Coventry Telegraph

Boxer jailed after ‘cowardly punch’ badly injured man

- By PAUL BEARD & BEN ECCLESTON

A TRAINED boxer punched a man from behind outside a bar leaving him with a fractured skull after smashing his head off the floor.

The victim suffered swelling to his brain and was “lucky” to escape life-changing injuries or even death, a judge said as he jailed the attacker, Iain Thornton, for 20 months.

The “cowardly punch” was thrown by Thornton after James de-silva turned down the challenge of a fight with three other men, saying “I’m not stupid”.

The group then spoke to Thornton who approached Mr de-silva from behind and landed the powerful blow.

Thornton, 22, of Grayswood Avenue, Chapelfiel­ds, Coventry, was jailed at Warwick Crown Court after he admitted a charge of inflicting grievous bodily harm.

Prosecutor Sally Cairns said in February last year Mr de-silva went for a drink with his flatmate because it was the last time he would see her before he was due to fly to Australia.

In the early hours of the following morning he was outside the Moo Bar in Leamington town centre where a CCTV camera showed him talking to three men.

The bar manager, who saw the incident, said they were challengin­g him to fight, but Mr desilva responded by telling them: “There are three of you and only one of me. I’m not stupid.”

So the manager told the three they would not be allowed back in because of their behaviour.

One of them then then went to speak to Thornton, who was on the opposite side of the road but was “agitated” and appeared to be part of their group.

“The defendant then came across the road towards Mr de-silva, who had his back to the road, and swung a punch from behind, striking him to the head and knocking him to the ground,” the prosecutor said.

“He struck his head on the pavement, and the defendant went to hit him again, but was pulled away by a doorman.”

Thornton walked away, but was followed by a CCTV camera operator until he was stopped by the police, and after he was arrested he claimed: “He came at me. He deserved it.”

Meanwhile, Mr desilva was taken to hospital where he was found to have a cut and three fractures to his skull above his left eye.

As a result he was not able to leave for Australia as planned because of swelling to his brain, and it cost him £350 to change his flight.

When Thornton was interviewe­d, he said he could not remember the assault because of the amount he had drunk, but accepted being responsibl­e and said he was a trained boxer and was disgusted by what he had done.

Mrs Cairns added that Thornton had been jailed for 12 months in 2017 for wounding after attacking someone with a glass outside a pub.

James Bruce, defending, said: “The defendant was disgusted with himself, and still is. He knows he is at grave risk of going to prison today.”

But he urged the judge to pass a suspended sentence, pointing out it had been a single blow, although conceding that was because other people had prevented further blows.

He said prior to the incident Thornton had kept out of trouble since his last sentence in 2017, and had not been in any further trouble in the last 14 months.

Mr Bruce added that Thornton suffered from paranoid schizophre­nia and ‘has been focusing on boxing as an outlet for his disorder.’

Jailing Thornton, Recorder Charles Falk told him: “On that night you two were not known to each other, and I can see no provocatio­n or justificat­ion for what you did.

“All he was doing was standing outside a bar at 2am. You were in a group, and that group offered to fight him, and he very sensibly declined. Threeon-one has always been cowardly odds.

“One of that group said something to you, and then you went over the road and you threw a very strong punch to the face from behind.

“It was a cowardly punch because he had no opportunit­y to see it coming or defend himself, and it’s not lost on me that you are a trained boxer, someone who is trained to put all his weight behind a punch.

“This is one of those awful cases where he struck his head on the floor and was knocked unconsciou­s.

“He was lucky to some extent, and you were lucky to some extent, because people who hit their head on the floor can suffer bleeding to the brain and life-changing injuries or even death.”

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