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Suspended sentence for Irish road rage driver who deliberately rammed cyclist

“He was intemperate and probably in a temper” said judge

A motorist who deliberately drove into a cyclist in Dublin five years ago has been spared jail. One witness described Sean Kearns’ driving as “beyond dangerous”.

The Irish Times reports that on August 27, 2014, cyclist Marcelo Valencia was closely passed by Kearns on Drimnagh Road, Crumlin, only to catch up with the driver again at the next set of lights.

Valencia pulled in front of the car and turned to get a look at the driver. Kearns saw him do this and “got very angry”.

When the lights turned green, Kearns drove straight into the cyclist, who was thrown into the air and landed on his head and shoulders. He was helped by passers-by, but Kearns drove away.

Afterwards, the car was traced. Kearns admitted to gardai he’d been driving the vehicle at the time, but denied hitting Valencia.

Appearing at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court this week, Kearns pleaded guilty to endangerment. A civil claim had previously been settled out of court with Valencia receiving compensation.

Kearns has six previous convictions, including one for dangerous driving in 2005.

Defending, Keith Spencer BL said that Kearns was suffering from depression at the time. “It was done in the spur of the moment, in a rush of blood to the head.”

Bizarrely, Spencer also saw fit to mention that Kearns was a keen golfer who had shown great promise in his youth and hoped to get back into the sport.

Judge Martin Nolan said that “the reference to golf didn’t help him,” but suspended a three-year sentence, citing as mitigating factors that Kearns had worked hard as a welder since the incident took place and had a good work history.

He also ordered Kearns to pay Valencia €10,000 within two years.

Nolan said Kearns had been “intemperate and reckless” when he drove into Valencia. “He was intemperate and probably in a temper,” he added.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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16 comments

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Shades | 4 years ago
2 likes

If you're going remonstrate with a motorist. make sure you have an 'escape plan' if they decide to turn nasty.  I can recall 2 occasions where I've had to duck down an alley (car spent a couple of minutes hunting for me) or a quick hop onto the pavement (car gave up).  If it's a 'nutter' in a large metal box, it could end badly.

Avatar
Burke replied to Shades | 4 years ago
1 like

Shades wrote:

If you're going remonstrate with a motorist. make sure you have an 'escape plan' if they decide to turn nasty.  I can recall 2 occasions where I've had to duck down an alley (car spent a couple of minutes hunting for me) or a quick hop onto the pavement (car gave up).  If it's a 'nutter' in a large metal box, it could end badly.

I agree completely. You wouldn't antagonize a lunatic with a machete, so I don't see why you'd get in the face of an idiot driver. Either weapon can kill you in a heartbeat. The only difference is that the driver won't think he's done anything wrong.

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mattsccm | 4 years ago
0 likes

Crackers.

I assume that the poster above lives in some city where private cars are not needed. Such a situation in rural areas is just impossible nowadays. 

Also I don't feel that professional drivers are any better than anyone else. Almost all of the near misses and crap driving I see  come from those who drive for living. Bus driver, lorry driver, bloody taxis, delivery men in vans. Lethal.

Final the implication that a gun is dangerous is thoughtless and offensive. In our country a motor vehicle is many times more likely to be the instrument of death than a gun. For one thing the ownership is less well policed. 

Avatar
FluffyKittenofT... replied to mattsccm | 4 years ago
1 like
mattsccm wrote:

Crackers.

I assume that the poster above lives in some city where private cars are not needed. Such a situation in rural areas is just impossible nowadays. 

Also I don't feel that professional drivers are any better than anyone else. Almost all of the near misses and crap driving I see  come from those who drive for living. Bus driver, lorry driver, bloody taxis, delivery men in vans. Lethal.

Final the implication that a gun is dangerous is thoughtless and offensive. In our country a motor vehicle is many times more likely to be the instrument of death than a gun. For one thing the ownership is less well policed. 

Crackers yourself, at least on that last paragraph. Which makes no sense, even on it's own terms - it contradicts itself.

( Also, with your first point, I tend to assume any general statement is referring to urban areas, because in this country hardly anyone lives in rural areas. If you live the rural idyll in the middle-of-nowhere I don't really care what you do, as long as you don't drive into my city)

Oh, and even your second point doesn't really address the point. I agree that a lot of 'professional' drivers are awful (taxi drivers in particular, though drivers of the largest vehicles are often at least a little-bit better trained) the point is how essential - and _potentially_ well-regulated - the driving is, not how good it is.

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hawkinspeter replied to mattsccm | 4 years ago
5 likes

mattsccm wrote:

Crackers.

I assume that the poster above lives in some city where private cars are not needed. Such a situation in rural areas is just impossible nowadays. 

Also I don't feel that professional drivers are any better than anyone else. Almost all of the near misses and crap driving I see  come from those who drive for living. Bus driver, lorry driver, bloody taxis, delivery men in vans. Lethal.

Final the implication that a gun is dangerous is thoughtless and offensive. In our country a motor vehicle is many times more likely to be the instrument of death than a gun. For one thing the ownership is less well policed. 

Sorry, I don't see how it's offensive to consider that a gun is dangerous. It seem fairly clear to me that a gun is fundamentally a weapon and is designed specifically to be dangerous. Yes, a lot of guns these days are used for sport/target shooting which isn't particularly dangerous, but those guns can still cause injury if mishandled.

You could just as well say that nuclear warheads aren't dangerous as in my country a motor vehicle is many times more likely to be the instrument of death than a nuclear warhead.

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hobbeldehoy | 4 years ago
1 like

I'm increasingly coming over to the idea  often vaunted by environmentalists that motorized transport should be limited to professional applications. Those would be transportation of goods, passenger transport and emergency services. Cars are no less dangerous than guns in certain hands and in many ways more dangerous than guns .

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Glov Zaroff | 4 years ago
0 likes

There's a facebook page dedicated to getting Judge Martin Nolan to resign. Shitty sentencing  is his forte. 

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clayfit | 4 years ago
0 likes

Call me soft, if you like, but this is a good outcome for society.

He's still in a job, he's not costing tens of thousands each year in prison, where he would not have learned to be a better human anyway.  The money he has to pay will ensure that he's on an existence minimum for several years.  I'm assuming that he'll be banned from driving for a while- although this should be a forever ban.

But my guess is that keeping his nose clean will be quite difficult, so he'll end up doing the time anyway.

Avatar
FluffyKittenofT... replied to clayfit | 4 years ago
0 likes

clayfit wrote:

Call me soft, if you like, but this is a good outcome for society.

He's still in a job, he's not costing tens of thousands each year in prison, where he would not have learned to be a better human anyway.  The money he has to pay will ensure that he's on an existence minimum for several years.  I'm assuming that he'll be banned from driving for a while- although this should be a forever ban.

But my guess is that keeping his nose clean will be quite difficult, so he'll end up doing the time anyway.

 

No mention of a driving ban in the report.  I hope that doesn't mean there wasn't one, but I don't see that one can assume that there was.  (It does mention that he has six previous convictions including one for dangerous driving, so yeah, he should probably be banned from driving for life at ths point.)

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racyrich replied to clayfit | 4 years ago
0 likes

clayfit wrote:

Call me soft, if you like, but this is a good outcome for society.

He's still in a job, he's not costing tens of thousands each year in prison, where he would not have learned to be a better human anyway.  The money he has to pay will ensure that he's on an existence minimum for several years.  I'm assuming that he'll be banned from driving for a while- although this should be a forever ban.

But my guess is that keeping his nose clean will be quite difficult, so he'll end up doing the time anyway.

As you surmise, he'll almost certainly end up doing time eventually.

So how you think this is a good outcome for society is beyond me. A good outcome for society is one where this tosser does not make a victim of yet another innocent person. 

So the correct outcome is one that removes him from society. Preferably permanently.

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danhopgood replied to racyrich | 4 years ago
0 likes

 

"So the correct outcome is one that removes him from society. Preferably permanently."

Really?  At £38,000 + a year?  For what, 40 years?   At today's money £1.5m plus.  I'd rather spend money on avoiding the problem in the first place, which I agree is not simple.

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racyrich replied to danhopgood | 4 years ago
0 likes
danhopgood wrote:

 

"So the correct outcome is one that removes him from society. Preferably permanently."

Really?  At £38,000 + a year?  For what, 40 years?   At today's money £1.5m plus.  I'd rather spend money on avoiding the problem in the first place, which I agree is not simple.

If it's your nearest or dearest he runs over next you might think 1.5m was worth spending.
What price a life?

Personally i'd permanently remove him, and thousands more like him, very very cheaply. But that's no longer allowed as it actually works.

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growingvegtables replied to clayfit | 4 years ago
0 likes

clayfit wrote:

Call me soft, if you like, but this is a good outcome for society ... 

 

NO.  Not ever.  NEVER.

 

FFS - the b@st@rd STILL has a job? 

I wonder how long the cyclist will hold on to HIS career path?  Cut short, changed, diminished ... by a see-you-next-Tuesday who DGAF.

But see-you-next-Tuesday has his "career-path" protected.  

 

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vonhelmet | 4 years ago
1 like

Scum.

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dobbo996 | 4 years ago
2 likes

Replace 'car' with 'machete' as the weapon of choice and this short-fused thug would be looking at the world through bars right now.    

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The _Kaner | 4 years ago
4 likes

So, I can go around assaulting people (with a large fecking weapon) because I'm in a bad mood?
And expect the courts to be (as) lenient with me, as long as I can show them my 35 year work record is exemplary (which it currently is)....
Noice!

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