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Former footballer Joey Barton leaves Westminster Magistrates' Court, central London, where he has been found guilty of assaulting his wife, Georgia Barton. Alamy Stock Photo

Former footballer Joey Barton found guilty of assaulting his wife in 2021

The former Man City player was handed a 12-week prison sentence suspended for two years at Westminster Magistrates’ Court.

JOEY BARTON HAS been found guilty of assaulting his wife by kicking her in the head at their family home.

The former Manchester City, Newcastle and Rangers midfielder left Georgia Barton, 38, with a lump on her forehead and a bleeding nose after the incident in Kew, south-west London, in June 2021.

He was handed a 12-week prison sentence suspended for two years at Westminster Magistrates’ Court.

They had each been drinking alcohol with two other couples while their children slept upstairs, before having a drunken row about a family matter, the court previously heard.

Barton, 42, then grabbed his wife and pushed her to the ground before kicking her in the head.

Georgia Barton had called police immediately after the incident, saying her husband had “just hit me”, but later sent a letter to prosecutors retracting her allegations.

At the same court today, chief magistrate Paul Goldspring rejected Joey Barton’s account of events as “vague” as he convicted him of a single charge of assault by beating after a two-day trial.

While he acknowledged the former footballer had “a record of violence”, the magistrate said: “I am satisfied that it is not necessary to impose an immediate custodial sentence.”

Goldspring said a mitigating factor was that the couple remained in a “happy relationship” with a young child, adding: “That is not something I want to interfere with.”

Speaking outside court after the sentencing, Barton said he was “really disappointed” with the magistrates’ verdict and intended to appeal the decision at the High Court.

Prosecutor Helena Duong told the court Georgia Barton’s 999 call to police on the night of the incident was “compelling evidence” of the assault, as she had described it in “clear terms”.

Georgia Barton was not as affected by alcohol as both she and Joey Barton had suggested, the prosecutor said.

Duong said Georgia Barton’s bloody nose was “an injury that really requires an explanation”, adding: “It was, plainly, something not caused by an accident.”

Joey Barton previously told the court he admitted to getting into an argument with his wife but denied that anything “physical” had happened.

He was arrested in his bedroom on the night of the incident, where he had been asleep and was still drunk, the trial was told.

He was taken to a local police station, where he gave a no-comment interview.

Simon Csoka, defending Barton, said it was not clear what the period of time was between Georgia Barton receiving the injury and making the 999 call.

Referring to the lump sustained on her head, he told the court: “There are a number of circumstances where the injury may have been sustained accidentally.”

The former footballer, of Widnes, Cheshire, was due to face trial at a magistrates’ court in 2022 but the case was adjourned after Georgia Barton sent a letter to prosecutors retracting her allegations.

In the letter, she said her injuries had been caused by an accident when a friend moved in to separate the pair.

A judge ordered that proceedings be paused over concerns a trial would be unfair to Barton after prosecutors said they did not plan to ask Georgia Barton to give evidence in court.

The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Stephen Parkinson, appealed against the decision at the High Court in London, with barristers claiming at a hearing that a fair trial could go ahead.

In a judgment in June, two senior judges ruled in the DPP’s favour and said Barton should face a trial over the allegations in front of a different judge.

Barton, wearing a black jacket, jumper, trousers and glasses, did not speak from the dock but was asked to stand as the verdict was given.

He was ordered to pay £2,183 (€2,617) in victim surcharge and prosecution costs within seven days.

Written by Press Association and originally published on The 42 whose award-winning team produces original content that you won’t find anywhere else: on GAA, League of Ireland, women’s sport and boxing, as well as our game-changing rugby coverage, all with an Irish eye. Subscribe here.

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