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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Oliver Clay & Ashlie Blakey

Women barged into ex-friend's home and battered her in 'wild' attack

Three women burst into their former friend's home and battered her in a 'wild' attack.

Charlie Wilson, 25, Alysha Dean, 24, and Charlotte Corless, 23, 'barged' their way into Eve Sadler's home and launched a horrific 'premeditated' attack on her, kicking her 'repeatedly' and punching her, the Liverpool Echo reports. Miss Sadler's home was also smashed up by the 'intoxicated' women.

The three women were angry with Miss Sadler because it was claimed her brother owed money to Wilson, Chester Crown Court heard. She had also broken up with a friend of the group.

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Text messages discovered by investigators following the incident revealed Wilson said she 'can't believe she did this', while a conversation between shameless Corless and Dean said 'we didn't hurt her that bad'. The court was told how Miss Sadler heard a knock at her front door in the early hours of the morning on September 10, 2021.

She had returned home from a night out to watch a Tyson Fury boxing match with two others and believed the person knocking was her landlady. But as she opened the door, she was confronted by Wilson, Dean and Corless, all from Runcorn, who burst in with Wilson leading the way and shouting 'I want my money'.

Joanne Moore, prosecuting, told how Miss Sadler was forced back onto the couch and told them to get out but her three former friends began kicking her. Dean kicked and punched her, knocking her to the ground and causing 'severe pain'.

Charlie Wilson (runcornweeklynews)

Miss Sadler’s two friends in the flat tried to intervene but Corless and Wilson stood on her head as Dean 'went wild smashing up' the property. Despite efforts to protect Miss Sadler, the assault continued, with Wilson kicking her and she was joined by Dean, who 'rained repeated blows' on Miss Sadler’s face and pulled her hair as she tried to shield her face with her hands.

A male friend of the victim dragged Dean away. The prosecutor said Miss Sadler made a remark about Dean’s boyfriend 'cheating on her', which resulted in 'all hell breaking loose' as Dean proceeded to 'go wild, and smashed up the property' while Corless 'repeatedly punched Miss Sadler to the face'.

It ended when Miss Sadler’s male friends managed to keep the attackers away from their victim. Miss Sadler said when she contacted the police they told her she was 'safe in her own home and it wasn’t an emergency'.

She 'felt like she was having a panic attack' and her nose was 'bleeding heavily' while her arm also bled. The damage to her flat was so extensive it looked 'destroyed', including a fish tank, with the estimated value running to thousands of pounds.

Miss Sadler suffered a broken eye socket, swelling, bruising to her eye, nose and scalp, plus an abrasion to her cheek and tenderness.

In her victim impact statement she said the ordeal left her 'badly shaken' and she hasn’t been able to return to the flat other than collect some belongings, and she remained 'scared' of encountering her attackers. She added she suffered 'flashbacks' and 'I don’t feel safe at home'.

Alysha Dean (runcornweeklynews)

Miss Sadler also took five months off work, adding she didn’t feel safe in court at the plea hearing in November. All three attackers pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm (ABH) at the first opportunity with Dean also admitting criminal damage.

None had any previous convictions. Paul Wood, defending Dean, conceded the assault caused an 'unpleasant injury', as he warned against the risk of 'double-counting' aggravating features such as being in drink.

He referred to Dean’s previous 'good character', her assessment as a 'low risk of reoffending', 'remorse' and a 'significant period of delay in which the defendant has held down work, stayed out of trouble', and lost one job but found another in pharmaceuticals. Mr Wood said Dean was also awaiting an assessment for borderline personality disorder in addition to a 'question mark' over undiagnosed attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD).

She was also the primary carer for her young daughter, and has only had two drinks since the night in question - 'a dramatic reduction' in her alcohol consumption. Mark Pritchard, defending Corless, contested the degree of premeditation, arguing the assault was a case of 'three young women in drink in a drunken spur of the moment to make a very silly decision', adding the incident was an 'expression of her immaturity', and she deserved full credit for her guilty plea.

He added Corless was 'struggling with her grief' at the time because she had lost two grandparents in a short space of time, but realised her behaviour in her words was '100 per cent wrong'. Mr Pritchard said Corless presented a 'realistic prospect of rehabilitation'.

Jeremy Rawson, representing Wilson, said her position had 'significant mitigating features', namely her previous good character, five references that 'speak highly of her', and her 'tangible and obvious remorse'. He said Wilson 'blames herself and she wishes it had never happened' and the 'horrible incident was something she regrets bitterly'.

Charlotte Corless (runcornweeklynews)

Mr Rawson added she presented a 'low risk of reoffending' and 'realistic prospect of rehabilitation', was in work and had a partner and two young children. Judge Simon Berkson sentenced Dean, of Mevagissey Road, Brookvale, to 18 months in prison, suspended for two years, plus a 20-day rehabilitation activity requirement (RAR), 120 days on an alcohol monitoring programme and 250 hours of unpaid work.

Dean must also pay £500 in compensation. The judge sentenced Corless, of Suffolk Street, to 16 months in prison, suspended for two years, with a 20-day RAR and 250 hours of unpaid work, and to pay £500 in compensation.

Wilson, of Mooring Close, Murdishaw, received 16 months suspended for two years, plus a 25-day RAR, and 250 hours of unpaid work. He made a restraining order against all three defendants to run for seven years.

In his sentencing comments, Judge Berkson described the case as 'three people targeting this one victim causing her not only physical injuries, which include a serious injury so far as ABH is concerned, but also the emotional trauma of three friends attacking her in her own home'.

Summing up, Judge Berkson said: "This is a very upsetting case so far as this court is concerned. Four friends have fallen out and one friend has ended up beaten up in her own home and had property damaged."

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