Louise Smith posted a picture of herself on Facebook in a a mask of blood after the attack
A brute who knocked out his girlfriend, leaving her face a mask of blood must pay her just £75 in compensation.
Louise Smith, 27, slammed the sentence imposed by magistrates on Robert Jenney, 30, of Middlesbrough, and told how she had to flee through her kitchen window to escape him.
In a bid to win some kind of justice, the G4S administrator posted a picture of herself on Facebook after the attack.
In a moving post, she said the ‘strong independent woman’ she always was had disappeared upon being confronted by Jenney who wore an ‘unforgettable look of hate and anger’ on his face.
Miss Smith and Jenney had been friends since the age of 13 and met each other by chance at a Middlesbrough FC match last season, rekindling their friendship and then starting to date.
But their three month relationship ended in two shockingly violent attacks, Teesside Magistrates’ Court was told on August 23. However, Jenney only got a 12-month community order for the assaults.
Miss Smith (left), 27 slammed the sentence imposed by magistrates on Robert Jenney (right), 30, of Middlesbrough, and told how she had to flee through her kitchen window to escape him
Miss Smith, who has a daughter called Skyler-Mae, said: ‘The sentenced he received is disgusting, he should have been sent to prison because he could have killed me.
‘I suffer from nightmares and have trouble sleeping, I need to move out of my house and have a fresh start with my daughter.
‘I am suffering from depression but he is free to get on with his life, it feels like he’s been let off.’
Jenney’s punishment will be to do ten days of rehabilitation activity, and he was given a-12 month restraining order to stay away from Miss Smith. He was also ordered to pay £75 compensation to her and £165 court costs.
Miss Smith added: ‘I’m a fiery person, someone who stands up for themselves but when you’re faced with the person you thought you had a future with charging towards you with what I can only describe as an unforgettable look of hate and anger on their face, that strong independent woman disappears.
‘Being punched, thrown about and head butted in the face and being made to feel like a prisoner in my own home having to climb out of the window whilst pouring with blood to run for help is a memory that will stay with me forever.
‘Feeling like such an idiot and fool, taken in by what I thought was a kind, sweet, romantic boyfriend who would have done anything for me for then to turn at the slightest argument or disagreement, become controlling, aggressive, unrecognisable.
‘He isn’t the man I met when I was 13 years old. I don’t know this person any more and I’m starting to question whether I actually ever did.
‘The thing is with these type of people, they have a certain way of making you believe it’s your fault, that you’ve started the argument, that you’ve pushed them to do what they’ve done.
‘They manipulate you into thinking it’s all in your head and you’re the problem when in actual fact, it’s all mind games to break you down.
‘I have a three-year-old girl who I now have to pluck up the courage to face and try and explain why Mammy’s face is poorly, why I’m covered in bruises, why Mammy isn’t her happy self and is quite sad and why Rob won’t be coming round any more.’
Describing the attacks, Miss Smith said: ‘When we first got together he was perfect, he treated me lovely and cooked me meals. I’d known him since I was 13-years-old so I trusted him and really liked him.
‘But after a while we started to argue. We would have the slightest argument but he would overreact and then make me feel like it was my fault.
‘He would also argue with my best friends, it was like he wanted to leave me with nobody, he didn’t like me going out either.’
Arguments turned to violence on July 21 when Miss Smith was assaulted. Despite the incident, Miss Smith gave Jenney a chance to redeem himself.
She said: ‘I actually felt like he needed help and I gave him a second chance after we spoke about some form of help. He said it wouldn’t happen again.’
But just over two weeks later, Jenney attacked her for a second time. Miss Smith continued: ‘We were arguing at my house and then he turned violent.
‘He attacked me and left me unconscious. I woke up to see him sitting rolling a cigarette, there was blood everywhere. I ran to the back door but the key was missing, it was also missing out of the front door.’
Finally, Miss Smith, who had to have the bridge of her nose glued after the attack, said she managed to flee out of her own kitchen window and sought help from a neighbour who called the police.