The victim, who suffered multiple facial injuries and nerve damage, said her confidence has been shattered and her world has ‘become small’
A drunk rugby player repeatedly punched a woman in her fifties in the face as she sat in her car, a court has heard. Ben Jenkins reached through the open window of the vehicle to deliver a series of blows to his victim after she asked him to get out of the road.
The woman suffered multiple facial fractures and nerve damage in the attack. A judge said to describe what 28-year-old Jenkins did on the night in question as “disgraceful” would be to understate the seriousness of the incident.
The judge also said the defendant “did not have the guts” to admit his wrongdoing and tired to “brazen it out” at trial. Don’t miss a court report by signing up to our crime newsletter here
Swansea Crown Court heard that the incident took place on Guy Fawkes Night 2023 in the street outside the Nos Da bar on Victoria Road in Milford Haven.
When Jenkins – who had been “drinking heavily” – was asked by the victim to get out of the way so she could drive past he approached the driver-side door and repeatedly punched the woman in the face through the window. Georgia Donohue, prosecuting, told the court the victim was “unable to escape”.
The court heard that while the fractures have healed the victim continues to suffer facial swelling, has “mild facial asymmetry” which is likely to be permanent, and has “mild pain due to nerve damage” which again is likely to be permanent.
In an impact statement read to the court, the victim described the profound physical and psychological consequences of the assault. The woman said her confidence had been shattered and that her “world has become small”.
The court heard the Crown Prosecution Service originally decided not to charge Jenkins but the victim successfully appealed against that decision.
Ben Jenkins, of St Lawrence Avenue, Hakin, Milford Haven, Pembrokeshire, had previously been convicted at trial of inflicting grievous bodily harm when he returned to the dock for sentencing. He has no previous convictions.
John Hipkin KC, for Jenkins, said the defendant was of previous positive good character, and is due to become a father in August. He said his client wants to put the “sad and tragic incident” behind him, and said in his submission Jenkins “is not a defendant the courts are likely to see again”.
The barrister said his client lost his previous employment as a result of his conviction but had secured a new job and was in a position to pay compensation to his victim.
Judge Paul Thomas KC said to call what the defendant did “disgraceful” would be to understate the seriousness of it. He told Jenkins: “You viciously attacked a woman in her 50s by punching her repeatedly in the face through her car window. You did so simply because she asked you, in your drunken state, to get out of the way of her car. You had been drinking heavily. I repeat – you, a rugby player, punched a woman in her late fifties repeatedly in the face”.
The judge said the defendant then “did not have the guts” to admit what he had done but instead chose to “brazen it out” at trial where a jury saw through his “lies”. He noted that Jenkins had written a letter in which he expressed his remorse for what he had done, and he said to the man in dock: “What a shame, Mr Jenkins, you were not man enough to do that two years ago”.
The judge said given the length of sentence Jenkins was facing the court was obliged to consider whether it could be suspended – he told the defendant that “By the skin of you teeth” he would avoid immediate custody.
Jenkins was sentenced to two years in prison suspended for two years, and must complete a 90-day alcohol abstinence requirement and do 250 hours of unpaid work in the community. The defendant was ordered to pay his vicitm £3,000 in compensation, and was made subject to a three-year restraining order banning him from contacting her.
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