Woman pretended to be pregnant to stop boyfriend strangling her

Brian McLaughlin sentenced to three years, with two and a half years suspended

Brian McLaughlin appeared at Letterkenny Circuit Court after pleading guilty to the 2013 offences at a previous sitting.
Brian McLaughlin appeared at Letterkenny Circuit Court after pleading guilty to the 2013 offences at a previous sitting.

A young woman had to pretend to her boyfriend that she was pregnant to stop him from strangling her, a court in Co Donegal has heard.

Shauna McLaughlin was assaulted and imprisoned by Brian McLaughlin after they argued following a night out in Co Donegal.

After returning to their home on St Oran’s Road in Buncrana, McLaughlin, (22), held Ms McLaughlin hostage and subjecting her to a vicious assault.

McLaughlin appeared at Letterkenny Circuit Court after pleading guilty to the 2013 offences at a previous sitting.

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The court heard how McLaughlin set upon his girlfriend after she preferred to stay out with friends instead of returning home with him.

They argued and then McLaughlin suddenly punched her in the face before climbing on top of her on a bed and trying to strangle her. Ms McLaughlin said she thought she was going to die but managed to claw at her attacker.

However, he twisted her arm behind her back and she said she remembers waking up in the sitting room. She called the emergency services, but, when gardaí arrived, McLaughlin locked the doors and a hostage-like situation began at around 1.55am.

He got a kitchen knife and began sharpening it and refused to allow gardaí into the house. Shauna eventually managed to hide the knife, but McLaughlin fetched a number of other knives for the kitchen.

Trained hostage negotiators were called who contacted Brian McLaughlin’s father who finally convinced him to take some medication. He eventually released Ms McLaughlin and, at 4.40am, he finally gave himself up to gardaí.

He asked to be admitted to a psychiatric unit at Letterkenny General Hospital, but he was refused admission because staff felt he had addiction issues.

Defence barrister Damien Crawford said his client had suffered a "mental meltdown."

He asked how his client’s irrational actions were that of a rational man.

At one stage, McLaughlin had held aloft a television over his head and threatened to throw it at Ms McLaughlin.

When questioned about this by gardaí, he denied it, saying he would have nothing to play his Grand Theft Auto computer game on if he did.

Mr Crawford said his client was receiving medication for mental health issues but had unfortunately mixed it with alcohol on the night.

“He is is deeply ashamed and has been trying to unravel what happened that night. He was on medication. This is more of a mental health episode rather than a criminal episode and I am not taking away from what happened to Shauna. He had not got an appreciation of what was going on around him. He had a mental meltdown,” said the barrister.

Judge Francis Comerford said there was a limit to how much mental illness could explain McLaughlin's actions on the night.

He described the actions of McLaughlin in holding down his victim and then “throttling” her as horrible and said the outcome could have been far, far worse.

He sentenced McLaughlin to three years in prison for each offence to run concurrently, but suspended the last two and a half years.

Two relatives of Ms McLaughlin were in court for the hearing but the court was told that she had now moved overseas.