Woman harassed family friend after ‘banter’ between daughters

Aisling McCann given suspended sentence over insulting emails and silent phone calls

Aisling McCann of Oaklands Park, Swords, Dublin, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to nine charges of harassment on various dates between September 11th and November 22nd, 2015. File photograph: Collins Courts

A mother has been given a suspended sentence after she admitted harassing a former family friend for two months over some “mild school banter” between the women’s young daughters.

In September 2015, Aisling McCann (34) began making anonymous silent phone calls to the victim from a blocked number. Over the next two months she harassed the victim by sending anonymous emails insulting her daughter and telling her to keep away from her children.

She would also order food online and have it delivered to the woman’s home and ordered taxis to pick her up at her home.

McCann of Oaklands Park, Swords, Dublin pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to nine charges of harassment on various dates between September 11th and November 22nd, 2015.

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Garda Sergeant Gerry Holland told Tom Neville, prosecuting, that all the harassment grew out of some very mild school banter that was taken out of proportion by McCann at a stressful time in her life.

Judge Melanie Greally noted that McCann was going through a particularly difficult and vulnerable stage in her life. Instead of confiding in family members she was trying to manage her stress by drinking alcohol.

The judge said she was suspending a 12-month prison sentence after taking into consideration the woman’s lack of any other convictions and her very early plea of guilty.

Owned up

When gardaí went to McCann’s house in December the accused owned up to all the acts of harassment.

Sgt Holland told the court she was completely remorseful at that time. He said there was no logic to her behaviour, which he described as completely irrational.

He said the harassment stopped immediately after gardaí confronted her. The victim had declined to make a victim impact statement and was just relieved it had stopped.

Before it was traced to McCann the harassment caused the victim fear and anxiety and was very distressing to her and her family, the court heard. Sgt Holland said that the former family friendship was now severed and unrecoverable.

Patrick Jackson, defending, said his client came from a very decent and honest family. He said the McCann family wished to thank the garda sergeant for his sensitivity in dealing with the matter.

He told the court that the two women’s daughters had been friends and that McCann’s daughter told her mother about some “very innocent innocuous comment”.

Counsel said McCann was drinking at the time and was under stress because her family home was in negative equity and her daughter was starting secondary school.

Sgt Holland said she had made the calls and sent the emails from her own smartphone and it was easy for gardaí to trace them back to her.

In imposing sentence the judge said McCann was a responsible and supportive parent who was going through a difficult period in her life.