Selston dad laid open man’s skull with tyre iron in pub car park fracas
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Nathan Gilbert armed himself after his brother got into an argument in the Royal Oak, in Westwood, on December 22, said Alexis Mercer, prosecuting.
Gilbert, aged 34, came out of the pub holding the tool behind his back before confronting a group of more than ten young men.
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Hide AdWhen another man tried to disarm him, Gilbert struck him at least four times on the head.
Ms Mercer said his victim suffered “quite nasty injuries” as the wounds exposed his skull and he was taken to hospital.
Although he didn't want to make a statement, or support the prosecution, CCTV and witnesses identified Gilbert as the culprit.
“The photographs of the injuries speak for themselves,” she said, adding that the offence has a starting point of 18 months in custody which exceeds the magistrates’ sentencing powers.
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Hide AdNichola Thorpe, mitigating, said Gilbert, who has no previous convictions, pleaded guilty at the earliest opportunity.
“It is extremely out of character,” she said. “He wasn't involved in the initial incident.”
She said Gilbert urged his brother to go home but a number of people blocked them in the pub car park on Palmerston Street.
“He tells me some verbal threats were made,” Ms Thorpe added. “He made the ill decision to take the metal bar from the footwell of his car.
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Hide Ad"His intention was to disperse the group. He can’t explain why he took the tyre iron with him. The victim unfortunately stepped forward. There was a scuffle between the two. He is extremely remorseful for the way he reacted. He has never been before the courts before.”
Ms Thorpe said Gilbert, a father-of-three and who runs his own ground working business, was going through a stressful time” following a divorce and has been prescribed medication for anxiety and depression.
Gilbert, of Alfreton Road, Selston, admitted assault causing actual bodily harm and possessing an offensive weapon, when he appeared at Mansfield Magistrates Court, on Tuesday.
He received a 12-month prison sentence, suspended for one year, with 15 rehabilitation days and a 120-day alcohol monitoring programme.