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Issue of intoxication "all over" case of 24-year-old man who fatally stabbed his sister's partner
Issue of intoxication "all over" case of 24-year-old man who fatally stabbed his sister's partner

BreakingNews.ie

timea day ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Issue of intoxication "all over" case of 24-year-old man who fatally stabbed his sister's partner

The issue of intoxication is "all over" the case of a 24-year-old man who fatally stabbed his sister's partner with a kitchen knife, with the consumption of three bottles of "firewater" having an effect on everyone that night, lawyers for the accused have told a murder trial jury. The jury panel of eight men and four women, having so far spent two hours and 20 minutes considering their verdict, have ceased their deliberations for the weekend. Advertisement At 4pm today, presiding judge Mr Justice David Keane told the jurors he would release them for the weekend and directed them to return on Monday morning to continue their deliberations. Moldovan national Valeriu Melnic (24), with an address at Calliaghstown Lower, Rathcoole, Co Dublin has pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to the manslaughter of Ion Daghi (39) at The Close, Sallins Park, Sallins in Co Kildare on May 12th, 2024. A pathologist has told the jury that Mr Daghi died from a single stab wound to the chest, which measured 13cm in depth, and death would have been very rapid. Mr Melnic told gardaí in his interviews that he couldn't remember stabbing his sister's partner with a kitchen knife as he was so drunk but later said that "all the evidence pointed" to him being "the only one responsible". Advertisement Witness Alexandru Beccieu gave evidence that the accused was squatting down trying to protect his head earlier in the night while Mr Daghi held the leg of a chair and told him "stop or I'll beat you one". In his closing address on Thursday, Carl Hanahoe SC, prosecuting, told the jury that when they applied their common sense to the case it was quite clear that Mr Daghi at all times was trying to calm the accused man down but Mr Melnic was impervious to this; "he wasn't to be quietened". Mr Hanahoe said Mr Daghi had entered the kitchen when a struggle pursued between the accused and his sister. "It wasn't the entry of a bull or a bear, it was a man entering saying 'calm down, calm down'". Counsel said the accused had responded with "I will kill you", which the prosecutor said was the "clearest statement of intent" that the jury are likely to encounter. Advertisement The lawyer said when the jurors examined each of the issues in the case and stepped back from the fog, they could be satisfied that the defences of provocation and intoxication were not open to Mr Melnic and the appropriate verdict was guilty of murder. In his closing speech, Brendan Grehan SC, defending, told the jurors that the blade of the knife was 20cm long and the injury to the chest area was "much much shorter" and yet Mr Daghi had died. He suggested that his client should be found not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter. Referring to the words 'I will kill you" which were uttered by the accused, Mr Grehan told the jurors if everybody who said these words in a fight were guilty of murder then the State wouldn't be able to build prisons fast enough. "People say things not meaning them". Intoxication, he said, was "all over this case" and the consumption of three bottles of "firewater" had an effect on everyone that night. Mr Grehan said whiskey can have a remarkable transformation on peoples moods and how they behave. Advertisement Having been arrested on suspicion of assault causing harm to Mr Daghi in the early hours of May 12th, Mr Melnic was deemed unfit for interview and was not questioned until 15 hours later. He told interviewing officers at Naas Garda Station that he and the deceased had been drunk and at some point an argument started. "A lot of drink was taken, my memory is very hazy," added the accused. Mr Grehan asked the jurors to look at whether the accused was acting under provocation and whether something had been done to him which caused him for a very short period of time to totally lose it in terms of self control. He said all the indicators were there that Mr Melnic was totally out of control that night. Counsel said evidence had been given that the accused was down on the ground with his hands over his head and Mr Daghi stood over him with the remains of a chair, which had been smashed into pieces Advertisement There was any doubt at all, the barrister said, but that a provocative act had occurred to the accused, who was badly beaten and had reacted to that. He said his client had reacted badly in hot blood and picked up a knife in the heat of the moment, where passions did not have time to cool. "Provocation is a reaction to something that causes you to boil over and boil over he did and cause the death of the deceased". Curiously, the lawyer said Mr Melnic did not recall being hit over the head with the leg of a chair and the only thing he could remember was the deceased having his hands around his neck trying to strangle him. He said nine hours after the accused's arrest, scrape marks or finger marks were found on Mr Melnic's neck. "The accused did get assaulted and assaulted badly, the rights or wrongs of how that started is irrelevant". Mr Justice Keane spent Friday explaining the law and summarising the evidence in the case to the 12 jurors following the trial. The judge told the jury panel that they must be unanimous in their verdict. Mr Justice Keane said they could return two verdicts in relation to the murder charge against Mr Melnic, namely; guilty of murder or not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter. In his charge to the jury, the judge said to consider the defence of provocation they must first be satisfied in killing Mr Daghi that the accused had intended to kill him or cause him serious injury. Ireland Man given suspended sentence for causing €60k dama... Read More He said provocation reduces the crime of murder to manslaughter and for the defence to arise it must be a complete and sudden loss of self control. The judge said it must go beyond an action or insult that hurts a man's pride and that an ordinary man would be unable to exercise self restraint in the same circumstances as this case. Referring to the law of intoxication, the judge said it is not a complete defence to murder and is there if the accused's mind was in such a state from the effects of alcohol that he had not intended to kill or cause serious injury. He told the jurors if they had a doubt about that, then the verdict should be not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter.

Murder accused told gardaí he couldn't remember stabbing man as he was so drunk, jury hears
Murder accused told gardaí he couldn't remember stabbing man as he was so drunk, jury hears

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

Murder accused told gardaí he couldn't remember stabbing man as he was so drunk, jury hears

A murder accused told gardaí that he couldn't remember stabbing his sister's partner with a kitchen knife as he was so drunk but later said that 'all the evidence pointed' to him being 'the only one responsible', a jury has heard. Moldovan national Valeriu Melnic (24), with an address at Calliaghstown Lower, Rathcoole, Co Dublin, has pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to the manslaughter of Ion Daghi (39) at The Close, Sallins Park, Sallins, Co Kildare, on May 12th, 2024. A pathologist told the jury that Mr Daghi died from a single stab wound to the chest. Having been arrested on suspicion of assault causing harm to Mr Daghi at 3.30am on May 12th, Mr Melnic was deemed unfit for interview and was not questioned until 15 hours later. He told interviewing officers at Naas Garda station that he and the deceased had been drunk and at some point an argument started. 'A lot of drink was taken, my memory is very hazy,' he added. READ MORE The accused said he remembered pouring whiskey into a glass and Mr Daghi told him he was pouring whiskey in the 'incorrect manner' and they started fighting with their fists. The accused said he remembered a brief moment where he was sitting on the floor and Mr Daghi was trying to choke him. In his next interview, the accused said he worked in a granite and concrete factory and had been a heavy drinker over the years. Asked whether he accepted he had stabbed Mr Daghi, the accused said he was ready to face punishment but couldn't remember anything. He accepted he had 'caused the wound which caused' the deceased 'to pass' but did not remember. Earlier, Garda Justin Meaney testified the accused was intoxicated, quite emotional and agitated when he arrived at the deceased's house in Sallins at 3.35am on May 12th. He said Mr Melnic was rambling at times in another language and other times in English. When he cautioned the accused, Mr Melnic said: 'Maybe tonight I killed someone cause he stupid.' Gda Meaney told Brendan Grehan SC, defending, that Mr Melnic was bleeding from the back of the head. He said the accused had gashes at the top and back of the head, a badly swollen eye and cuts and scrapes on his knee. Dr Mohamad Shafi told Carl Hanahoe SC, prosecuting, that he examined the accused on May 12th and found injuries including severe swelling on the side of the face, which could have been caused by a punch. There was pooling of blood in the tissues surrounding the accused's eye and abrasions on the lateral and back part of the head. There were also abrasions on the knee. Under cross-examination, the doctor agreed with Mr Grehan that the scratch marks on the neck were 'quite possibly' consistent with the accused being grabbed around the neck. Asked if it was fair to say he was looking at someone who had suffered 'a beating', the witness said: 'Yes, possibly.' In his opening address, Mr Hanahoe said it was the State's case that the accused 'armed himself with a kitchen knife' and stabbed Mr Daghi once in the chest following an altercation after the pair had spent the night drinking together. The trial continues tomorrow before Mr Justice David Keane and a jury of eight men and four women.

Murder accused told gardaí he couldn't remember stabbing man as he was so drunk, jury hears
Murder accused told gardaí he couldn't remember stabbing man as he was so drunk, jury hears

BreakingNews.ie

time3 days ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Murder accused told gardaí he couldn't remember stabbing man as he was so drunk, jury hears

A murder accused told gardaí that he couldn't remember stabbing his sister's partner with a kitchen knife as he was so drunk but later said that "all the evidence pointed" to him being "the only one responsible", a jury has heard. Moldovan national Valeriu Melnic (24), with an address at Calliaghstown Lower, Rathcoole, Co Dublin has pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to the manslaughter of Ion Daghi (39) at The Close, Sallins Park, Sallins in Co Kildare on May 12th, 2024. Advertisement A pathologist has told the jury that Mr Daghi died from a single stab wound to the chest. Having been arrested on suspicion of assault causing harm to Mr Daghi at 3.30am on May 12th, Mr Melnic was deemed unfit for interview and was not questioned until 15 hours later. He told interviewing officers at Naas Garda Station that he and the deceased had been drunk and at some point an argument started. "A lot of drink was taken, my memory is very hazy," he added. The accused said he remembered pouring whiskey into a glass and Mr Daghi told him he was pouring whiskey in the "incorrect manner" and they started fighting with their fists. The accused said he remembered a brief moment where he was sitting on the floor and Mr Daghi was trying to choke him. "The only moment I remember is when he tried to choke me, am I going to prison?" asked Mr Melnic. Advertisement The defendant told gardai "we drank three or four bottles of whiskey between the two of us and I drank beer too". In his next interview, the accused said he worked in a granite and concrete factory and had been a heavy drinker over the years. He said he drank quite a lot and that alcohol had "deleted" his memory "almost completely". Mr Melnic said he couldn't remember taking the knife and had fights before "but would never use a weapon". Asked whether he accepted he had stabbed Mr Daghi, the accused said he was ready to face punishment but couldn't remember anything. He accepted he had "caused the wound which caused" the deceased "to pass" but did not remember. Advertisement In his final Garda interview on May 13th, Mr Melnic said he was ready to face a punishment but recalled "nothing of the fight". "What I remember I told you, what I didn't tell you I don't remember...I didn't want to harm anyone, I didn't want to cause all of this". "You don't recall grabbing a knife and your sister struggling with you to stop you?" asked the detectives. "I can't recall anything of what you said, my memory is blank," he replied. He continued: "I can't recall holding a knife, I can't recall how I stabbed him. I regret it happened to my sister, my sister gone through a horrible thing". He said he was the most intoxicated person in the house, which is why he accepted every statement read to him by gardaí. Advertisement "I can't imagine I'm capable of stabbing a live person but ready to face the consequences for my actions". He denied pretending that he couldn't remember. The accused said he was drunk so he couldn't recall everything. Gardaí put it to him that "in this country doing things when drunk isn't a defence", to which the accused said he wasn't trying to use it as a defence. "Do you accept that you did stab him with a knife?" asked the officers. "Not accepting but it's a reality... I'm not that type of person, I find it hard to comprehend I'm a person capable of doing such a bad thing," said the accused. He said he was prepared for punishment but couldn't recall grabbing the knife or stabbing Mr Daghi. "I wish I was dead, not him". Advertisement Mr Melnic said he hadn't "done this on purpose", it wasn't deliberate. The accused said he was being choked by Mr Daghi, couldn't breathe and remembered pushing him away."I can't remember how I stabbed him but prepared to face punishment for my actions". Asked again whether he accepted he stabbed Mr Daghi, the accused said he had to accept it. "If everyone says it's my fault it shows I'm the person involved". Gardaí put it to the accused that he had picked the "biggest knife" when he went to stab the deceased. Mr Melnic said he didn't know why he had picked that knife but all the evidence pointed that he was "the only one responsible". Earlier, Garda Justin Meaney testified that the accused was intoxicated, quite emotional and agitated when he arrived at the deceased's house in Sallins at 3.35am on May 12th. He said Mr Melnic was rambling at times in another language and other times in English. When he cautioned the accused, Mr Melnic said: "Maybe tonight I killed someone cause he stupid". Gda Meaney told Brendan Grehan SC, defending, that Mr Melnic was bleeding from the back of the head. He said the accused had gashes at the top and back of the head, a badly swollen eye and cuts and scrapes on his knee. Dr Mohamad Shafi told Carl Hanahoe SC, prosecuting, that he examined the accused on May 12th and found injuries including severe swelling on the side of the face, which could have been caused by a punch. There was pooling of blood in the tissues surrounding the accused's eye and abrasions on the lateral and back part of the head. There were also abrasions on the knee. Ireland Man (52) pleads not guilty to attempted murder Read More Under cross-examination, the doctor agreed with Mr Grehan that the scratch marks on the neck were "quite possibly" consistent with the accused being grabbed around the neck. Asked if it was fair to say he was looking at someone who had suffered "a beating", the witness said "yes, possibly". In his opening address, Mr Hanahoe said it was the State's case that the accused 'armed himself with a kitchen knife' and stabbed Mr Daghi once in the chest following an altercation after the pair had spent the night drinking together. The trial continues tomorrow before Mr Justice David Keane and a jury of eight men and four women.

Murder accused must have had 'a colossal amount' of whiskey before incident, witness tells trial
Murder accused must have had 'a colossal amount' of whiskey before incident, witness tells trial

BreakingNews.ie

time11-07-2025

  • BreakingNews.ie

Murder accused must have had 'a colossal amount' of whiskey before incident, witness tells trial

A murder accused was squatting down trying to protect his head while the man he would later fatally stab held the leg of a chair and told him "stop or I'll beat you one", a witness has told the Central Criminal Court. The witness also agreed that the accused must have had "a colossal amount" of whiskey on the night. Advertisement Valeriu Melnic (24), with an address at Calliaghstown Lower, Rathcoole, Co Dublin, is charged with murdering Ion Daghi (39) at The Close, Sallins Park, Sallins in Co Kildare on May 12th, 2024. Mr Melnic has pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to Mr Daghi's manslaughter. A pathologist has told the jury that Mr Daghi died from a single stab wound to the chest, which measured 13cm in depth, and death would have been very rapid. Moldovan național Alexandru Beccieu (24), who has given evidence over the last two days, told Carl Hanahoe SC, prosecuting, that he and Mr Melnic went to Mr Daghi's house in Sallins for a barbeque around 8pm on May 11th. He said the accused's sister was the partner of Mr Daghi. Advertisement Mr Beccieu said he had brought a bottle of whiskey, which he shared with the accused and Mr Daghi. The men bought another bottle of whiskey or "a strong drink" later in the night and returned to Mr Daghi's house, where they continued drinking. The witness said the atmosphere was "different" before they went to get a third bottle of whiskey from a nightclub in Naas. He said the accused had gotten drunk and was "speaking ugly" to Mr Daghi. The witness said both he and Mr Daghi were trying to calm Mr Melnic down, but the accused was "very drunk". Mr Beccieu said Mr Daghi was trying to calm the accused down "with nice words," but the deceased's patience was wearing thin. He said when Mr Melnic's behaviour wasn't changing, Mr Daghi "wasn't being very kind either" and told him to take his car and go home. Advertisement The accused and Mr Daghi then started to pull at each other. Mr Melnic, the witness said, had started to pull at Mr Daghi first, and the accused said he wasn't going anywhere. The witness said he went between his friends to pull them apart when they started throwing punches at each other. Mr Beccieu said the accused tried to hit him and was successful on the second occasion. He said Mr Daghi then got in between them and separated them. Mr Baccieu went to look for the accused's car keys because Mr Melnic wasn't calming down after Mr Daghi told him to go home. When the witness came back, he said the accused was "down" or on the ground with his hands on his head, trying to ward something off" and that Mr Daghi had a piece of a chair in his hand. Advertisement A woman took Mr Melnic into the house, and Mr Baccieu and Mr Daghi stayed outside smoking a cigarette. The witness said Mr Daghi looked in the window of the house and saw the accused and his sister pulling at each other. Mr Daghi went into the kitchen to see what was happening and came out seconds later. The witness continued: "Mr Daghi said he cut and fell down in front of me. After he fell down on his stomach, I turned him around on his back and asked what was wrong with him". Advertisement He said Mr Daghi's mother was crying and screaming. Asked how long Mr Daghi was in the kitchen for, the witness said "he just went in and came back out". Mr Baccieu said the deceased had fallen around a metre from the entrance to the kitchen. Asked again what Mr Daghi had said when he came out of the kitchen, the witness said the deceased told him "he cut me, go," but he didn't understand where Mr Daghi was telling him to go. Under cross-examination, Mr Beccieu agreed with Brendan Grehan SC, defending, that the accused was "very drunk" as he had never seen him "speak like that way before". The witness also agreed that the accused had been pouring more whiskey for himself than the others. He further agreed Mr Melnic must have had "a colossal amount" of the whiskey as the deceased didn't have a lot of alcohol in his system. The witness clarified that Mr Daghi had the leg of the chair in his hand when the accused was squatting down with his hands over his head, trying to protect it. He said he hadn't seen Mr Daghi hit Mr Melnic but heard the deceased say, "stop or I'll beat you one". In his opening address, Mr Hanahoe said it was the State's case that the accused 'armed himself with a kitchen knife' and stabbed Mr Daghi once in the chest following an altercation after the pair had spent the night drinking together. The trial continues on Monday before Mr Justice David Keane and a jury of eight men and four women.

Man (39) died from single 13cm deep stab wound to the chest, pathologist tells trial
Man (39) died from single 13cm deep stab wound to the chest, pathologist tells trial

BreakingNews.ie

time09-07-2025

  • BreakingNews.ie

Man (39) died from single 13cm deep stab wound to the chest, pathologist tells trial

A 39-year-old man died from a single stab wound to the chest, which measured 13cm in depth, and death would have been very rapid, a pathologist has told the Central Criminal Court. Valeriu Melnic (24) with an address at Calliaghstown Lower, Rathcoole, Co Dublin, is charged with murdering Ion Daghi (39) at The Close, Sallins Park, Sallins in Co Kildare on May 12th, 2024. Advertisement Mr Melnic has pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to Mr Daghi's manslaughter. Assistant State Pathologist Dr Margaret Bolster on Wednesday told Carl Hanahoe SC, prosecuting, that she conducted a post mortem on Mr Daghi's remains on May 12th, 2024, after he had been pronounced dead around 5am that morning. Dr Bolster said she was informed that a physical altercation had occurred between two men. The witness said she was told a struggle took place and ultimately Mr Daghi was stabbed to the left side of the chest and collapsed almost immediately. Advertisement The witness testified that there was a stab wound on the left side of Mr Daghi's chest around the nipple area, which was 5.9cm from the midline. Dr Bolster said it was almost a vertically situated stab wound to the top left side of the chest, which extended through the intercostal muscle between the fifth and sixth ribs. The stab wound had gone through the pericardial sac, and there was 250ml of blood present in that area, which meant the heart couldn't beat properly. The stab wound measured 2.5cm in length. Dr Bolster said the stab wound had extended into the outer lower aspect of the right ventricle. The stab wound, which measured 13cm in depth, had not gone right through the heart but into the chamber of the heart. Advertisement She said 73 milligrams of ethanol was detected in the deceased's system, which is just over 2.5 pints. This was indicative that Mr Daghi had been drinking up to the time of his death. In her evidence, Dr Bolster said there were a number of blunt force injuries to the body, including bruising to the back of both hands and the knuckles, which indicated offensive or defensive injuries during the altercation. The expert witness said Mr Daghi would have collapsed, and death would have been very rapid. There was no evidence of the deceased trying to ward off the knife. Dr Bolster said the blade of a knife recovered from the scene measured 19.5cm in length, which was consistent with having caused the stab wound to the deceased. Advertisement The witness said Dr Daghi's cause of death was haemorrhage and shock with bleeding into the pericardial sac after a single stab wound to the chest. Under cross-examination, Dr Bolster agreed with Brendan Grehan SC, defending, that the deceased was of muscular build and it was obvious from an examination of his hands that he was a manual labourer. Asked whether the deceased had a number of "fighting injuries" to his hands, Dr Bolster agreed, saying it "was in keeping with the offensive or defensive" injuries. Dr Bolster also agreed that the blade of the knife was 19.5cm long, whereas the injury she noted was 13cm, which meant the knife had not "gone in the whole way". Advertisement "The knife was not plunged to the hilt?" asked Mr Grehan, to which Dr Bolster said was the case. Ireland CEO of care group in RTÉ Investigates says his res... Read More The witness also agreed that 13cm was only "an approximate measurement" and it didn't mean the blade "went 13cm, depending on the movement of the body". She said she couldn't comment on the dynamics of how the blade "went in" in terms of the struggle taking place between the two men. In his opening address, Carl Hanahoe SC, for the Director of Public Prosecutions, said it was the State's case that the accused 'armed himself with a kitchen knife' and stabbed Mr Daghi once in the chest following an altercation after the pair had spent the night drinking together. The trial continues tomorrow before Mr Justice David Keane and a jury of eight men and four women.

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