Western Mail

‘Frenzied’ knife attack on man teen met online

- JASON EVANS jason.evans@walesonlin­e.co.uk

ATEENAGER stabbed a man he’d met online 14 times with a kitchen knife then lied that he’d been tricked into thinking his victim was a woman, a court has heard.

The reason why Dexter Davies carried out the “frenzied attack” on the man he met on the dating site Grindr remains unknown.

Sending the defendant down for inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent, a judge at Swansea Crown Court told the 18-year-old he was fortunate he was not being sentenced for murder. Davies showed no emotion during the hearing.

James Hartson, prosecutin­g, said in September last year the defendant initiated contact with the profile of a man on the internet dating app. Davies – who was calling himself Danny and claiming to be 18 though he was actually 17 – and the man exchanged messages and met up.

The two males spent time together and engaged in “consensual sexual activity” at the man’s house in Port Talbot. The court heard that at that stage there were no concerns about Davies’s behaviour, the pair seemed to enjoy each other’s company, and they “parted on good terms”.

The prosecutor said the man did not expect to hear from Davies again but eight days later the defendant, using a different profile name on Grindr, contacted him. The pair chatted and it quickly became apparent who the new profile belonged to, and the pair agreed to meet again.

The court heard they once again went to the man’s house and Davies asked the man – who is in his 40s – whether he had handcuffs and a blindfold, items the man did not have. The defendant told the man he had “something in mind” and told him to lay on his front as he pulled the man’s T-shirt up over his head.

The man felt the teenager’s hands on his body and at first thought that the defendant was going to give him a massage, but then he felt a series of what he believed to be punches to his back delivered with “great force”. During the assault Davies remained silent.

The court heard the man was able to get up and turn around and he saw the defendant was holding a large kitchen knife in his hand and appeared “shocked”.

Davies then struck out at the man’s face with the blade.

The victim shouted at Davies and the teenager fled from the property, running into the garden of a neighbouri­ng house, discarding the knife as he did so. Davies told the neighbour he had met a woman who had turned out to be a man and who had tried to stab him, and asked if he could use the phone to ring his mother.

The prosecutor said the claims made by Davies that there had been some kind of “subterfuge” were completely without evidence and were part of an attempt by the teenager to blacken the name of his victim.

Davies answered “no comment” to all questions asked in police interview. Detectives recovered a knife from near the victim’s home and officers examined knives at the defendant’s family home – the recovered knife matched the brand and type of knives found in the house.

Meanwhile the victim had been taken to hospital where medics found 14 stab wounds to the man’s back, shoulders, and face along with other wounds. One of the injuries was a deep wound to the lower back which was just an inch from the spine, and there was another deep wound to the man’s cheek.

In an impact statement from the victim which the prosecutor read to the court the man had no idea why the defendant had attacked him and he was sure that in taking the knife to his house his assailant had intended to use serious or even fatal violence.

The man said he had been left feeling nervous and frightened of being alone, and said that in the aftermath of the attack his house – with its blood stains on the floor – had felt like living in a crime scene. He added that he felt “foolish” for letting the incident happen.

Dexter Davies, now aged 18, of Brynhyfryd Road, Briton Ferry, had previously pleaded guilty to inflicting grievous bodily harm with intent and to possession of a knife when he appeared in the dock for sentencing. He has no previous conviction­s.

Megan Williams, for Davies invited the court to take the “unusual step” in such a case of imposing a youth referral order to allow the work of reducing the risk the defendant poses to begin immediatel­y.

Recorder Mark Powell KC said Davies had carried out a “frenzied attack” on his victim which could have had fatal consequenc­es, and although he had read reports on the defendant the motivation for the “horrendous assault” remained a mystery to him. With a one-third discount for his guilty pleas Davies was sentenced to three-and-a-half years detention in a young offenders institutio­n.

 ?? ?? > Dexter Davies from Briton Ferry stabbed a man he met on Grindr 14 times with a kitchen knife
> Dexter Davies from Briton Ferry stabbed a man he met on Grindr 14 times with a kitchen knife

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