AFL player Noah Balta avoids jail for car park assault but given curfew and alcohol ban

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Richmond footballer fined $3,000 after pleading guilty to attackPremiership defender also pays victim $45,000 in compensationAFL star Noah Balta has avoided jail time and instead been handed a night-time curfew as part of his punishment for assaulting a man outside a regional venue.Balta, who plays for Richmond, was sentenced at Albury Local Court on Tuesday after pleading guilty to repeatedly punching Thomas Washbrook, 27, outside the Mulwala Water Ski Club in the NSW Riverina on 30 December. Continue reading...

AFL star Noah Balta has avoided jail time and instead been handed a night-time curfew as part of his punishment for assaulting a man outside a regional venue. Balta, who plays for Richmond , was sentenced at Albury Local Court on Tuesday after pleading guilty to repeatedly punching Thomas Washbrook, 27, outside the Mulwala Water Ski Club in the NSW Riverina on 30 December. He was fined $3,000, given an 18-month community corrections order and assigned a curfew, restricting him to his home address between 10pm and 6am until July.

Assault occasioning actual bodily harm carries a maximum sentence of five years imprisonment in NSW. Balta must abstain from alcohol for the duration of his community corrections order. The premiership defender has also paid the victim $45,000 in compensation, the court was told.



Balta had been on a pub crawl from 1.30pm on the day of the assault. Mr Washbrook was waiting for a courtesy bus at the club when he tried to intervene in an altercation between another man and Balta’s younger brother Oskar.

The court was told Balta saw Mr Washbrook touch his brother on the shoulder and felt a need to defend him. CCTV footage shown to the court showed Balta shoulder charge the victim before punching him several times in the head. Balta punched Mr Washbrook several more times, with the assistance of his brother, who has also been convicted of assault.

The AFL star turned himself in to police two days later on New Year’s Day. In sentencing Balta, Magistrate Melissa Humphreys said the attack was at the higher end of the medium threshold and disagreed there was a risk of death beyond a reasonable doubt..