Man guilty of attempted murder of three children in Dublin

BBC
By BBC
3 Min Read


A brown paper court sketching of Riad Bouchaker. He looks side on, to the right of the page. It appears he has short shaven hair on the back and side of his head and bald on top.  A man with short hair and glasses is to his left. Image source, Mike O’Donnell Court Artist
Image caption,

A court sketch of Riad Bouchaker during Wednesday’s proceedings

A court sketch of Riad Bouchaker during Wednesday’s proceedings

A 52-year-old man has been found guilty of the attempted murder of three children and assaulting four other people in Dublin’s Parnell Square in November 2023.

Riad Bouchaker, of no fixed address, was also found guilty of assault causing serious harm to crèche worker Leanne Flynn, and of assaulting two other children and a teenager.

The Central Criminal Court heard that a five-year-old girl has been left with a life-long brain injury after Bouchaker stabbed her in the heart.

In total, he was found guilty of all eight charges, which he had had denied.

The jury was sent out on Tuesday, they deliberated for around six hours and reached a verdict on Wednesday afternoon.

They found Bouchaker guilty on all counts.

Bouchaker was liaising with his interpreter upon hearing the verdict.

Judge Tony Hunt thanked the jury for their “hard work” and he said “having to listen by some of what you heard is very difficult”.

He also thanked the jury for their verdicts and said they are “entirely in line with the evidence that you heard”.

Sentencing has been set for 12 October and Bouchaker will be remanded in custody until then.

Dublin riots

A man in a navy overall wears a hi-viz vest as he shovels debris away from the remains of a burnt out bus. The bus has been charred black. Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

A tram was burnt out on O’Connell Street in central Dublin during rioting which followed the attack

A tram was burnt out on O’Connell Street in central Dublin during rioting which followed the attack

The attack on 23 November 2023 sparked riots across much of Dublin.

The most riot police in Irish state history were deployed to deal with the unrest.

Within hours of the attack, rioters destroyed 11 police vehicles, while 13 shops were badly damaged and more were looted during clashes with riot police.

Three buses and a tram were also destroyed and several police officers were injured during three hours of sustained violence.

Ireland’s police chief at the time, Drew Harris blamed the rioting on a “lunatic, hooligan faction driven by a far-right ideology”.

More on this story

Record number of police tackled Dublin riot

Fast-food rider acted on instinct when girl stabbed

Clashes in Dublin after knife attack outside school

Girl injured in Dublin knife attack leaves hospital



Source link

Share This Article
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *