Bray People

Man feared he’d be shot by car thieves

DUBLIN MAN GIVEN A THREE-YEAR TERM FOR VIOLENT CAR-JACKING

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driver out of his van, the court heard.

Thomas was previously sentenced at Wicklow Circuit Criminal Court for the second car-jacking and received a sentence of three years, with one suspended.

Last Thursday, June 30, Judge John Aylmer imposed the same sentence, to run alongside the sentence he is serving. He said the car-jacking at Shankill was the more serious of the two.

Mr Brown said he was in fear for his life. The court heard he ran away in a zig-zag fashion to avoid a bullet and ended up hiding in bushes until he heard his attackers driving off.

The victim suffered nightmares for a time after the attack.

Garnet Orange SC, defending, said this was a utterly chaotic and drunken spree by two men who were simply looking for a mode of transport. Detective Garda Stephen Ryan agreed that the vehicles were not used as part of any other crimes and said he didn’t think the men ever had a gun.

He told Karl Finnegan BL, prosecutin­g, that the victim was driving from Ashbourne at 2 a.m. to collect his son from Dun Laoghaire. He missed his exit and ended driving down a slip road for Bray where he met a man running at the car waving his arms.

The man had a horse bridal in his hand and Mr Brown thought he might be in difficulty with his horse. He stopped to offer help and Thomas reached in and grabbed the car keys out of the ignition.

Thomas dragged Mr Brown out of the car and struck him. A second man hit him on the back of the head causing him to collapse.

Mr Brown said he heard somebody shout: ‘He’s seen our faces, you can’t let him go, shoot him.’

Mr Orange said his client was genuinely sorry for his actions that night. After his arrest in Arklow he asked about Mr Brown’s condition.

Counsel said his client had suffered from drug abuse problems in the past but was now highly motivated in having a drug-free life. IRISH women love a bargain. It doesn’t matter that we don’t need it, or that just because there’s 20% off the size 8 jeans when you’re a 12 and they still cost €200 doesn’t actually make it a bargain, we perceive it as such.

And we love to brag about it. When someone compliment­s an Irish woman on her outfit she’ll never say ‘Oh God thanks! It was €250 in Brown Thomas!’ But if she paid a tenner for it in Penneys, she’ll tell the whole world!

I am no exception. I am Irish, I am a woman, therefore I love a bargain.

Unfortunat­ely having returned from holidays last year with ten handbags I was warned this time round that our marriage might not survive if I did the same again.

And I kept my word for the first few days. I was as good as gold. But on the fourth night, sitting on the terrace of a restaurant I spotted a queue gathering on the pavement outside. A Lucky Lucky Man was spreading his wares out and whatever he was selling was drawing a crowd of excited women.

I abandoned my steak and told Himself I’d be back. When I got outside there was a gaggle of women, ALL Irish squeezing their feet into a vast array of Nike runners.

They were like vultures, snapping up the runners in every colour and elbowing each other out of the way. The woman in front of me from Dublin was buying six pairs for the grandkids, ‘ they’re only €20 each!’

I chose a pair for me and The Youngest. Next thing I’m grabbed by the scruff of the neck. The teenager practicall­y has me in a headlock. ‘Dad says you’re not to buy anything,’ he says trying to drag me back to the restaurant.

Mr Lucky Lucky Man suddenly jumped in front of us. ‘Ah ah Boy that is your mama! You do not treat her like that!’ I decided to take full advantage of the situation. ‘You heard the man. Let go of me!’ I wriggled out of his grasp and stubbornly bought my runners.

‘He wanted €40 but I got him down to €35,’ I said proudly on my return. They’re both giving me the evil eye. They examine the runners intently. The teenager starts to laugh. Then Himself starts to laugh. Soon they are in hysterics. ‘What’s so funny?’ I demanded. The Teenager is clutching his side. ‘ The Nike tick is facing the wrong way round!’ Crap. ‘And the soles are plastic. You’d kill yourself if you ran in them.’

I hadn’t actually planned on running anywhere in them but that was besides the point.

‘Well I still think they’re lovely and they were a bargain,’ I said rubbing the side of the shoe. The Nike tick peeled off in my hand. Double crap. Should’ve stuck to fake handbags!

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