The Gold Coast Bulletin

Jail over ‘ice attack’

Man’s jaw broken in nightclub punch

- LEA EMERY lea.emery@news.com.au

A MECHANIC punched a man so hard in the jaw it broke it in two places.

Why? Because he thought the victim was throwing ice cubes while in a Surfers Paradise nightclub.

The early morning onepunch attack in The Bedroom Lounge Bar on May 19 last year means Thomas Spurgeon Nichols will be in prison until just before Christmas.

The 43-year-old pleaded guilty in the Southport District Court on Wednesday to grievous bodily harm.

Judge Katherine McGinness sentenced him to twoand-a-half years prison to be released on parole on December 23.

“This was a significan­t blow to the complainan­t who was seated in the nightclub and it had a significan­t impact on him,” she said.

Crown prosecutor Gary

Churchill said the 29-year-old victim was sober when he went to meet a friend at The Bedroom Lounge Bar about 1.30am to discuss picking up a computer.

He was having a non-alcoholic drink when a friend and Nichols was in a group nearby.

Nichols thought the victim’s group was throwing ice at him.

“(Nichols) approached and struck him with a right hook,” he said.

“He fell forward and his jaw was broken and his mouth began to fill with blood.”

The court was told the man’s jaw was broken on the right side near the chin and on the left side near his ear.

Nichols was too intoxicate­d to be interviewe­d by police that night.

“Whether (Nichols’) belief about the ice cubes was correct or not is immaterial,” Mr Churchill said.

Defence barrister Marty Longhurst said Nichols was in the nightclub celebratin­g his son’s 18th birthday party.

He said there was some animosity with the group which had been sitting where the victim was.

Mr Longhurst tendered a letter of apology to the court.

He also said Nichols, a mechanic, had offered to pay $3000 in compensati­on.

Judge McGinness said she would not order compensati­on because Nichols was serving time in prison.

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