
Tom Keohane, pictured centre with his son David and daughter Carol, says he is pleased with the 14 year sentence handed down to Thomas Isaako.
The family of David Keohane have reacted positively to the 14-year sentence handed down to Thomas Isaako for the 2008 attack that left the 29-year-old Corkman in a coma for seven months.
David’s father Tom told the Irish Echo that the judge in the case, Ronald Solomon, “did his job very well, not like the jury”, referring to the fact that Isaako had, in March, been acquitted of attempted murder.
The family watched the sentencing from Ireland via video link as Judge Solomon handed down the sentence to Isaako for the viscous assault that left Keohane with “a life sentence”, according to Tom.
“The injuries sustained by the victim can only be described as horrendous,” Judge Solomon said at the sentencing hearing in Sydney District Court.
“The savage attack in a matter of moments tragically changed the course of the victim’s life from that of a successful, independent young man to that of a dependent person confined to a wheelchair.”
Shortly after the sentence had been handed down, New South Wales Police renewed their efforts to track down a second man wanted in connection to the attack.
New Zealand national Kane Desmond Tupuolamoui, 19 years old at the time of the attack, is however believed to have fled the country.
David, now 29, woke from his coma at Cork University Hospital in March 2009.


