The Telegram (St. John's)

Gary Hennessey released from jail

Man who threatened, assaulted sheriff’s officers sentenced to time served

- BY TARA BRADBURY Twitter: @tara_bradbury

Gary Hennessey walked out of provincial court in St. John’s a free man Tuesday, for the first time in 16 months.

Arrested in February 2017 in connection with a series of violent home invasions — and later acquitted of those charges — Hennessey had been in custody waiting to be sentenced on unrelated charges of threatenin­g and assaulting sheriff’s officers and threatenin­g a correction­al officer. Tuesday morning, Judge Colin Flynn sentenced him to time served for those charges, and Hennessey was free within the hour.

The 33-year-old told the court at his sentencing hearing Monday he planned to hop on a plane as soon as he was released and move away from the province with his fiancée, never looking back.

Last November, while making a court appearance, Hennessey threatened a female sheriff’s officer. He later pleaded guilty to that charge and was handed a 75-day jail term. As he was being escorted back to the holding cells in Atlantic Place,

Hennessey saw the same officer and gestured toward her. When the male sheriff’s officer escorting him told him to keep moving and attempted to turn him in another direction, Hennessey attempted to sweep the male officer’s leg out from

under him. The court was told the officer pushed him away and Hennessey pushed back before spitting in the officer’s eye.

In the cells, Hennessey told sheriff’s officers he had a gift in his back pocket: two playing cards, including the ace of spades, which prosecutor Chris Mccarthy said is sometimes referred to as the “death card.” Hennessey told the sheriff’s officers the card was for the female officer he had previously threatened, calling her an insulting name and saying, “If she wants to play, she’s going to have to play the hand she’s dealt.”

Mccarthy said the officer was visibly shaken and deeply disturbed by the incident.

The incident at HMP happened in April 2017 after Hennessey and another inmate refused to go back to their cells after a disturbanc­e on a particular unit. He threatened to beat up the cell, threw toilet water at the door and told correction­al officers he would fight them if they tried to move him. He threatened the life of one male sheriff’s officer in particular, saying the officer had “made it personal.”

When given the chance to address the court Monday, Hennessey apologized for the incidents, and said spitting at the sheriff’s officer was “nothing more than a spur-of-themoment thing.” He spoke of being under stress in prison and not being taken seriously when he asked for help.

Flynn sentenced Hennessey to 355 days in prison for the two incidents, saying the spitting may have been spontaneou­s, but the threat with the playing cards was not.

“It was what I would call very insidious and subtle in nature,” Flynn said of the threat.

Flynn said he recognized the difficulti­es some inmates have in adapting to prison.

“However,” he said, “threats and attempts at intimidati­on are not helpful and will initiate a response from authoritie­s to the threat, as they must do. The same goes for the sheriff’s officers — they do their jobs and they need to be protected by the courts.

“Offences in an institutio­nal setting require condemnati­on by the court.”

Flynn noted Hennessey has a number of prior conviction­s for uttering threats.

With credit given for the time Hennessey has spent on remand, his 355 days have been served and he was released after court was adjourned.

 ?? TARA BRADBURY/THE TELEGRAM ?? Gary Hennessey speaks to family members in a provincial courtroom in St. John’s Tuesday morning after being sentenced to time served for threatenin­g and assaulting sheriff’s officers and threatenin­g a correction­al officer. With the credit he has earned...
TARA BRADBURY/THE TELEGRAM Gary Hennessey speaks to family members in a provincial courtroom in St. John’s Tuesday morning after being sentenced to time served for threatenin­g and assaulting sheriff’s officers and threatenin­g a correction­al officer. With the credit he has earned...

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