Man to be sentenced for vicious Letterkenny stabbing

December 14, 2018

A former gym owner and doorman will be sentenced next week after an attack which left a man with seventeen stab wounds during a row in a Co Donegal apartment.

Dubliner Kenneth Broe man was found guilty of “intentionally and recklessly” stabbing Kristian Shortt during the row in Letterkenny ten years ago.

Broe, of 15 Alderwood Green, Springfield, Tallaght, was also found guilty of assault causing harm in the incident.

The attack resulted in Mr Shortt spending two weeks in intensive care in hospital and receiving two “life-saving operations” after he suffered stab wounds to the neck, chest, head and back areas.

So bad were his injuries that Gardai could not tell if the victim was a male or a female when they arrived at the scene of the gruesome attack.

Kristian Shortt said that after drinking in a number of venues in the town, he and the accused had gone to the flat of Damian O’Connor above Victor Fisher’s shop at Upper Main Street in the early hours of October 9th, 2008.

The witness and the accused had got into an argument and had threatened one another.

Mr Shortt recalled a pair of scissors having been produced before he was stabbed repeatedly. The accused had used all his power and force during the attack, he claimed.

Broe had been arrested in Monaghan after he and a friend had taken a taxi to Dublin on the day after the assault.

When arrested Broe was found in possession of €1,100 of cocaine and he later admitted guilty to the possession of the cocaine.

A medical report revealed Mr Shortt had been stabbed a total of seventeen times – three or four times in the neck, three in the back of the head, three in the chest and also wounded in the hands and back area.

He had been taken to Letterkenny General Hospital before being transferred to St Vincent’s Hospital in Dublin.

He spent two weeks in intensive care and underwent two life-saving operations.

A previous trial involving the case had collapsed on the second day of evidence at Letterkenny Circuit Court.

After a six-day trial, Broe was found guilty and the case was put back until yesterday for sentence.

The court was told that the Director of Public Prosecutions found the offences were in the upper end of the scale of such offences.

Among the reasons for this was the sustained and vicious nature of the assault, the fact that it was unprovoked and also the use of a weapon.

The court was told that Broe has a number of previous convictions going back to 1991 including road traffic, criminal damage, breach of the peace and public order.

He was also jailed for three years with the last year suspended after he attacked a club patron and bit off some of his ear while he was working as a doorman in Dublin.

Barrister for Broe, Mr Colman Fitzgerald said the reason his client fought the case at all times was that he did not believe he was capable of such an attack on Mr Shortt.

He added that his client also suffered from depression and was prone to excessive drinking.

Several references were read out on behalf of Broe including one from a shopowner in Dublin who revealed how Broe had donated all the equipment from his gymnasium to his local community when it closed down.

Mr Fiztgerald added that there was no premeditation in the attack and that he did not intend to do any harm to Mr Shortt or somebody that came his way.

He added that he has had to live with this hanging over him since 2008 and despite a tragedy in his family five years ago he has become a very different person.

Judge John Aylmer said he was adjourning until next Wednesday.


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