Denis Morris (24) of Braemor Road, Churchtown pleaded guilty to following the woman after drinking 14 pints
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Denis Morris (24) of Braemor Road, Churchtown pleaded guilty to following the woman after drinking 14 pints
A stalker has been spared jail after leav Denis Morris (24) of Braemor Road, Churchtown pleaded guilty to following the woman after drinking 14 pints Monitor developments in Stalker for further updates.
Denis Morris (24) of Braemor Road, Churchtown pleaded guilty to following the woman after drinking 14 pints
A stalker has been spared jail after leaving a social media influencer fearing for her life when he followed her into her Dublin hotel, leaving her wondering if she “would even still be here” afterwards.Denis Morris (24) of Braemor Road in Churchtown, received a fully suspended six-month sentence on Thursday, having pleaded guilty earlier to stalking the 25-year-old woman after drinking 14 pints.Dublin District Court heard he followed her from Harcourt Street into her hotel lift, while holding a belt and staring at her, then into the corridor near her room.The successful influencer who delivered a moving victim impact statement at an earlier stage was present at the sentencing hearing.READ MOREConor Murray: Expectations of Welsh success have nosedivedAzerbaijan vows to respond after Iranian drone strikes; Irish woman stranded in Dubai says ‘We’re not getting information’Could Jessie Buckley’s ‘problematic’ anti-cat vibes scupper her Oscar bid?China Hunan review: This brilliant new restaurant is set to become one of Ranelagh’s most popularJudge Treasa Kelly stressed that she had done “nothing wrong” and had acted entirely with her own safety in mind. The victim had recorded Morris, who followed her off the street, through the hotel, into a lift and to the corridor near her room at around 2am on March 21st last year. The judge noted the incident had a significant psychological impact on the victim.The social media personality cannot be named for legal reasons and did not wish to waive her anonymity, prosecutor Sharon Rossiter informed the court.Judge Kelly noted from the Probation Service assessment report that out-of-work Morris had done all that was asked of him. She described Morris as a chronic alcoholic who was “a danger once he had drink on board”.She recalled the CCTV evidence and noted from the pre-sentence report handed into court that the accused had gone to five probation meetings, and claimed to have no recollection before eventually claiming he wanted “to chat women up”.However, Judge Kelly remarked that, while he had taken responsibility, he had maintained that he did not remember the incident.She suspended the sentence on condition that he does not reoffend within 12 months, continues attending alcohol addiction treatment, and remains under Probation Service supervision for six months.Morris had brought €2,000 for the victim, who declined the compensation and asked that it instead be donated to a charity that supports victims of domestic and gender based violence.Earlier, Detective Garda Eamon Leen of Kevin Street Divisional Protective Service Unit told the court that CCTV showed the accused spotting the victim as she exited Copper Face Jacks club.She was staying in a hotel across the street.“He pointed her out and followed her into the hotel and into the lift,” he said. “As she was in fear, she took out her phone to start recording.”He explained that the accused overtook her in the corridor, but stopped as she entered her room, where her mother was waiting.Morris exited the building via a fire escape and returned to Harcourt Street.Morris, who had no previous convictions and was not known to gardaí, was tracked via CCTV and a taxi app. He first told gardaí that he had entered the hotel to get a drink and said he thought that his girlfriend might be there. Morris was charged under section 10 of the Non-Fatal Offences Against the Person Act.The victim had spoken about how she had told herself that 2025 was her year, but this incident had changed that. “I still blame myself,” she said, explaining that she wondered if she should have worn a jacket or covered up more. “I constantly have nightmares,” she had said.She said that she used to love the freedom of travelling alone for work, but now she began turning down offers.“It has just taken over my life,” she had told the court. “What if my Mam wasn’t there. Would I even still be here?” she questioned. “I remember standing in the lift,” she said. “I was prepared to be hurt.”She said she had to put on a brave face for the public, but that it had changed her and her family’s lives forever.