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Niece of Gerry Hutch will not face extra jail time despite "astronomical" number of convictions

Donna Hutch was sentenced to 12 months imprisonment in June 2015 for attempting to stab a Garda with a syringe.

15736529131_5ccbc0ff5e_o Richard Woffenden Richard Woffenden

A WOMAN WITH “an astronomical” amount of previous convictions will not face extra jail time for attempting to stab a garda with a syringe despite an appeal by prosecutors.

Donna Hutch (42), who is the niece of Gerry ‘The Monk’ Hutch, with an address in north inner-city Dublin, had pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to production of a syringe in the city on 15 May 2015.

She was sentenced to 12 months imprisonment by Judge Martin Nolan on 18 June 2015.
The Court of Appeal refused to review Hutch’s sentence today following an application by the Director of Public Prosecutions on grounds that it was “unduly lenient”.

Counsel for the DPP, Gerardine Small Bl, had told the court that Hutch had “an astronomical” amount of previous convictions – 313 in total – and the sentence did not reflect the personal circumstances of the offender.

Giving judgment, Mr Justice George Birmingham said the circumstances of the offence were “highly unusual”.

Garda John O’Donovan had seen Hutch shouting and falling on Amiens Street, near Dublin’s Connolly Station, on the day. He saw her again at the rails of the Custom House and, as he approached her, he could see she had a syringe needle clenched in her right hand with blood visible.

Syringe

As Gda O’Donovan went to speak with her, Hutch struck out with her right hand and was trying to stab him. A member of the public, who happened to be a member of the Simon Community, intervened.

Eventually Hutch opened her hand dropping the syringe and Gda O’Donovan realised there was no barrel attached to it.

At this point, Hutch reached into her trousers, took something out and swallowed it. It later emerged that this was the barrel.

Hutch accepted what had happened and said she was “out of it”. She was extremely apologetic and she thanked the garda for having sought to come to her assistance.

She had known Gda O’Donovan for more than 20 years but failed to recognise him on the day initially thinking it was Fr Peter McVerry before thinking people were chasing her.

She was hallucinating having ingested crystal methamphetamine.

Mr Justice Birmingham said she had not gone out with an intention to harm anyone. The evidence was that she had an established practice of informing gardaí who stopped her whether she had a syringe on her or not “lest the garda be injured”.

Previous convictions

The mother-of-two teenage boys had 313 previous convictions including 138 for theft, 44 for handling stolen goods, 81 for larceny, nine Section Two assaults and one Section Three assault.

She had one previous conviction for producing a syringe in threatening circumstances.

Mr Justice Birmingham said it appeared the great bulk of her convictions were in the nature of shoplifting apparently to feed a drugs habit.

At the time of sentence, she appeared to be doing well in the Dóchas Centre and her methadone dosage had been reduced.

Mr Justice Birmingham said the sentence was a lenient one and one might react with disbelief upon hearing that an individual with more than 300 previous convictions received a 12 month sentence for attempting to “stab a Garda”.

But closer examination of the judge’s approach shows he recognised this was a very unusual case and he sought to craft an appropriate sentence, as had been submitted by Hutch’s barrister, Pieter Le Vert BL.

Mr Justice Birmingham, who sat with Mr Justice Garrett Sheehan and Mr Justice John Edwards, said the court did not identify any error in principle and accordingly refused the DPP’s application.

Read: Mother and partner convicted of murdering two-year-old boy

Read: Woman accused of withholding information on Gareth Hutch killing

Author
Ruaidhrí Giblin
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