Crown plans to seek dangerous offender status for man charged in home invasions involving elderly women - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Crown plans to seek dangerous offender status for man charged in home invasions involving elderly women

A man accused of two violent home-invasions involving three elderly women is facing the prospect of a lengthy stay behind bars, if convicted, as the Crown says it plans to pursue dangerous offender status for Paul Alexander Sponagle.

Paul Alexander Sponagle faces charges in connection with 2 break-ins involving 3 women in their 80s

The Crown says it intends to seek dangerous-offender status for Paul Alexander Sponagle, if he's convicted of charges police laid after two violent home invasions involving elderly women. (CBC)

A man accused of two violenthome invasions in Halifax involving three elderly women is facing the prospect of a lengthy staybehind bars ifconvicted.

Paul Alexander Sponagleis facing several charges, including assault with a weapon causing bodily harm, robbery, breaking and entering, and uttering death threats.

He appeared by video link in Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Halifax onThursday morning.

The charges relate to two home invasions that happened just before Christmas2016.

Jeanette MacDonald, 85 at the time, said a man forced his way into her west-end Halifax home on Dec. 20, 2016. She said he punched her in the face and demanded money. He fled when neighbours answered her calls for help.

The next day, police responded to a report of a break-in at a seniors' complex not far from MacDonald's home. Two women, both 86, were home at the time. They told police a masked man came into the bedroom and demanded money.

Police obtained surveillance video from the seniors' complex and arrested Sponagle a short time later.

Sponagle's court appearance Thursday was to confirm details for his trial, set to run for eight days in May. He is also to be sentenced on separate, unrelated charges.

But in discussing dates forsentencing, Crown prosecutor Sean McCarroll indicated that if Sponagle is convicted for the home invasions, the Crown will be seeking to have him sentenced as a dangerous offender.

That means he would be locked up indefinitely.

Sponagle has a lengthy criminal history and had been released from prison just six months before his arrest.