Irish Daily Mail

Court increases jail term for Tinder rapist

- By Natasha Reid

TINDER rapist and serial sex offender Patrick Nevin has had his 12-year jail term increased by two and a half years after the State appealed the undue leniency of his sentence.

The Court of Appeal described the impact on each of his victims as ‘nothing short of devastatin­g’.

The now 38-year-old attacked three women he met on Tinder during their first meetings in the space of 11 days in July 2014.

The computer programmer had pleaded guilty to raping one woman at Bellewstow­n, Co. Meath that July 12, and to sexual assault four days later of a second woman at an unknown place in Co. Meath.

The father-of-two, previously of Meadowland­s Court, Mounttown Road, Dún Laoghaire and Dundalk, Co. Louth, had been due to stand trial at the Central Criminal Court.

However, he changed his pleas to guilty following a legal ruling, which would allow the prosecutio­n to introduce evidence from the third woman describing sexual assault by Nevin on a first date.

Justice Eileen Creedon imposed a 14-year sentence on the rape charge and an eight-year sentence on the sexual assault charge. Both were to run concurrent­ly, with the final two years suspended.

The rapist had already been sentenced to five and a half years in prison for the sexual assault of his third Tinder victim at the UCD campus on July 23 that year. Nevin appealed that conviction, but subsequent­ly withdrew it.

Cathleen Noctor SC on Thursday appealed the undue leniency of the 14-year sentence for the other cases on behalf of the DPP.

She submitted to the Court of Appeal that the judge had erred in failing to identify an appropriat­e starting point at a significan­tly higher level than the 15 years she set before considerin­g mitigation.

Ms Noctor said that the judge had not considered a number of aggravatin­g factors including a campaign of offences just days apart, his tricking the victims into positions of vulnerabil­ity by driving them in his car to remote locations, the fact that he had carried out the attacks while under a suspended sentence for possession of a firearm and his premeditat­ion.

Ms Noctor submitted that, as these were individual offences, the judge should have either given a greater sentence or imposed some degree of consecutiv­e sentencing.

Michael Bowman SC made counter-arguments on behalf of Nevin.

He referred to Nevin’s tricking of the women into positions of vulnerabil­ity by having them get into his car. He noted that they had not been taken against their will.

Judge Isobel Kennedy, who sat with Court President Judge George Birmingham and Judge Úna Ní Raifeartai­gh, delivered an extempore judgment yesterday.

‘The impact on each is nothing short of devastatin­g,’ she said of his victims.

She noted that Nevin had received a net sentence of 12 years in prison and said that the judge had erred in identifyin­g 15 years as the pre-mitigation sentence.

The court did not intervene on the eight-year sentence for the sexual assault, but substitute­d a 10-year sentence on the rape charge.

Justice Kennedy explained that, although they were reducing the sentence for the rape, they were making both sentences consecutiv­e, resulting in an indicative sentence of 18 years.

They suspended the final three and a half years of that 18 years, bringing Nevin’s net sentence up from 12 years to 14 and a half years.

‘Impact on victims is devastatin­g’

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