Gorey Guardian

Couple plead guilty to drugs, theft and public order charges

-

A COUPLE now living together in emergency accommodat­ion had prosecutio­ns for various offences finalised by Judge Gerard Haughton when he sat at the District Court in Wexford.

Solicitor Tim Cummings represente­d both Sharon O’Brien (40) and Shane Reville (42).

Ms O’Brien’s past addresses included Thornberry House, Irishtown, New Ross and 24 Oaktree Heights, Castlebrid­ge

Reville lived previously at 65 College Green, Summerhill in Wexford Town.

She faced public order charges while he stood accused of drugs possession.

Mr Cummings noted that the charges were not related but that his clients came before the court as a couple.

They had been homeless but now had accommodat­ion provided to them on an emergency basis, pending a move to somewhere more permanent. All offences were admitted. In January of last year, the female accused removed €206 worth of clothes without paying from TKMaxx in Wexford, most of which were recovered.

The court learned how Ms O’Brien was found very intoxicate­d at the Maldron Hotel in Wexford one evening in May of last year.

Her room at the hotel had been paid for but she was arrested there after she was discovered in a sitting room, her speech slurred and in a very upset condition.

A couple of months later, gardaí called to Oyster Lane in Wexford where the same woman was seen so intoxicate­d she was unable to stand.

On January 17, officers arrived in Aldi to deal with the defendant after she began throwing kindle sticks and magazines around the shop when she was refused service as she attempted to buy alcohol.

On February 5, she was arrested once more as she was again discovered in an intoxicate­d state, this time at SubWay.

Mr Cummings noted that Ms O’Brien was now taking a culinary skills course and stressed that she had not come to recent garda attention.

A six month sentence was handed down for theft, suspended once Ms O’Brien comes up with €26.99 compensati­on due to TKMaxx.

Shane Reville came to the attention of gardaí back in April of 2015 after a syringe was found in the toilet of Burgermac in Enniscorth­y.

They tracked him down in the vicinity and seized a bag containing 460 yellow diazepam tablets.

The same drug was uncovered in February of the following year during a search of the place where he was staying.

As well as the €2,700 worth of diazepam which the defendant had for sale, the search uncovered bottles of ketamine worth €1,400 for his own use.

It appeared that the drugs had all been imported on line.

Again the solicitor pointed out that his client had not come to the attention of the gardaí in recent times.

Reville was now drug free after completing a detox programme, the court was told.

He was working with probation staff and with the Cornmarket Project.

The judge accepted that the defendant had made substantia­l strides towards sorting himself out.

The serious amount of drugs involved was marked with the recording of a nine month jail sentence, which was suspended.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland