Man jailed for his involvement in mob that tried to storm Dublin nightclub

One of men attempting to push past doormen was armed with hatchet, court hears

The scene at Adam Court, off Grafton Street, in July 2019, where the incident took place. Photograph: Dan Griffin
The scene at Adam Court, off Grafton Street, in July 2019, where the incident took place. Photograph: Dan Griffin

A man who was part of a large mob who tried to storm their way into a Dublin nightclub last year has been jailed for 18 months.

Moses Lulendo (19) joined up with the group of males, some with their faces covered, which tried to push past doormen at Lost Lane nightclub off Grafton Street, in the city centre on July 7th, 2019.

Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard that some of the other men present had a hatchet and that a petrol bomb made from a Hennessy brandy bottle was also found near the scene.

Det Garda Sarah Barry told Pieter Le Vert, prosecuting, that the mob was trying to get into the nightclub to exact revenge on people they believed were inside who were linked to an earlier attack on a relative of Lulendo's.

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Retaliation

The previous week a car occupied by this man and another was attacked. Det Garda Barry said that the mob was going to the club that night in retaliation.

She said that after 17 years working in the city centre, she had never seen anything like this incident.

Lulendo, of Gardiner Place in Dublin city, pleaded guilty to committing violent disorder at Adam Court, Dublin 2.

In a victim impact report, a doorman from the venue said he had worked for more than a decade in security and this incident was the most vulnerable he had felt in that time. He said he grew up in Belfast and was very aware of the devastation that could be caused by petrol bombs.

He said he had since stopped working in security as a result of these events and he continues to suffer flashbacks and panic attacks.

Lulendo’s 16 previous convictions include public order offences committed on July 16th, 2019, nine days after these events.

Dave Fleming, defending, said Lulendo was not a ring leader on the night and was not armed.

Judge Elma Sheahan said that the defendant was part of a large group of males who had their faces covered. She said it was open to Lulendo to leave if he was surprised by the level of violence from "the mob" some of whom had brought weapons capable of causing serious injuries.

On Thursday, she sentenced him to a prison term of 18 months.

Lulendo also pleaded guilty to two robberies of iPhones at a playground on October 29th, 2017. The judge imposed a sentence of 26 months but suspended the final eight months on condition he comply with the Probation Service for 12 months.