A Jet2 passenger was arrested after their drunken antics on a plane saw them attempt to expose themselves. Jack Breheny was travelling to Manchester from Salou in Spain alongside his twin brother when the incident unfolded.
The 32-year-old had planned the trip following a break-up, a court heard. Police were called to the aircraft moments after it touched down at Manchester Airport at about 10pm on October 3 last year following reports of a ‘very intoxicated’ passenger on the flight.
When police boarded the aircraft, officers concluded that ‘it was immediately obvious that the defendant was heavily intoxicated’, prosecutor Hayley Parkes told Manchester Crown Court on Tuesday, January 14.
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Breheny, who is unemployed, was ‘compliant’ at first, offering out his hands to the arresting officers and telling them ‘take me’ before they handcuffed him. He then ‘fell over immediately’ in front of an officer and then began to display ‘resistance’.
He had to be assisted by the arresting officers as they walked him off the aircraft. Breheny was loaded onto a waiting police van and driven to the airport police station but his behaviour ‘was becoming more disorderly’ and he began making threats to the officers, the MEN reports.
He was placed straight into a police cell ‘due to the risk’ he posed, said Miss Parkes. Jet2 flight attendants told police the defendant had been running up and down the plane ‘trying to expose himself’ as shocked fellow passengers watched. The defendant’s twin brother ‘prevented this to an extent’, said the prosecutor.
He began ‘shouting and screaming’ and locked himself on a toilet and when staff finally opened the door, they found him seated fully clothed on the loo. Breheny had no previous convictions apart from one reprimand and one caution when he was a youth, the court was told.
Adam Roxborough, defending, told the court his client had been on a week-long holiday in Salou, Spain, paid for by the brother to get over a recent break up suffered by the defendant. Breheny had taken the break-up ‘badly’, he said.
He said: “The idea was to have a week’s break. That’s the context in which this offending took place. Mr Breheny accepts this was disgraceful behaviour. He’s deeply ashamed.”
When Judge Suzanne Goddard KC said it had taken until page 11 of the pre-sentence report for the defendant to say he was sorry, Mr Roxborough said: “He’s expressed to me he’s deeply ashamed of his behaviour. He knows it will have caused a significant degree of anxiety for a number of people on the flight.”
The barrister said his client had been shouting in the toilet ‘because he could not unlock it in his situation – that’s an indicator of the state of his inebriation’. Mr Roxborough said such offences ‘routinely’ end in jail sentences but he asked the judge to accept a recommendation in the pre-sentence report penned by the Probation Service that Breheny be handed a community sentence as he had acknowledged he had a ‘problem’ with drinking and had sought help to address it.
He said his client had admitted his guilt at the first opportunity and ‘did not seek to prevaricate’. The court heard Breheny also consumed cocaine and Mr Roxborough said his client had been ‘self-medicating if I can put it that way’.
Judge Goddard told the defendant: “Your behaviour was appalling. It’s the sort of behaviour that caused distress and upset for those on the plane having to watch the way you behaved.”
The judge noted there was ‘no violence’ or threats made on board the aircraft, that the defendant had no previous convictions and that the defendant had said he was ‘deeply ashamed’. Judge Goddard said there was a ‘good prospect of rehabilitation’ and was ‘able to stop short’ of handing out an immediate prison sentence.
Breheny, of Briarlea Gardens in Burnage, was handed a six-month jail sentence suspended for 18 months after he admitted a single charge of being drunk on an aircraft. He was ordered to carry out 150 hours of unpaid work and 15 days of rehabilitation activity.
He was also told to complete an alcohol treatment program. The judge told him: “I’m giving you a real opportunity today. If you fail to take it, you will only have yourself to blame.”