An English tourist feared he was going to be tossed off the
Cobden Bridge into the Grey River during an unprovoked attack
by two "drunken thugs,'' the Greymouth District Court heard
yesterday.
One of the assailants, Wayne Rodger Ryan, 23, was sentenced
to six months' home detention when he admitted his part in
the offence.
Ryan also admitted unrelated charges of assaulting a police
officer and disorderly behaviour.
He and two other men were crossing the bridge at 1.35am on
September 10 when they encountered two men and a woman coming
in the opposite direction.
Without warning they attacked the tourists, one of the
assailants knocking John Bonnick, 25, to the ground, where
Ryan delivered several punches and kicks to him.
Police in a patrol car saw the assault from a distance and it
continued until officers intervened.
While handcuffed, Ryan said the tourists had assaulted them,
and a co-offender, Kyle Ashman, yelled as they were being
taken back to the police station, "all we need to say is that
we got rolled by some English tourists''.
Ashman is yet to be sentenced but he and Ryan admitted
assaulting Bonnick with intent to injure.
The tourist suffered bruising to his face, a bleeding and
swollen nose, split lips, sore teeth and bruised thighs.
Ryan also admitted recent charges arising from the execution
of a search warrant at a Cobden house.
He was in the vicinity and was placed under arrest while
trying to open the driver's door of a police car. He was
drunk and abusive, trying to headbutt one officer and
spitting at another.
Lawyer George Linder said Ryan accepted that his behaviour
had been rude and unacceptable, and had apologised to the
officer concerned.
Mr Linder submitted that a sentence of community detention
was called for but Judge Kevin Phillips snapped:'' No! It's
home detention or prison for him.''
Undeterred, Mr Linder said Ryan had a steady job and the
tourist had not been seriously injured in the attack.
"How would you like bruising all over your face, split lips,
a bleeding and swollen nose and sore teeth?'' the judge asked
the lawyer.
"These tourists were set upon by these thugs _ one of them
thought he was going to get thrown over the bridge.
"He was really scared when he was pushed up to the rail and
heard one of the thugs say, `put him over'.
"The female tourist had previously been mugged in South
Africa. She was uneasy when she saw these men approaching,
but her companions said `it will be okay.'''
Judge Phillips said it was the eighth time Ryan had been
convicted of serious violence and it would be the last time
he escaped a full prison sentence.
"The West Coast has developed a tourism industry which is a
major player in the economy of the region.
"Drunken thugs like you destroy that industry,'' he told
Ryan.
- Greymouth Star
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