Sunday, 19 May 2024

Serial sex offender Patrick Nevin jailed for five-and-a-half years for attacking Brazilian student he met on Tinder

Serial sex offender Patrick Nevin has been jailed for five and a half years for attacking a Brazilian student he met on Tinder.

Nevin (37) was convicted last December of sexually assaulting the woman whom he had met for a first date, after they contacted each other via Tinder in July 2014.

Last June he pleaded guilty to raping a second woman and sexually assaulting a third victim. All three attacks took place within 11 days in July 2014 and all involved Nevin meeting the women on Tinder and then picking them up at their home in his dark blue BMW.

Nevin, with former addresses of Mounttown, Dun Laoghaire, Dublin and Castlebellingham, Co Louth, then drove the women to secluded locations and attacked them.

After a trial at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court, a jury found him guilty of sexually assaulting the Brazilian woman on UCD campus, south Dublin on July 23, 2014. His lawyers told the court that he continues to deny the charge.

Judge Cormac Quinn said that contact on Tinder did not give consent to sexual assault. He said Nevin brought the victim to a secluded spot knowing she was a foreigner who did not know where she was and spoke very little English.

He said the mitigating factors included his age and a prison governor’s report which stated he is on an enhanced privilege level and is pursuing studies in custody.

He sentenced him to five and a half years. He also imposed a post release supervision period of two years with a condition that he not to use the internet to make contact with any persons not known to him for purposes of meeting with him.

Nevin met the woman on Tinder and repeatedly asked her to meet with him. The language student was using Tinder to meet Irish people to practice speaking English and she believed they were meeting to go for a coffee.

Instead, Nevin drove her to a secluded field on UCD campus. When she resisted a forcible attempt to kiss her, Nevin became aggressive and began cursing.

He put his hand up her dress and she struggled with him. He pulled down part of her dress exposing her breast and restrained her by holding her arm.

During the struggle, Nevin punched her on the back of head. The attack stopped when she managed to release her seat belt and get out of the car and Nevin drove off.

He left her in a distressed state and she didn’t know where she was. A lady out walking her dogs came to her assistance and helped her get to the N11 and into a taxi.

Nevin was identified as a suspect by gardaí after they checked the records of the car registration caught on UCD’s automatic number plate recognition system. He has been in custody since September 2014.

During the trial, the woman testified that she was in fear of her life and thought Nevin was going to rape her.

The victim, now aged 36, told the court on Friday that it had been very hard for her to travel back here for the trial last year and to see her attacker.

She said she felt “the same fear I felt that day when he became a monster in front of me”.

Becoming tearful at times and flanked by the investigating garda Detective Sergeant Denis Ellard , the woman said that when the jury returned its verdict, she felt a freedom she hadn’t felt for a long time.

She said that the attack forced her to change her plans to learn English here and and she was only able to find work as a cleaner. She said she was working alone most of the time, so the only words she learned were related to cleaning.

Reading from her victim impact statement, in halting English, she said “Initially I blamed myself for everything that happened. I’m afraid of people’s judgment about how I am especially when it comes to men.”

The woman said she struggles to still believe that men can be kind and hates seeing a blue BMW or beige leather as they both remind her of the attack.

She said she still dreams of returning to Ireland to live here. She said that Ireland taught her “to say please, sorry and thank you for everything” and she tells herself nowadays that most people are good.

“I know I lost money and self confidence after what happened but I still think I will be able to live my dream of living here,” she said.

Det Ellard told the court that Nevin’s eight previous convictions include one for “a brutal assault” on his then partner. In that 2001 attack, Nevin killed the woman’s two dogs before launching a assault on her which left her with serious injuries.

He received a seven-year prison term for this and the court heard he qualified with a degree in software engineering from UCD while in custody. He also has a conviction from 2012 for possession of a stun gun in suspicious circumstances.

Patrick McGrath SC, defending, told the court that his client does not accept the verdict of the jury.

He asked the court to consider the nature of the assault. He also asked the court to note the relative youth of his client.

Nevin is due to be sentenced in another court next month for the rape offence and the other assault.

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