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Successful appeal by drunk, dangerous driver sent to jail for killing a woman and paralysing another

His seven-year sentence looks set to be reduced.

A SEVEN-YEAR sentence imposed on a man who was four times over the limit when he crashed his BMW into a roundabout killing a woman and paralysing her friend was “out of line” with other sentences for dangerous driving, the Court of Appeal has found.

Sean Casey (27), of Cooragannive, Skibbereen, Co Cork, had pleaded guilty to dangerous driving causing the death of Megan Johnston (22) and causing serious bodily harm to Kate Petford (24) who was left paralysed following the crash at Skibbereen on 8 April 2013.

He was sentenced at Cork Circuit Criminal Court to seven years imprisonment and disqualified from driving for 30 years by Judge Seán Ó Donnabháin on 17 February 2014.

Error by judge

Speaking on behalf of the three-judge Court of Appeal yesterday Mr Justice Garrett Sheehan said Casey’s sentence was “out of line with other decided cases”.

Mr Justice Sheehan said the sentencing judge “erred in holding that this was at the absolute apex” of the dangerous driving scale, as had been submitted by Casey’s barrister Thomas Creed SC.

Although “no two cases are the same”, the court considered eight dangerous driving cases which had reached an appeal court. In all but two of the eight cases, sentences of below five years were imposed.

Mr Justice Sheehan said the court wished to give careful consideration to the question of imposing a new sentence and the matter was put back to 19 October.

Forgiveness

Mr Creed submitted an up-to-date victim impact report from the parents of Ms Johnston.

“They feel Sean Casey has served enough time in prison to make amends for what he did,” Mr Creed said.

Mr Justice Sheehan said the generosity of spirit displayed by Ms Petford in such adversity was “a lesson to us all”.

The court did not take up the DPP’s invitation to set guidelines on dangerous driving cases in this particular case.

Jail time

Moving to appeal his sentence last month, Mr Creed said his client always knew, “almost out of a sense of atonement”, that he was going to get a custodial sentence.

However, the sentencing judge put this case at “the very apex” of dangerous driving causing death cases and completely ignored the possibility for rehabilitation, Mr Creed said.

There was no evidence that Casey’s silver BMW was a ‘big powerful’ car, Mr Creed said. It may have been one of the least powerful BMWs available and the same results could have been brought about in a one-litre Ford Focus.

There had been reference to Casey being five times over the limit, Mr Creed said. It was accepted Casey was 4.1 times over the legal limit.

Victim’s loss

Mr Creed said the whole court had been influenced by a very touching and very sad victim impact report from Ms Petford, who was left paralysed following the incident.

It was a palpably sad occasion and the judge seemed to put the case far higher up the scale than he would in a situation less fraught.

The judge seemed to have been influenced by such matters, Mr Creed said.

Ms Petford had written:

My greatest loss has been the death of my best friend, Megan Johnston who tragically lost her life in the same accident – the loss of my friend at such an early stage is a tragedy and a sadness with which I must live.
Despite the loss of my spontaneity and independence and the catastrophic impact of this accident on so many aspects of my life, I am at least fortunate to have survived and am so much more fortunate than my beloved friend, Meg who has been lost forever.
Perhaps my greatest regret, apart of course from the death of my beloved friends is that the tragic events and tragic consequences of the road traffic accident were entirely avoidable and arose by reason of dangerous and irresponsible driving by the defendant.”

Drunk driving

Counsel for the Director of Public Prosecutions, Lorcan Staines BL, said the devastating consequences that were visited on both families were forseeable and “unfortunately” they fell at the feet of Casey in this case.

Mr Staines said a very large amount of alcohol had been consumed and more people than were legally allowed – five – were in the car at the time.

Mr Staines said the vehicle was travelling at significant speed coming into a roundabout. Evidence was given that the safe speed to approach a roundabout was 34 – 42 kmph. Casey was travelling at 80kmph.

It seemed to be an automatic consequence that there would be a very serious collision travelling at that speed, Mr Staines said.

Other people had said Casey was at a stage of drunkenness that would not enable him to drive, Mr Staines said. The car keys came back to him because of a friend’s representations to the barmaid who had taken them.

Furthermore, Casey was experienced with vehicles because of his job. The family business was plant hire, the court heard.

He said dangerous driving causing death cases were difficult to balance because they were not the result of intended actions.

It had been “very, very clearly signposted” by the State, Oireachtas and Road Safety Authority that these were actions which cannot be condoned.

The DPP maintained that there was no demonstrated error in principle and it was open to the trial judge to do what he did, Mr Staines said.

More: Former Defence Forces member guilty of manslaughter of woman who was blackmailing him

Read: Nazis, Stalin and the Blitz all counted against this man, but he just wanted to call Dublin home

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    Mute Tweed Cap
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:13 PM

    The only positive thing that will come out of this unhealthy alliance is that the rest of the UK “mainlanders” will finally get to see what space cadets this DUP really are.

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    Mute The Risen
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:21 PM

    @Tweed Cap: Amen Brother. Beat me to it. Theres 2 brilliant clips out there about the DUP from Frankie Boyle and George Galloway. Well worth a watch. FB describes them as the political wing of the old testament.

    189
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    Mute @angrymanwithissues
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:25 PM

    @Tweed Cap: I can’t stand the DUP. But this morning those Space Cadets managed to secure a £1bn deal that will make the lives of their constituents better while Sinn Fein sat on their hands.

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    Mute The Risen
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:45 PM

    @@angrymanwithissues: Just to clarify, you think SF should have broken their election pledge?

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    Mute Hurt Stoogie
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:53 PM

    @The Risen: no, but the DUP are acting in te interests of all the people of Northern Ireland. SF act only in their own interests

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    Mute ktsiwot
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:01 PM

    @Tweed Cap: I have just looked at a few comments on the Guardian online, they are going ballistic at the cheer brass neck of the Torys, it as you have stated has also informed the greater British public to the space cadets that now hold the balance of power. Another aspect coming over very strongly is the pressure on the Scottish Torys if they do not stand up here they could be destroyed the next time around.

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    Mute The Risen
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:06 PM

    @Hurt Stoogie: “no, but the DUP are acting in te interests of all the people of Northern Ireland”

    LOL! Yes yes, the DUP are all about looking after ‘all’ the people, Catholics included.

    Cheers for the laugh.

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    Mute Harry Whitehead
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:12 PM

    @The Risen: The rules of the game have changed. Weak governments seem to be the norm, the old order is collapsing. And yet SF seem more interested in pretending nothing is any different. They have no right to complain if things go pear-shaped as a result of this deal.

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    Mute Live at Oriel
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:29 PM

    @Tweed Cap: Please do not use the word mainland .It displays a subservience to the UK.We are not a subservient nation to the British.We are an independent sovereign state.As for the arrangement with the DUP the fact it does not mention Brexit as far as an open border is concerned shows up the DUP for the bigots they are.This deal is sowing the seeds of future violence which another generation will have to endure

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    Mute Harry Whitehead
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:33 PM

    @Live at Oriel: I don’t believe Tweed Cap was using the term seriously, hence the quotation marks.

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    Mute Frank Mc Caffery
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:40 PM

    @Hurt Stoogie: what world do you live in?

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    Mute Live at Oriel
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:48 PM

    @The Risen: Please do not use the term mainland.It signifies subservience of Ireland to the UK.And that we are not.The term UK mainland is a grossly insulting word to use to anybody who identify themselves as Irish.

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    Mute Tommy Whelan
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    Jun 26th 2017, 3:42 PM

    @Live at Oriel: The UK is made up of four identities that’s why its call a union . Not only does it recognise the Irish identity but it defends the rights of the people of Ireland to be Irish .

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    Mute Hurt Stoogie
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    Jun 26th 2017, 3:46 PM

    @The Risen: so only unionist will benefit from better broadband and better roads? And only unionist companies (whatever they are) will benefit from potentially better corporate tax rates?

    Your hatred is making you blind jamming

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    Mute Jane
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    Jun 26th 2017, 4:12 PM

    Hopefully Corbyn is right and he’ll be PM by Christmas.

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    Mute Todd
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    Jun 26th 2017, 5:42 PM

    @Hurt Stoogie: Irish language act.
    RHI Scandal. Redsky, LGBT rights. Yeah they act for all people alright.

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    Mute Meekus
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:17 PM

    You can’t blame the DUP for looking after their own interests but you have to question why they’ve been given this opportunity. How power hungry can you be to go into a coalition with the DUP? Such a short sighted decision from the Tories that lacks integrity.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:02 PM

    @Meekus: As someone said yesterday of David Davis handling of brexit negotiations, ‘like a drunken trapeze artist’. The entire Tory cabinet are acting like they are drunk with power under Theresa May’s leadership.

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    Mute Ted Murray
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    Jun 26th 2017, 8:50 PM

    @Meekus: __ Theresa May would gouge out her own eyeballs with a rusty nail, if it meant she would stay in power.

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    Mute John003
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:16 PM

    Well if infrastructure includes plan to build motorway from Monaghan border to Derry then it does help border region….SF have 48 hours to get back into NI assembly and influence spending of this money….Lets hope the don’t say “SF says NO”….

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    Mute winston smith
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:28 PM

    SF could do a counter deal and see what price the Brits really put on the ‘precious union’.

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    Mute Stephen Maher
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:19 PM

    I wonder Who will get the lions share of the deprivation money?
    ( Theres a pun in there)

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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:22 PM

    Things could have been so different if SF did not throw their toys out of the pram

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    Mute John003
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:32 PM

    @Alan Scott: I am not close to SF leadership but I think be Thursday we will have a U turn from SF and they will be back in the Stormont assembly…..Would not look good a new road in Fermanagh with SF getting the credit for it….

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    Mute Alan Scott
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:38 PM

    @John003: precisely not a fan of SF because of the standing around stance.

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    Mute Seán Ó Briain
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    Jun 26th 2017, 3:10 PM

    @Alan Scott: So trying to hold the DUP to account for an almost half a billion pounds fraud run on the watch of Arlene Foster is “throwing their toys out of the pram”?

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    Mute dannyboy
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:16 PM

    What does “devolution of corporate tax rates” mean ??

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    Mute Jamie Fitzgibbon
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:21 PM

    @dannyboy: It means that NI can set its own corporate tax rate (to be able to compete with the Rep). This was already in the pipeline.

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    Mute Cathal O'Hagan
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:22 PM

    @dannyboy: it means they can lower corporate tax rates through stormont (if it sits ha) rather than Westminster setting it for them. They have wanted it for a while as the republic’s is currently 12.5 % I think while the norths is much higher and so less companies were interested in setting up there. Not a fan of the dup obviously but its Good news to attract companies to Ireland north and south. Even if it increases competition it’s good to have tax harmonisation on the island, hopefully more to follow .

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    Mute Jamie Fitzgibbon
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:26 PM

    @Cathal O’Hagan: This will rile the rest of the UK who they will now be competing with for FDI. Good for the island of Ireland because Rep. will still be more attractive to those companies who want access to the EU.

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    Mute DonalC
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:50 PM

    @Jamie Fitzgibbon:

    NI’s corporate tax rate could be 0% and it wouldnt make much difference. ROI has far better infrastructure, less disruptions and obviously the single market as well. Not to mention a better education system and just a far better place to live in general

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    Mute ktsiwot
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:10 PM

    @Cathal O’Hagan: you would want to be mad to set up a new company in the North. Issues such as Brexit and an unstable government voted on sectarianism lines and add in a bit of bigotry and intolerance. The economy is a basket case with a current expenditure over spend of 20% per year where those employed by the government accounts for a third of the work force. It is dependent on a 10 billion per year intervention. It is a huge welfare state in reality a basket case and the extra dependency will do nothing for the north in the long run.

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    Mute gjpb
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:27 PM

    @DonalC: so broadband in rural ROI is better than in NI?
    And the education system in ROI I’d better than NI???
    Not sure where you get your info

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    Mute dannyboy
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    Jun 26th 2017, 4:10 PM

    @Cathal O’Hagan: ok thanks for the replies…it is currently 20% corporate tax rate in the North same as the rest of UK, and there was talk of bringing it down to 15% before the assembly was dissolved…personally I think it is a good thing to bring down this rate of tax to attract investment to N Ireland… however, I can’t help thinking it is all pie in the sky as Brexit will throw it all out the window anyway….

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    Mute Tony Daly
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:33 PM

    It’s all very small beer with the exception of devolution of corporate tax rate which, in practice, will be severely constrained by budgetary considerations.

    It’s a soft deal for May and the Conservatives. The DUP went very easy on this. Why? Likely some “understandings” have been arrived at.

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    Mute Barry Burke
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    Jun 26th 2017, 5:03 PM

    Well I hope as much money as possible goes into infrastructure related projects .

    We expect the Brits will do the place up before the leave.

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    Mute Tony Hartigan
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    Jun 26th 2017, 5:11 PM

    Give credit where it is due, here we have a Provence screwing the British Government for £1.5 Billion while countries like Scotland, Wales and England will pick up the tab by way of taxation

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    Mute John Fergus
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    Jun 26th 2017, 1:19 PM

    “Devolution of corporation tax rates”
    That’s a big part of the deal.

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:06 PM

    @John Fergus: Exactly less money in NI tax revenue while the British taxpayer foots the bill.

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    Mute Gus Sheridan
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    Jun 26th 2017, 5:04 PM

    A shame SF sat on their hands, its time to ditch this non attendance lark now. If the stand for Westminster they should sit in Westminster
    Otherwise a vote for them is wasted. The DUP has wrongfooted them, SF can do better than this.

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    Mute Pat Price
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    Jun 26th 2017, 4:27 PM

    This is the DUP’s greatest moment in their history, the border would be way down on their list of priorities and they would probably accept a Thrump wall been built along it if asked , they will compromise their staunch beliefs if necessary to maintain their glorious days in the sun , interesting days ahead , and loads of smarmy self satisfied smiles from Paisiely’s Brood..

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    Mute Paul Coughlan
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    Jun 26th 2017, 2:55 PM

    Not a great deal and it took so long to come up with. The £1.5bn could be eaten up by loss of taxation if corporate taxes are interfered with. Imagine giving budgetary control to the NI Assembly. Those who have will benefit most. Those who have not will be protesting. Hmm

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    Mute Chris Kirk
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    Jun 26th 2017, 3:55 PM

    @Paul Coughlan: Exactly, lets have a party on the Shankill Road instead with a big bonfire and parades every day during July.

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