Anger as Zim killer jailed 3 yrs in Ireland
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Anger as Zim killer jailed 3 yrs in Ireland


Jailed for manslaughter in Dublin on Monday … Norma Phillips

NORMA Phillips, 47, was convicted of manslaughter for the killing of 36-year-old Romanian national Stefan Neanu at the killer’s home on the Phibsboro Road, North Dublin on April 12, 2015.

Phillips, who is originally from Zimbabwe, was charged with murder but a jury found her guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter.

At the Central Criminal Court Monday Justice Margaret Heneghan sentenced her to three and a half years in prison with a further two years suspended.

The judge backdated her sentence as she has already spent nine months in custody.

When the sentence was read out Neanu’s aunt Gabi Corina Tapu stood up and said “only that for the life of my baby”.

Outside the court shortly afterwards she asked: “If your nephew gets killed and the person who killed your nephew gets only three years and a half, are you satisfied?”

She said her nephew was a quiet, honest person and the only bad thing he ever did was meeting Norma Phillips.

She added: “He will never come back from the ground and she will be out in three years.”

Before announcing the sentence Justice Heneghan said that she was taking into account Phillips’ previous good character, genuine remorse and her early plea of guilty to manslaughter that was rejected by the Director of Public Prosecutions.

The judge said that she also recognised that she had engaged with rehabilitation services.

Aggravating factors were Phillips’ initial lies to emergency services and gardai (police) when she said that an Irishman had run into her home, stabbed Neanu and then run away.

When gardai (police) later told her that Neanu had died, she admitted her part in his death.

Late last month, a jury of seven women and four men took seven hours to come to a unanimous verdict of “not guilty of murder, guilty of manslaughter”.

During four days of evidence, the jury heard that Phillips called the emergency services that Saturday night (April 12, 2015) saying there had been a stabbing and repeating several times “someone stabbed him”.

When ambulance, fire brigade and police arrived, she told them that a man had run into her home stabbed Neanu and then run off. At first she was reluctant to allow police officers to enter, telling them: “no guards, just ambulance”.

At Mountjoy Garda Station, when she was told Neanu had died, Phillips changed her story.

 
She gave a voluntary statement saying that Neanu pulled a knife on her and she thought he was going to harm her. They had been drinking and an argument broke out but she could not remember what they argued about.

As he waved the knife at her, she said she pushed his hand away in self-defence, turning the blade towards him and causing the fatal wound.

State Pathologist Professor Marie Cassidy said the wound, a single stab wound to the heart, could have been caused in the way Phillips described, adding that Neanu would have to have held a “firm” grip on the knife as it was pushed with “some moderate force” into his chest.

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