The Sunday Post (Dundee)

13 YEARS OF ABUSE, SIX VICTIMS BUT NOT A DAY IN JAIL

Women unite to accuse legal system of completely failing them

- EXCLUSIVE By Hannah Rodger

Furious former partners of a serial domestic abuser have spoken out after he escaped jail.

Businessma­n Jamie Doak, left, subjected the three women to a campaign of violence and harassment over 13 years.

Despite a number of previous conviction­s for targeting three other women, he escaped jail with 240 hours of community service.

One of his distraught victims said: “The sentence was an absolute joke. What was the point of going through all of this for absolutely nothing?”

Three women terrorised for years by a serial domestic abuser yesterday voiced anger and disbelief after he was spared jail.

The survivors told of the abuse and violence inflicted by businessma­n Jamie Doak and condemned his sentence.

He had beaten them, pinned them to the ground, threw phones and television­s at them and broke their bones between 2001 and 2014.

Despite being found guilty at Perth Sheriff Court, Doak walked free after being sentenced to community service.

This disgusted his victims, Joanna Chac, Julie Mailer and Joanna Perrett, who demanded fundamenta­l changes in how domestic abuse is investigat­ed and prosecuted.

Doak, a 41-year-old steel firm boss, was found guilty of four out of 11 charges but was sentenced to 240 hours of community service by Sheriff Christophe­r Shead.

The thug had refused to accept his guilt and denied a string of charges, dismissing his victims’ claims as “nonsense”.

But a jury at Perth Sheriff Court found him guilty of four charges of assaulting and injuring the three women.

Yesterday, they united to claim Doak should have been jailed and insist that the courts still do not treat domestic abuse like other violent crime.

We can also can reveal the businessma­n, from Menstrie, has previous conviction­s of harassing at least three other women across Scotland between 2013 and 2015.

Joanna Chac, 36, a waitress who has two children with the abuser, was in a relationsh­ip with Doak between 2008 and 2016, and was subjected to years of physical and mental abuse.

Joanna said: “The sentence is an absolute joke. What was the point of going through all of this for nothing? The justice system has completely failed us.”

Julie Mailer, 35, started a relationsh­ip with Doak when she was just 19 but said he quickly started controllin­g her, and his behaviour turned more violent until they broke up.

The hairdresse­r said: “There is no justice. This is not the first, or even second time he has stood in front of a judge for a similar thing. He is a serial offender, and it is inevitable that this is going to happen again to someone else.

“Compared to what we went through, 13 years of torture, for a few weeks of community service, it’s just hellish.

“Domestic abuse I think is treated differentl­y than other violent crimes. But this was still violence committed against another person. Just because it happened in a house, or against someone who was in a relationsh­ip with him, doesn’t make it any different.

“The public probably have an idea of that because they live in the real world. But the man on the bench doesn’t have a clue.

“It was a jury of his peers who convicted him, but one man who sentenced him.

“A normal person would have been disgusted to the core at what he got.”

Joanna Perrett, 33, first met Doak at a wedding and started a relationsh­ip in 2006.

During that time, she said she was controlled and manipulate­d by Doak and at one stage had her wrist broken.

The animal welfare worker said: “It’s laughable, comparing what we went through to what he got.

“[ We suffered] years of abuse, for him to do 240 hours of work.

“If his was a random person he had attacked, it would be treated completely differentl­y.

“I would still encourage women to come forward and report abuse, but I do feel like we’ve been really let down here.”

In January 2016, Doak was sentenced to 120 hours of community service, as an alternativ­e to custody, after bombarding a Glasgow woman with emails, phoning her and turning up at her house uninvited over eight days in September 2015.

Doak was also told to pay compensati­on to two other women and hit with a £ 440 fine after threatenin­g them at a house in Torryden, Perthshire in August 2013.

He admitted going to the house uninvited, shouting, swearing, and threatenin­g the pair with violence.

Doak also has conviction­s for assaulting a police officer at his former home in Blackford, Perthshire, being in possession of drugs and assaulting someone while on bail.

Scottish Women’s Aid chief executive Dr Marsha Scott said Scotland has a “very long way to go” to improve justice for domestic abuse victims

She said: “There are broader questions and issues here about the justice system and how we respond to domestic abuse.

“At present the tools we have to deal with domestic abuse aren’t good enough. The new law on domestic abuse making its way through the Scottish Parliament has the potential to strengthen these tools and equip our justice system to respond in a way that reflects women’s lived experience of domestic abuse.

“Although we have seen many improvemen­ts over the years, Scotland has a very long way to go in terms of our justice system, but also the way in which our cultures, institutio­ns and attitudes tolerate domestic abuse and other forms of violence against women and children.”

Doak declined to comment when approached at the home he shares with his pregnant girlfriend.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Jamie Doak at his home yesterday
Jamie Doak at his home yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom