Dublin court gives 5-year suspended sentence to motorist

Dublin court gives 5-year suspended sentence to motorist

Mohan Sinha
26 Feb 2026, 15:10 GMT+

DUBLIN, Ireland: The Dublin Circuit Criminal Court has pronounced a five-year suspended sentence to a motorist who dragged an arresting garda for six metres.

The court heard that Dylan Walsh (33) suffered from mental health issues and intoxication during a "moment of madness" and was extremely remorseful.

Walsh pleaded guilty to endangerment, damaging a garda vehicle, and driving without insurance at Castleknock on May 20, 2024.

He has 12 previous convictions, mostly for traffic offences.

On February 23, Judge Pauline Codd said the crime was more serious because it was committed against a garda (police officer). She said the officer suffered several injuries and needed surgery. In a victim impact statement, the garda said he no longer feels confident working on the front line.

The judge first imposed a sentence of six and a half years and banned Walsh from driving for 10 years.

However, she also considered factors in his favour. She said Walsh was struggling with his mental health at the time. He has not been in trouble since and has tried to deal with his mental health problems. Judge Codd said his behaviour that night was not that of someone thinking clearly.

A Probation Service report said Walsh is at a medium risk of reoffending, but he has a limited record and good family support. The Probation Service is willing to supervise him, and he needs regular mental health support.

The judge said that if Walsh had a history of violence, she would have made a different decision. She wished the injured garda well in his recovery.

She said Walsh understands what he did and has taken responsibility. She then imposed a five-year prison sentence but suspended it fully on the condition that he work with the Probation Service for three years and follow his mental health treatment plan.

In court, Garda Paul McMahon said that after an argument at his former partner's home became worse, Walsh pulled a television off the wall. The woman called the gardaí and told them she had seen Walsh take a sword from behind his bedside locker.

When gardaí arrived, they saw a man sitting in a parked BMW. The car sped off but was blocked at the apartment complex entrance. Officers approached, but the car reversed, forcing them to jump out of the way.

The car stopped again. A garda opened the front passenger door and saw the sword. He tried to take the weapon and arrest Walsh, partly entering the car. He identified himself and was in full uniform. The car suddenly drove off, dragging the garda for about six metres before he fell out.

The officer injured his arm, neck, head, and elbow, and was off work for five months.

Walsh managed to drive away, and the car was later found after a public appeal. He was arrested four days later and admitted to what he had done. He said he had planned to kill himself and believed that if he had been arrested earlier, he would not have been able to carry out that plan.

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