Man sexually assaulted a woman out running while he was on a suspended sentence for a previous attack on a woman

Padraig Conlon 30 Nov 2021

By Sonya McLean

A man sexually assaulted a woman out running 12 days into a suspended sentence for attacking another woman and demanding sex from her.

Liam Vickers (24) was handed down a two-year suspended sentence from Judge Elma Sheahan in January 2021 after he pleaded guilty to assault causing harm in an apartment in Dublin city centre in the early hours of September 30, 2017.

At the time he had two previous convictions for driving while holding a mobile phone and failure to appear.

At that hearing Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard that Vickers also threatened the victim’s roommate when they attempted to intervene in the assault.

He instructed the victim to delete his phone number and text messages from her phone before he left her home.

Vickers’ father is currently serving a life sentence after he pleaded guilty at the Central Criminal Court to murdering Vickers mother in 2009.

Detective Garda Niall Gibs told Derek Cooney BL, prosecuting, that on February 3 last (2021) a 21-year-old woman was out running near her family home when she became unnerved by a man in the park.

She left the park but she was pushed against the park railings by the man.

She could hear him moaning in her ear before he grabbed her vagina.

She described him as smelling of alcohol.

She began screaming and managed to run off but didn’t get “a proper look” at her attacker, Det Gda Gibbs said.

Vickers was later identified after gardaí canvassed the local area and local residents for CCTV footage.

Vickers, who is currently homeless, was living nearby at the time.

He pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to sexual assault of the woman in a Dublin suburb.

Judge Sheahan heard that Vickers has been in custody since the previously two-year suspended sentence was re-activated.

He had been placed on a bond on January 22, 2021 by the judge to keep the peace and be of good behaviour for three years.

Dean Kelly SC, defending, told Judge Sheahan yesterday that there are “grave concerns” for his client “going forward, not only for him but others too”.

“One can’t be but extremely worried,” counsel said before he added that Vickers knows that “he needs to be fixed and these issues need to be addressed”.

Det Gda Gibs agreed with Mr Kelly that although Vickers told gardaí in interview that he doesn’t know what caused him to attack the woman last February, he acknowledged that it was obviously sexually motivated.

Counsel said his client wanted to take up opportunities offered to him while in custody and absolutely recognises that he needs help.

Judge Sheahan said she needed time to consider the case and adjourned it to December 6, next.

CCTV footage was played for the court and Det Gda Gibs pointed out the woman being followed by Vickers as she came into the park.

He said at one point the man almost seems to be trying to run to catch up with the woman.  The incident itself was not clearly captured on CCTV footage.

Gardaí later contacted a woman who was captured on CCTV footage picking Vickers up in her car after the attack. She made a statement to the gardaí and helped to identify Vickers.

Vickers was arrested and admitted that he saw the victim, followed her through the park and grabbed her. He said he regretted it and hoped it didn’t affect her too much.

Det Gda Gibs said when Vickers was asked what was his intention were when he grabbed the woman, he replied “To be honest, I am not too sure”.

He said once she screamed, he let her go.

“I don’t know what was going through my head,” Vickers said but admitted that “obviously it has to be sexual”.

A victim impact statement from the woman said she was out of work for eight weeks following the assault because she had such difficulty sleeping.

“I couldn’t go to sleep without feeling the presence of someone behind me or grabbing me,” the woman continued.

She said she didn’t feel safe in her house or her local area.

She said through counselling she eventually established a better sleeping routine and managed to get back to herself.

“It had an impact on everything in my life.

I struggled to be alone but then pushed my partner away. I feel like I am restricted as to how I live my day-to-day life,” the woman said.

Mr Kelly said his client had an extremely difficult childhood.

His former partner wrote a letter for the court describing him as a devoted father and said she had never suffered any type of abuse at his hands. His sister was also in court to support him.

At the previous sentence hearing in relation to the September 2017 assault, the court heard that the victim in that case was working an escort when she got a call from Vickers to see if she was free.

After she brought Vickers into her bedroom he took out a large knife and tried to stab her in the face.

She blocked the attack and was wounded in her arm and her cheek.

Vickers pointed the knife at her and asked for free sex, which she refused.

Her roommate attempted to intervene and was also threatened with the knife.

He told the victim to sit on the bed and delete his phone number and texts from her mobile phone.

She deleted his texts and he walked calmly from the room, but she did not delete her call history and saved his phone number.

During interview with gardaí, Vickers said that he had been drinking in a park earlier that day and that he had consumed half a litre of vodka as well as taking cocaine and sleeping pills.

He said he found the knife in the park and took it with him because he was paranoid about “being robbed”.

In a victim impact statement, which was read out in court, the woman said she was attacked a second time with a knife after this incident and that she has lost her ability to trust people.

She said she now feared to be alone and said that although her native Brazil was famous for being a violent country, she had never been attacked while she lived there.

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