A THUG who hijacked a Donegal woman’s jeep with her nine-year-old child still in the back seat hasn’t been given a single extra day behind bars.
Bernadette Moran (37), is the wife of the Donegal football team doctor, Letterkenny based Kevin Moran.
She was in Dublin last August with her three children for an All-Ireland quarter-final match in Croke Park when Christopher Coakley pulled her out of her jeep and tried to drive away.
He ignored her pleas to let her get her child from the backseat but the woman managed to flee with the child as Coakley was distracted by trying to work the jeep’s controls.
Judge Desmond Hogan sentenced him to three years which is to run alongside a three year sentence he is already serving for a firearms offence. This was backdated to December 5 last when he was taken into custody.
Coakley, 21, of Belvedere Place pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to hijacking the jeep at Mountjoy Square on August 5, 2012.
The court heard he has 92 previous convictions and during his teens he was up before the Children’s Court “two or three times a week”.
The judge said he was not going to impose a consecutive sentence as Coakley “is still a young man” but warned that this shouldn’t be seen as a precedent. He also imposed 12 months post release supervision.
Garda Carl Byrne told prosecuting counsel Martina Baxter BL that Ms Moran had stopped the jeep and was waiting as two of her children played in the park across the road.
She looked in the rear-view mirror and saw someone running towards her. Coakley then pulled open the door and told her to “get the f**k out”. Ms Moran was able to grab her phone before getting out of the jeep.
Coakley got in the driver seat and was trying to operate the gears as Ms Moran pleaded with him to let him get the nine-year-old child from the backseat. She later told gardai she was praying that her other children wouldn’t return from the park during the incident.
Coakley was trying to accelerate with the handbrake on and there was black smoke coming from the exhaust. Ms Moran used the opportunity to get the child seconds before the jeep sped off.
The vehicle was found abandoned shortly afterwards and a fingerprint on the door led to Coakley’s arrest the following month.
Coakley’s mother, Paula Johnson, said she is “so ashamed and sorry for the woman and her children.” She tearfully told the court her son needs residential treatment for his drug abuse because “this is no life for anyone.”
Defence counsel Lorcan Staines BL said Coakley was one of the most problematic youths the State has dealt with. He offered his client’s apologies to the victim and said that Coakley accepts a significant jail term is unavoidable.