Man with 230 previous convictions jailed for falsely imprisoning two boys

Michael Cummins threatened to pour acid into child’s eyes during drug-induced paranoia

Michael Cummins has  230 previous convictions including fir thefts, burglaries, unauthorised taking of vehicles, possessing stolen property and 100 road traffic offences. Photograph: Collins Courts.
Michael Cummins has 230 previous convictions including fir thefts, burglaries, unauthorised taking of vehicles, possessing stolen property and 100 road traffic offences. Photograph: Collins Courts.

A Dublin man with 230 previous convictions has been jailed for falsely imprisoning and threatening two boys during a “frightening” drug-induced paranoia.

Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard Michael Cummins (32) threatened to pour what he said was acid into one of the boy's eyes and said he was going to blow their house up during the incident in Swords in August last year.

Garda Miriam O’Donovan said Cummins approached the 13-year-old and 15-year-old from across the street saying: “Why were you looking at me, I get very paranoid”.

He then hit the 13-year-old, ordered the boy to delete pictures “with eyes on them” from his phone and barged into this child’s home.

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The teenagers asked a passerby to call gardaí ­ before following Cummins, who was jailed for two years, into the house.

The older boy later said he saw the intruder go upstairs and return wearing a wig, peaked cap and carrying a bag. He also saw Cummins take a wallet from the kitchen.

Garda O’Donovan said that while Cummins had them locked in the house, he demanded each boy to look him in the eyes “and don’t look away”. She said he hit the younger teen twice more during this ordeal.

Cummins, a father-of-two of Applewood Avenue, Swords, pleaded guilty to stealing an iPhone, making a threat to kill, burglary, false imprisonment and assault in Swords on August 9th, 2017.

Frightening

His 230 previous convictions include thefts, burglaries, unauthorised taking of vehicles, possessing stolen property and 100 road traffic offences.

Garda O'Donovan told Maurice Coffey BL, prosecuting, that Cummins again ordered the 13-year-old to delete pictures while he had locked them all in the home.

The boy who jumped a four metre drop out the kitchen window in his bare feet to get away from the intruder.

Garda O’Donovan said Cummins unlocked the front door after brief negotiations when gardaí ­ arrived on the scene.

The 13-year-old later told a child specialist Garda interviewer that Cummins had threatened to pour what he claimed was acid, but what was later found to be eye-drops, into the boy’s eyes.

He also threatened to blow the house up.

Gardaí recovered a wallet and phone from Cummins at the scene.

Victim impact reports made on behalf of the boys by their caregivers revealed that both of them were more fearful in public and that the incident had had detrimental effects on their well-being.

The court heard the neither boy had known Cummins, though the older boy had seen him once before on a bus.

Judge Martin Nolan noted that Cummins presented "as a very frightening person to these two young people" on the day. He accepted Cummins's remorse but said it was a voluntary activity to take drugs and that he was liable for his behaviour.

He imposed a two-year sentence backdated to when Cummins went into custody.