Regan Sleeman was jailed over the attack. Photo / Otago Daily Times
After racist and homophobic slurs, two Mosgiel men laid into their victims in a vicious street attack, a court has heard.
Jessy Clayton Clark, 24, who was the agitator in the incident, was sentenced to 11 months' home detention by Judge Jim Large when he appeared in the Dunedin District Court yesterday on charges of wounding with intent to injure and assault with intent to injure.
Regan James Sleeman, 22, was jailed for three years yesterday on identical charges as well as counts of injuring with intent to injure, obstructing police and failing to assist police carrying out a search from an earlier episode.
On October 12 last year, Sleeman was out drinking in town with his cousin.
In the same bar was a university PhD student with whom they had a brief interaction.
The victim was taken to hospital where he was found to have two fractures to his cheekbone and one to his nose.
Lacerations to the man's face and head were glued together because he did not want stitches, the court heard.
Sleeman attended the Dunedin Central police station on November 1, but it was no routine arrest.
He refused to hand over his cellphone and when officers finally seized it, he refused to give his password to them.
Sleeman was bailed on condition he abide by a curfew and abstain from alcohol.
On December 14, at 3am — after drinking and while he should have been at home — the defendant was in McDonald's in George St with his 24-year-old friend Jessy Clayton Clark.
Clark stood over two men in an "aggressive manner", claiming they had said something insulting to him.
The pair remained seated and managed to pacify the defendant who staggered off.
He sat with Sleeman and abused other members of the public as they entered the restaurant.
When this too failed to spark a violent reaction, the man removed his shirt and stood in the middle of the concourse, slapping his bare chest.