Suspended sentence for causing cyclist serious head injuries

Kenneth O’Farrell pleads guilty to dangerous driving causing serious bodily harm

A Dublin man who knocked over a cyclist, causing him serious head injuries, has been given a suspended sentence.

Kenneth O’Farrell (33), broke a filter light and turned right off a national road before hitting Marcin Maciejewski, throwing him onto his windscreen. He claimed the lights were with him and that the cyclist came “out of nowhere”.

A witness who came to Mr Maciejewski’s assistance at the scene held a tracksuit to his head to stem the heavy bleeding. She described feeling the man’s skull moving about in her hands.

The victim later received 60 stitches to his head and underwent surgery.

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He also had two broken hands, a dislocated elbow, stitches to cuts on his back and cuts to his elbow. A victim impact report was handed into court but not read out.

Nicola Cox BL, defending, asked the court to accept it was a genuine error of judgment on O’Farrell’s behalf, rather than a case of him speeding.

Guilty plea

O'Farrell, of Dunomore Avenue, Tallaght, Dublin pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to dangerous driving causing serious bodily harm at the N81 Tallaght Bypass at the junction with the Fortunestown Road on June 15th, 2014.

He has four previous convictions, including a two-year suspended sentence for a drug offence.

Judge Martin Nolan said he could not believe on the evidence that O'Farrell had seen the cyclist, but added "It is puzzling, to say the least, why he didn't see him."

He noted Mr Maciejewski sustained serious injuries, and the incident still had a huge effect on him.

The judge said there was no speed involved and no suggestion that O’Farrell was drunk, adding he “was guilty of inattention and failure to concentrate”.

Judge Nolan imposed a two-year sentence which he suspended in full on strict conditions, and disqualified O’Farrell from driving for four years.

Garda James Good told Lisa Dempsey BL, prosecuting, that he arrived at the scene at 3.10pm and O’Farrell identified himself as the driver of the Peugeot who had knocked over the cyclist.

Mr Maciejewski had already been taken to Tallaght hospital by ambulance.

‘Came out of nowhere’

O’Farrell told gardaí­ he had been stopped at a red light waiting to make a right turn, he got the green light, moved across the junction and the cyclist “came out of nowhere”.

The witness who helped the victim later approached gardaí­ when they were examining the scene and contradicted O’Farrell’s version of events.

She was in the vehicle directly behind O’Farrell, and claimed he did not have the green filter light to turn right.

She said there was a gap in the traffic, but she could clearly see the cyclist when O’Farrell turned right directly into his path.

This woman told gardaí­ she did not see how anyone could have missed Mr Maciejewski. CCTV footage taken from nearby cameras supported this woman’s version of events.

O’Farrell was arrested the following August and interviewed again. He said he had nothing to add to his previous statement and commented “Did you think I wanted to kill the bloke? He was speeding.”

Little recollection

Garda Good agreed Mr Maciejewski had very little recollection of the incident.

He remembered cycling to work that morning, but his next memory was of waking up in hospital with his wife and brother-in-law by his bedside.

He had surgery three days after the incident and was discharged from hospital two days later.

Garda Good agreed with Ms Cox it was 40 minutes before gardaí­ arrived at the scene and O’Farrell had remained there. He agreed that excessive speed was not an issue in the case.

Garda Good also accepted O’Farrell’s parents came to the station to support him and they had stayed in regular contact with gardaí­ to express their concern for Mr Maciejewski’s welfare.

Ms Cox told the court her client was a father-of-one who is no longer with the mother of his son.