A mother-of-two who stabbed her boyfriend and left him bleeding on the floor because he texted her ‘happy birthday’ rather than calling her on the phone, has been jailed for six years.
The incident occurred back in May 2019.
Janet Kearns who had just turned 46 at the time,lost her cool when Alan Pearce, in his 60s, texted her to wish her happy birthday, assuming he was cheating on her.
After replying ‘thank you’ to his text, Kearns went over to Mr. Pearce’s third floor flat in Wythenshawe, Manchester, to demand an explanation why he didn’t call instead.
During the confrontation, Kearns stabbed him in his arm with a six-inch kitchen knife as he was calling the police for help. She watched as he collapsed to the floor after the wound severed an artery, leaving him in a pool of blood.
According to Mail Online, Mr. Pearce was rushed to a hospital, where he underwent emergency surgery for his wounds but still has trouble moving his right hand. He’s had plastic surgery to fix the deep wounds and may have to be operated on again.
At Manchester Crown Court Kearns, now 47, from Withington, Manchester, admitted causing grievous bodily harm with intent.
In a statement, Mr Pearce told police: ‘When I was lying on the lobby floor losing blood and getting weaker by the minute, I thought I might die. If it was not for the quick response of police officers and paramedics I would not be here today. I will always be grateful to them.
‘How could she be so callous just walking past me as I was on the floor bleeding to death? I still don’t have a sense of feeling in my right, index and middle fingers and part of my thumb.
‘The scars will always be with me mentally and physically but they won’t hold me back.’
Prosecutor Brian Berlyne said: ‘In August 2017 the defendant first noticed her becoming aggressive at times and she suspected him of being unfaithful. She struck his face but he did not report this to police.
Over the next year her behaviour became erratic. She became aggressive over trivial matters and she claimed he did not give her enough attention and on some occasions, she used or threatened to use violence against him.
‘She damaged or destroyed his belongings and at one point he threatened to call police but she said ”you will be dead before they get here”. He became unhappy with the relationship but decided to continue with it in the hope it would improve.
‘By April 2019 things got even worse and he began to discuss ending the relationship, but she made it clear she did not want it to end and the relationship stumbled on.’
Mr. Berlyne added: ‘On Friday 3 May they argued over the phone and he said it would be the last weekend of the relationship. The next day, which was her 46th birthday, he sent her a text saying ”happy birthday” at around 8am.
‘Three hours later he did receive a response saying: ”thank you” but at 1.43pm that day she went into his flat and asked him why he had not called her. She was speaking in an aggressive manner, and they began to grapple with each other. She tried to pick up her flat key to throw in his face and knocked over a plant pot.
‘He then told her he would call police but as he began looking for his mobile, she grabbed it from the sofa and hurled it against the wall on the hallway. He then tried to use the landline but she threw it at the wall too. He said he would ask a neighbour to call police but although she blocked his path he managed to push past her picked up the mobile began calling police outside.
‘She followed him but then returned to the flat where she took a knife and attacked the complainant in the lobby while he was on the phone to police. He was holding his mobile in his left hand and his right arm was stretched out in attempt to try and stop her from grabbing the phone off him.
‘He then felt something being drawn across the inside of his right arm near his elbow. He was bleeding and she was holding the knife but he managed to tell the operator to get an ambulance. He saw her go back through the lobby door and she returned to the flat and put the knife back.
‘She is believed to have cleaned it before police arrived. She must have seen that the complainant had lost a substantial amount of blood and he could feel the blood continuing to pump out of his arm and realised his artery was severed. He felt faint and unable to stand, and then he sank onto his knees. The complainant saw her looking at him and felt she wanted him to die.
‘Despite the fact she saw there was a large pool of blood by now, she offered him no help. There was no attempt to summon help. The complainant was still on the phone on the floor at this point.
‘Police and paramedics arrived five minutes later and he was taken to hospital. He was pale, sweating and shocked at the blood loss.’
Kearns later told police she wanted to see the victim’s mobile phone as she thought he was being unfaithful and he said he was going to call police.
The mother of two said she grabbed the knife to feel more secure in case he attacked her and claimed the wounds were accidental.
She explained that she loved him but would become ‘irate when she lost control.’ Ms. Kearns also added that she was sorry and did not intend to cause harm.
In mitigation, her lawyer Ben Kaufman said: ‘The defendant had post-traumatic stress disorder from a road traffic accident she had been involved in December 2018. The attack happened at the spur of the moment due to an argument.’
But sentencing Judge Hilary Manley told Kearns: ‘Your relationship with Mr. Pearce was marred by jealousy and you attacked him and tried to take his phone. You took a six-inch knife from the kitchen and struck him with it, causing serious injury. You intended to cause him serious harm.
‘The ongoing effect on your victim is profound. He had to have surgery and has been left with scarring and limited functionality in his dominant hand.
It is your good fortune that he survived and police and emergency services were able to get to the scene. If they had not you could have been facing a murder charge.’