Parade attacker jailed for 21 years and six months

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Jonny Humphries,at Liverpool Crown Courtand

Lauren Hirst,North West

CPS A police custody image of Paul Doyle. He has grey hair which is long on top and short at the sides. He is wearing a grey t-shirt and is staring directly at the camera.CPS

A man who used his car as a “weapon” to plough into more than 130 people at Liverpool FC’s victory parade has been jailed for 21 years and six months.

Paul Doyle, 54, drove at crowds “in a rage” after his “anger had completely taken hold of him” shortly before 18:00 BST on 26 May, Liverpool Crown Court heard.

Judge Andrew Menary KC said the former Royal Marine, who stared straight ahead with no expression as he was sentenced, had generated “fear and panic” and his “disregard for human life defied ordinary understanding”.

Doyle admitted 31 charges including causing grievous bodily harm (GBH) with intent, and dangerous driving and affray, with victims aged between six months and 77 years.

Judge Menary told the married father of three children: “It is difficult, if not impossible, to convey in words alone the scene of devastation you caused.

“It shows you, quite deliberately, accelerating into groups of fans time and time again.

“You struck people head-on, knocked others onto the bonnet, drove over limbs, crushed prams and forced those nearby to scatter in terror.”

Judge Menary continued: “You ploughed on at speed and over a considerable distance, violently knocking people aside or simply driving over them – person, after person, after person.

“You accelerated forwards and backwards repeatedly, several victims became trapped beneath the vehicle as you continued to move it.

“Others were thrown into the air or propelled across the ground.”

He added Doyle acted in an “inexplicable and undiluted fury” when he ploughed into the crowds.

Doyle spent large portions of the two-day sentencing hearing in tears – with dashcam and CCTV footage of his attack played multiple times to the public gallery.

He gave no reaction as he was taken down from the dock by prison officers.

Victims of the rampage on Water Street in the city centre spoke of their terror and injuries during the two-day hearing.

Sheree Aldridge, 37, said she thought her baby son Teddy Eveson had died after his pram was thrown into the air after being hit by Doyle’s car, adding that she thought she would “be next”.

“I thought my children would grow up without a mother,” she said.

A 12-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, said: “I found myself on the floor having been hit by a car I did not see coming, I have never felt so scared before in my life.”

The boy’s mother said her heart sank when she saw her child motionless on the floor.

She said: “The sight of my son lying motionless on the road, not moving for those few seconds, and the sound of the car hitting people will live with me forever.”

Following sentencing, Judge Menary said he wished to formally commend Dan Barr, who climbed into the back seat of Doyle’s car and held the automatic gear stick in park mode to bring the vehicle to a stop.

“His actions on that day were outstandingly brave,” the judge said.

“At a moment when many understandably feared for their own safety, he ran towards the danger, entered a moving vehicle and brought it to a halt, thereby preventing further injury and quite possibly saving lives.”

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