Northern Ireland

Man who drank five glasses of vodka before causing death of Barry McManus by dangerous driving is jailed

Barry McManus was killed in the collision
Barry McManus was killed in the collision

A man who admitted causing death by dangerous driving has been jailed with a judge stating his behaviour had “ripped the heart out of a young family".

Vladimar Kovac (42) from Carrowshee Park, Lisnaskea was “intoxicated, driving aggressively, at high speed and with the accelerator fully depressed” at the time of the horrific impact.

The victim, Barry McManus who had just become a father for the second time, was killed instantly by the impact on June 11 2022 which “cruelly” was his wife’s birthday.

He was driving his Renault Megane home from work along the Belfast Road, Brookeborough, when it was struck by Kovac’s Volkswagen Golf.

Records showed he was using his phone at the time and was still talking on it when police arrived, telling them he was informing his wife of the crash.

Prosecution counsel told Dungannon Crown Court that when police attended with the victim’s wife to inform her of his death, she answered the door holding their three-week-old son in her arms.

“Given her level of distress as this news was delivered, an officer had to take the baby from her, and nurse him until her parents arrived to support her,” said the prosecution.

Analysis revealed Kovac’s accelerator pedal was fully depressed for the five second period before the collision, increasing the speed from 80mph to 95mph in that short time.

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No braking activity was recorded with only “relatively small steering input”.

When arrested he claimed to have had an argument with his wife and began consuming alcohol, accepting he had “at least five glasses of vodka”, before getting into his car to listen to music.

His wife began ringing him so he drove off claiming to be “under so much pressure”.

The prosecution referred to a Victim Impact Statement provided by Mr McManus’ wife: “Speaking of the devastating loss. In the most cruel of coincidences that is Mrs McManus’ birthday. She also tells of the difficulty in seeing the defendant and his family in locality when her husband is gone, along with the challenges brought by her being alone with their two young children.”

Mr McManus’ daughter also provided “a heartrending note” to the court.

Judge Richard Greene KC noted the victim’s car was severely damaged in the collision and the driver’s door had been ripped off.

Mr McManus was slumped forward and died instantaneously having sustained serious head injuries.

He said, “I have read the Victim Impact Statements which eloquently sum up the loss to Mr McManus’ wife, children and family. The loss to this young family is unfathomable. The impact of them is heartwrenching to say the least.”

Addressing Kovac directly, he continued: “The selfish decision you made ripped the heart out of a family who will forever be impacted. You will serve your sentence and return to your family. You may from time-to-time think of this matter, but it will not consume you in the way it will affect the victims.”

Kovac was jailed for nine-and-a-half years to be served half in custody and half on licence and disqualified from driving for 10 years.