The mother of a man killed with one punch by a drunken teenager has spoken of her disgust at hearing that her son's attacker is behind bars for a third time.
Jackie Jones said she was "sick to death" of "evil" Jamie Mark Scott and his "reckless, terrifying actions" since the death of her 22-year-old son Lee.
It comes after the 30-year-old was sentenced earlier this week to nine months in prison after he gave a false name to police when he was stopped driving while disqualified.
Scott, of Ffordd Idwal, Prestatyn, gave the name of someone he'd been to school with and the innocent man ended up being convicted of the offence in his absence.

In August 2017, Scott was sentenced to 26 weeks after punching and headbutting a woman at a taxi rank in Rhyl.
Jackie and her husband Andy had earlier told how they finally gained closure when Jackie confronted Scott in person and heard him apologise for taking their son's life as he walked home from a rare night out in Rhyl in 2005.
They said that, in the aftermath of Lee's death, they kept seeing Scott's name in the media as he kept getting in trouble following his release after three and a half years in a young offenders' institute.
But they believed he had finally started to turn his life around by getting a job and supporting his young family.
After hearing of Scott's third imprisonment, Jackie said: "I can't tell you how upset I am.

"I am sick to death of this evil man more or less getting away with his reckless, terrifying actions.
"Not only has he ruined someone else's life, he has made a total mockery of everything we said about him learning from his mistakes.
"So much for him turning over a new leaf.
"So now not only has he killed an innocent young man and ruined our lives, he's attacking women too.
"He punched her and headbutted her."

She added: "What if she too had fallen and banged her head?
"I'm raging. I am disgusted with him but yet again he's shown his true colours."
Scott was just 17 when he killed warehouseman Lee in an unprovoked attack.
The manslaughter charge to which he eventually pleaded guilty was not his first offence for violence. Three months before he killed Lee, he had been given a community order for punching another man in the face.

Since Lee's death, his family have continued to raise awareness about organ donation after their son signing the register meant he was able to save six lives.
They said that, although he had lived as a "shy and quiet lad", he died a hero.