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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Eoin Reynolds & Alahna Kindred

Mum left 'tortured' over death of son stabbed by teen when he broke into house

A devastated mum has said she has been "tortured" over her son's death since he was stabbed to death by a teenager when he broke into his home.

Yesterday Dean Kerrie, now 21, from Portarlington in Co Laois, Ireland was jailed for three-and-a-half years by the Central Criminal Court in Dublin, reports the Irish Mirror.

Kerrie, who was 17 at the time, killed Jack Power, 25, when entered his home at Shanakiel in Dunmore East, Waterford, a seaport city in southeast Ireland, in the early hours of July 26, 2018.

Kerrie was tried twice for murder but was convicted by the jury of manslaughter for killing Mr Power.

Yesterday, Mr Justice Paul McDermott said that Kerrie was entitled to use the force of himself, his family and his home when Jack Power entered his home.

However, the force the teenager used on the victim was "grossly" excessive given that Mr Power was unarmed.

Taking into account that Kerrie was a teenager at the time of the crime and showed genuine remorse, the judge ended up imposing a sentence of four years and six months with the final year suspended for two years.

Further to this, the sentence was backdated to June 30 of this year, considering that the teen had already spent in custody - with the judge noting that Kerrie did not expect or instigate the violence on the night.

In a written statement Loretta Power said ahead of sentencing that her son Mr Power was a hard-working man with a “big smile and laugh” whose “kindness will forever be locked in my heart”, Irish Mirror reports.

She said that the four years since his death, which have included two trials for the man who killed her son, have “taken a huge toll” as the family serves a “life sentence every day but we keep going because that is what he would have wanted us to do.”

In delivering the sentence, Mr Justice McDermott said that in impact statements made to the court, Jack Power's family had said that they felt their son had no voice in the courtroom.

The judge added that trials, focusing on rules and evidence, provide "cold comfort for relatives whose loss is profound and life-long."

He went on to describe the deceased victim as an "exceptionally hard-working young man" who loved his work as a fisherman and was "fuelled by his father's encouragement".

Mr Power was also a role model and a fun companion for his brothers, the judge added, saying that his loss is "incalculable", with Mr Justice McDermott continuing to say: "Nothing I do or say will alleviate this suffering. The sentence I impose must be proportionate to the gravity of the offence of manslaughter and also appropriate to his [Kerrie's] circumstances."

The trial went on to hear that Mr Power had been drinking into the early hours of the morning, and around 3am saw that damage had been done to his car - which he believed had been caused by Kerrie.

He went to Kerrie's home, where he picked up a rock and smashed the front window of the house, and proceeded to enter through the front door.

Mr Justice McDermott said Mr Power assaulted Kerrie in his bedroom, and there was a suggestion that he also attacked Kerrie's mother.

Kerrie told gardai officers he found a knife by the side of the bed and proceeded to stab the victim during the disturbance.

However, Mr Justice McDermott said that he does not believe the court has heard the truth about the "provenance of the knife and how it was found but he armed himself quickly" and used the knife.

Mr Justice McDermott said: "I have to consider the nature of what happened that night. The Oireachtas have recognised the special position of those obliged to defend themselves or their property from unlawful attack, particularly in their home.

"That is therefore a matter that has to be taken into account when considering the culpability of the accused. Those who are attacked in the home are entitled to use force and sometimes lethal force in defence of themselves and their home."

He went on to add that Kerrie's case was different to one where a person carries a concealed knife in public and the defendant’s case, therefore, attracts a lesser sentence.

Kerrie did not instigate the attack and could not have expected it, the judge said, adding that the teen was at home when, "without warning" he was attacked by Mr Power who smashed the window and entered unlawfully into his property.

The judge also noted that Mr Power was a tall, well-built man while Kerrie was of a slight build and younger.

But the jury's verdict indicated that Kerrie had used excessive force when he stabbed Mr Power, and the fact that Mr Power was unarmed was an aggravating factor, the judge said.

When the offence happened, Kerrie was a minor and had he been sentenced as a minor he would have been subject to a regime where the emphasis is on rehabilitation rather than punishment, the judge said.

Taking into account Kerrie's age and the "difficult and pressurised situation created by the deceased which was not of his making," he set the headline at five years and six months.

He further reduced that having considered Kerrie's remorse and that he immediately contacted emergency services following the stabbing and accepted responsibility for inflicting the fatal wound.

Kerrie is considered at moderate risk of violent offending in the future and will be required to work with probation services and engage in anger and violence management if deemed appropriate after his release.

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