Belfast Telegraph

Burglar facing long jail term for theft at 75-year-old’s home

- BY JOHN CASSIDY

A CO Tyrone man with a “prolific” criminal record has been warned that he faces a “substantia­l custodial sentence” for burgling the home of an elderly woman.

John Patrick Nixon (30), of Castle Hill, Dungannon, had pleaded guilty to one count of burglary and stealing a purse and wallet from his victim’s home.

Dungannon Crown Court, sitting in Belfast, heard that on January 17 this year the 75-yearold lady was at her Kalendra Court home when her son called.

Prosecutio­n lawyer Simon Reid told the court that before leaving the man went out into the garden to turn on his mum’s heating and when he returned he noticed a back door to the house was ajar.

“He saw a male standing with one foot inside the property,” he said.

“He was wearing black woollen gloves who then tried to push past him to get out.”

Judge Stephen Fowler QC heard that the elderly woman and her son along with a neighbour were able to restrain Nixon before police were called and he was arrested.

Nixon tried to claim that the victim’s son had pushed him into the house and also alleged he had gone to the address by mistake to relieve himself.

“The Crown rejects these excuses. The intention was to burgle the property and steal the purse and wallet,” added Mr Reid.

The prosecutor told the court that Nixon had 63 conviction­s on his criminal record which started in 2002 and included 17 offences for burglary, eight of theft and four for robbery.

One of the robbery conviction­s related to a break-in at a parochial house during which he stole £500 in cash, the keys to a priest’s car along with his mobile phone.

Mr Reid said the aggravatin­g features in the case were Nixon’s record, the victim’s age and the fact she lived alone.

A defence barrister told the court that Nixon’s criminal record “doesn’t cover him in glory’’ but added that the defendant had told the probation service in a pre-sentence report that he “doesn’t want to spend any more time in custody” and was prepared to “establish a life for himself out of custody”.

“In the report he voices his regret and he accepts the distress he has caused to the injured party,” the barrister added.

Judge Fowler described Nixon’s criminal record as “prolific” and noted that in 2012 the defendant received a four-year sentence for burglary, with more than half the sentence spent on probation, adding: “And that didn’t do him a lot of good.”

Deferring sentence until later this month, the judge said: “These are serious offences and the defendant should be under no illusion that this will attract a substantia­l custodial sentence given the number of aggravatin­g features.”

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