An accountant who has been before the courts more than 30 times in relation to an alleged knife assault on his wife that was described at his original trial as “extreme domestic violence” has failed in a bid to halt his retrial.
After costs in the action were awarded against him on Friday, Sidney Sutton (47) told the Court of Appeal: “You won’t be getting anything from me. Social welfare €232 a week: That’s what I’m reduced to. It’s corruption at its best.”
Mr Sutton, of Brindley Park Square, Ashbourne, Co Meath, was convicted of four counts of assault, one of assault causing harm, and one count of producing a knife capable of inflicting serious injury following a Circuit Court trial in 2017.
It was the State’s case that the alleged offences occurred in the early hours of February 6th, 2016, as Mr Sutton and his wife, Edele Aherne, returned to their home after attending a wedding the previous day in Slane, Co Meath.
Patrick Freyne: I joined a gym this year. Here’s how working out is working out
‘Show some respect’, Brian Cowen told Gerry Adams in furious Belfast meeting, records show
South Korea plane crash: All but two of 181 passengers and crew dead after aircraft hits wall and catches fire
Mother who fled home with children on Christmas Day gets protection order against husband
In interviews with gardaí following the assault allegation, Mr Sutton said that his wife had attacked him and that her injuries were caused by a fall and self-harm with a kitchen knife.
Mr Sutton’s conviction was subsequently quashed and he appealed a High Court decision that his second trial on the alleged offences should not be halted on the grounds that the case was an alleged malicious prosecution and an abuse of process.
Delivering judgment at the Court of Appeal on Friday, Ms Justice Tara Burns said Mr Sutton had failed to establish “an arguable case” with respect to any of the issues he had raised. She said accordingly, leave to apply by way of judicial review was refused.
Mr Sutton was originally sentenced to two years with the final 12 months suspended, but the Court of Appeal then ruled that sentence was too lenient and ordered him to serve a further 16 months, with Mr Justice John Edwards describing the alleged stabbing as “the culmination of a prolonged incident involving extreme domestic violence”.
However, in April 2021 the Court of Appeal quashed the conviction and acceded to the DPP’s application for a retrial.
Mr Sutton subsequently made applications against this retrial, which ultimately failed in court on Friday.
- Sign up for push alerts and have the best news, analysis and comment delivered directly to your phone
- Join The Irish Times on WhatsApp and stay up to date
- Listen to our Inside Politics podcast for the best political chat and analysis