Man (21) ordered to do community service for nightclub bomb hoax call

A MAN who called in a bomb scare to a Dublin nightclub causing it to be evacuated because some of his friends had gone there …

A MAN who called in a bomb scare to a Dublin nightclub causing it to be evacuated because some of his friends had gone there instead of attending his 21st birthday celebrations has to perform 150 hours community service.

Kris Holmes (21) made the hoax bomb call to gardaí on his own mobile phone “in a moment of madness” after some of his friends did not join him at the nightclub where he had his party.

Holmes, of Kildare Road, Crumlin, pleaded guilty to making a false report that there was a bomb in Barcode Nightclub, Westwood Club, Clontarf Road, Dublin, on April 12th, 2009.

Judge Katherine Delahunt told Mr Holmes that people who make these kinds of calls usually end up serving custodial sentences but she did not believe that he or the community would be best served by incarcerating him.

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She ordered he carry out 150 hours community service in lieu of a one-year prison sentence. The maximum penalty for this offence is five years’ imprisonment.

Judge Delahunt ordered him to pay €1,000 to Focus Ireland and €1,000 to The Samaritans.

Garda Lisa Sheehan told Paul Carroll, prosecuting, that a call was made at 1.16am from a mobile phone to the 999 emergency line stating there was a bomb in Barcode Nightclub. The busy club was evacuated for a short time while gardaí carried out a search but they found no suspicious devices.

Garda Sheehan said they quickly traced the mobile phone number to Mr Holmes, the registered owner, and attended at his home on April 24th. He was arrested and admitted making the call. He said he had been refused entry to the club and said friends of his whom he thought should have come to his 21st birthday party had gone to Barcode instead.

Mr Holmes said he made the call from Dame Street near the club he went to. He apologised and said he had too much to drink on the night. He has no previous convictions and lives with his parents.

Defence counsel Cormac Quinn said Mr Holmes had been holding his birthday celebrations at Sin nightclub off Dame Street but some of his friends went to Barcode instead and he had been refused entry.

Mr Quinn said he had made the threat “in a moment of madness or fit of pique” because he felt his friends should come to his birthday party. He did not think it through and made the call from his own phone.

He said Mr Holmes had got “the fright of his life” due to this court case and he will never reoffend again.

Mr Quinn said Mr Holmes came from a decent, hardworking and law-abiding family who were “horrified” when gardaí called to their home. He said if Mr Holmes were any younger his mother “would have hit him a slap”. He said Mr Holmes worked two or three days a week as an apprentice glazier. He said the offence was “not premeditated, rather a reckless act” and his conviction would have ramifications for his desire to work abroad in the future.