Former world boxing champion jailed for four months

Eamonn Magee told court: ‘That girl can fight . . . she was punching me, she was (Marvin) Hagler’

Eamonn Magee celebrates his victory in the WBU Welterweight title fight against Jimmy Vincent in Cardiff in 2003. Photograph: John Gichigi/Getty Images
Eamonn Magee celebrates his victory in the WBU Welterweight title fight against Jimmy Vincent in Cardiff in 2003. Photograph: John Gichigi/Getty Images

Former world boxing champion Eamonn Magee has been jailed for four months for assaulting a woman in a north Belfast flat.

The judge told the 43-year-old ex-fighter that his “nasty” attack on a vulnerable victim warranted the prison term. However, Magee was granted bail pending a planned appeal against the assault conviction.

Belfast Magistrates' Court had heard he dragged Louise Mullan to the ground by her hair before kicking and hitting her. The nursing home worker said she was subjected to a no-warning attack during a late-night drinking session at a friend's apartment in July last year.

Denying the charge, the defendant claimed she subjected him to a barrage of up to 10 punches he likened to legendary US middleweight Marvin Hagler. Magee, known as The Terminator during a professional career which saw him capture the WBU welterweight belt, had left a bar with Ms Mullan and her boyfriend at closing time to go back to a mutual friend's flat in the Oldpark area.

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She told the court they had some drinks before Magee targeted her as she sat on a kitchen bench. “All of a sudden Eamonn just turned into somebody else, grabbed me by the hair and trailed me to the ground,” she said at last month’s d hearing. “He was kicking and hitting me, holding me on the ground. I was trying my best to swing back to get him off me.”

She said the attack lasted for up to two minutes, before Magee got up and ran out the door. She said she was left with rib and leg injuries, forcing her to take unpaid leave from her job.

Magee, of Eskdale Gardens in Belfast, claimed Ms Mullan had been “a bit lairy” and struck him first, knowing his status as a former world champion boxer. The boxer said she suddenly hit him with a right-left-right combination as he tried to restrain her. She landed further strikes after backing into and starting to slide down a wall, he claimed.

“That girl can fight, as she went down she was punching me something shocking. She can fight like a man,” he told the court. “My ribs were the worst, she was punching me, she was (Marvin) Hagler.”

Magee repeatedly denied prosecution assertions that the violence came from him. “If I had hit that girl I would have knocked her out, and it would only be one punch,” he insisted.

Following his conviction, however, he returned to court to be sentenced.

Defence counsel Sean O’Hare confirmed his client maintains that he acted in self-defence. In a plea for leniency, Mr O’Hare stressed Magee’s status as a family man and continued involvement in the boxing world.

District Judge Peter King told the defendant he was entitled to no credit for any post-conviction remorse because he still protests his innocence. He said: "This was a nasty assault against a vulnerable individual. The description of how you say you had to defend yourself from assault from your victim strikes me as nonsensical."

Magee appeared shocked as he was handed a four-month prison term and led to the cells. Mr O’Hare then secured his release on £250 bail pending the appeal hearing.