Student awarded €15,000 after attack by Krystle bouncer

Court hears Elaine Bennett was punched and kicked outside nightclub on Harcourt Street

When Elaine Bennett wanted to go into Krystle Nightclub she was refused entry because, according to bouncers, she was “too drunk”. File photograph: Getty Images

A 28-year-old student who will be scarred for life after an attack by a nightclub bouncer has been awarded damages in the Circuit Civil Court.

Elaine Bennett told her barrister Mark O’Connell that she had been celebrating new year 2014 with friends when she and they decided to go to Krystle Nightclub, Harcourt Street, Dublin.

She said her friends had gone inside while she stayed outside for a smoke. When she wanted to go in, she was refused entry because, according to bouncers, she was “too drunk”. She had drunk seven glasses of wine that day.

Ms Bennett, who is from Cork, said she left the area but came back half an hour later as her friends were inside and she was alone on the street. She was refused entry a second time.

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She told the court that when she asked again if she could be let in, a female bouncer suddenly attacked her, pulling her to the ground by her hair.

Circuit Court president Mr Justice Raymond Groarke heard that Ms Bennett was punched and kicked on her body and face before another security guard separated them.

She told Mr O’Connell she had been helped up by people on the street before gardaí­ arrived at the scene. She attended her GP a few days later complaining of bruising on her face and body. Her wounds had left a permanent scar under her right eye.

Denied liability

Ms Bennett, of Glenary, Glencoo Park, Boreenmana Road in Cork, sued Triglen Holdings Ltd which trades as Krystle Nightclub and P&B Security Services Ltd (now in liquidation), with a registered address at Newhall, Naas, Co Kildare.

The defendants had denied liability and claimed that Ms Bennett had been extremely and racially abusive towards the security staff and had pushed female bouncer Dawn Cleary down the entrance stairs, calling her a bitch and a Polish lesbian. She had called another bouncer a “Polish bastard”.

Judge Groarke said that although it was his view that the bouncers had an obligation to refuse Ms Bennett entry because she was intoxicated, he was satisfied she had been viciously assaulted.

He said he could not believe a word bouncer Dawn Cleary had said in the witness box. She had also refused to co-operate with gardaí­ who investigated the incident and in his view she should not be licensed to work in security.

The judge awarded Ms Bennett €15,000 damages and adjourned the case to a date this month to determine which of the two defendants was liable to pay the award.