse rings 'will only continue to expand and get worse' without an urgent crackdown from the Chinese government and law enforcement. It was just an endless scroll of torture videos, one after the other... I felt, 'I just can't watch this'... I had to sort of turn off my brain Undercover Feline Guardians activist "In mainland China, there are no laws that are stopping this,' she told the BBC. 'So that means that abusers and torturers can effectively do what they want and live out these very sadistic fantasies without any consequence. 'These videos are then uploaded, and essentially that's a global problem, because that means that everyone has access to these videos. Children are seeing this.' Since the torture cult's links to the UK have been discovered, the RSPCA and other animal rights groups have called for a clampdown. PETA's Mimi added: 'If anyone hears or knows of a person funding or recording animal torture videos in the UK, we urge you to report them to the police immediately. 'If you are someone buying such a video, you will be found out, and in this country, we will ensure you face the full force of the law.'


Sunday World
31-07-2025
- Sunday World
Man who supplied Irish crime gangs with weapons and ammo faces 14 years in jail
Before the Special Criminal Court today was Mark McCourt (34) The boss of a gun-running ring that supplied weapons and ammunition smuggled by air from America to criminal organisations could face up to 14 years in jail, a court has heard. Before the Special Criminal Court today was Mark McCourt (34), of Edenrieve, Newry, Co Down, who previously pleaded guilty to firearms offences and participating in a criminal organisation's efforts to import restricted weapons. Counsel for the State, Simon Matthews BL said that the Director of Public Prosecutions had placed the offending at the higher end of the scale, which carries a sentence of ten to 14 years. Mark McCourt and the seized weapons News in 90 Seconds - Thursday, July 31 The matter has gone back to November 3 next for sentencing, with the accused remanded in custody. When McCourt appeared before the Special Criminal Court earlier this week, a senior garda said in evidence to the three-judge court that he was 'fully satisfied' that there was a criminal organisation in existence under the 'control and direction' of McCourt 'whose function was the importation of firearms components from the USA to Ireland, and the reassembly of these restricted firearms for onward distribution to other criminal organisations'. Seized weapons Det Insp McCartan said McCourt had already been identified in connection with the suspected importation of firearms when the defendant was arrested for something else on 24 May 2024 and had his phone seized. Gardaí were able to extract data from the phone shedding light on the activities of the smuggling ring in the preceding year, along with conversations with prospective customers in messages on Signal, WhatsApp and Snapchat, the witness said. Det Insp McCartan said McCourt and his co-accused both flew to Las Vegas, Nevada on three occasions in April and May 2023. The witness told the court that in one text message, McCourt told one prospective customer -- who used the alias 'The Keeler' – that '€75k cash is [the] best price' for a number of firearms, adding: 'I'll throw in the 10 pipes for free.' Det Insp McCartan said: 'It's my belief that refers to pipe bombs.' He told the court the defendant has some 42 previous convictions including assault causing harm, theft, and dangerous driving 'on the high end'.


Irish Daily Mirror
31-07-2025
- Irish Daily Mirror
Youth took money off man, threatened to kill him and then went to his bedroom
A teenager has been given two years detention for the false imprisonment of another young man. Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard that the 17-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, pleaded guilty to false imprisonment with other counts to be taken into consideration at a location in Dublin on June 15, 2023. He was aged 15 at the time of the offending and had ten previous convictions from the Children's Court, including seven convictions for theft, one for attempted robbery, one for assault causing harm and one for production of a knife. He was also on bail at the time of this offending. Detective Garda John Hayes from Blanchardstown Garda Station told Stephen Montgomery BL, prosecuting, that a young man then aged 19 was travelling on a bus in the Clonsilla area of Dublin in May 2023. Neither the accused or the victim were known to the other. The detective told the court that the accused was larger in stature than the injured party. When the victim got off the bus, he was followed by the teenager, who started a conversation with him and broke his glasses. The accused then ordered the injured party to walk to a nearby shop and instructed him to withdraw €50 from an ATM. The teenager then threatened the victim to keep this a 'secret'. The court heard that a week later, the victim was on the bus again, and the teenager sat behind him and put his hands around his neck and told him to be quiet. They got off the bus together, and the teenager took the victim's iPhone 13, worth € 1,300. The teenager then added the victim as a friend on Snapchat. Det Gda Hayes told the court that the victim received a message on June 15, 2023, from the teenager, who told him to meet him with his bank card, which he did. The teenager brought the victim to an apartment where he produced two knives and told the victim he was going to kill him and slice him. The Irish Mirror's Crime Writers Michael O'Toole and Paul Healy are writing a new weekly newsletter called Crime Ireland. Click here to sign up and get it delivered to your inbox every week He also instructed the victim to remove his clothing, as he would have to burn it. The injured party did not take his clothes off, but his backpack was searched, and his driver's licence with his address on it was taken. The court heard that the victim was then brought to his own home by the teenager, who disposed of one of the knives en route. While in the injured party's house, the teenager threatened to harm the family dog if he didn't 'put it out of the way'. The teenager searched the victim's bedroom and took a Nike tracksuit, an Under Armour top, Nike runners, a PlayStation, and a camel jacket, all with a total value of € 1,751. The teenager then made the victim transfer €500 from his Revolut account to one of the injured party's friends' accounts, as he did not have a Revolut bank card. He told his friend to meet him in a local shopping centre, and the defendant, the victim and the victim's friend went to multiple ATM's while withdrawing €460 in total. The teenager then left with the cash and the items taken earlier from the victim's house. Later that evening, the victim told his mother and showed her the knife left behind by the teenager. They went to the gardai, and the victim showed them the apartment he had been taken to. CCTV footage from the shopping centre and footage from the Ring doorbell of the victim's home were obtained, and the defendant was identified. He was interviewed on two occasions. None of the money or belongings were recovered. A victim impact statement was submitted to the court and read by the prosecuting counsel. It outlined how the victim quit his job in case the teenager came back. He was also afraid that the defendant would come back to his home and described that he was in 'fear for his parents'. He said he was always 'looking over his shoulder' and said he 'can never relax on public transport'. He still has trouble sleeping. Padraig Dwyer SC, defending, said his client was forthright with the Probation Services and is apologetic, showing empathy towards the victim in his case. He stated that his client has taken responsibility for his actions and told the probation officer that he deserves a prison sentence. Counsel said his client was 15 at the time of the offending. He said that his client's parents do not condone this behaviour and are very pro-social people. He said his client 'self-reports that he has used cannabis but is now self-reporting that he is clear at present. He said his client is expressing regret for his actions. On Thursday, Judge Martina Baxter noted the defendant had two knives with him and the 'brazenness' of going to the victim's home. 'It wasn't as if it was a once-off situation, the judge said. It was clear that the 'fear and threat' was 'pervasive and real,' said the judge. Judge Baxter said she had to have regard for his previous convictions. She said the victim was bullied and traumatised 'while going about his business'. She said a significant factor was that the accused was 15 at the time but noted he was 'back in adverse company'. 'Clearly there has to be an intervention,' said Judge Baxter. She said the aggravating factors were the effects on the victim who is 'constantly in fear', the threats and the menace. In mitigation she took account of his age and that the Children's Act states detention is 'the last resort'. Judge Baxter imposed two years detention on him. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.