
GARDAĆ are investigating after a well-known Limerick hip hop artist and instructor was blinded in one eye in a road rage attack this past weekend.
Tobi Omoteso said āthe world went darkā Ā after he was āhunted downā and attacked by a man with a baseball bat last Saturday (March 28).
āMy iris was sliced in half and had to be meticulously stitched back together,ā said Mr Omoteso, who also works at Limerick Youth Service.
A Garda spokeswoman said that āGardaĆ received a report of an alleged incident of assault and criminal damage which occurred in the Old Cratloe Road area of Limerick City on Saturday 28th March 2026 at approximately 10.30amā.
The spokeswoman said that āinvestigations are ongoingā.
Mr Omoteso posted to a GoFundMe account set up to assist him with rising medical bills following the attack: āIt was the day I learned that the senseless violence you see in movie, the kind of nightmare you assume only happens to strangers, can hunt you down in your own neighbourhood.ā
Mr Omoteso, who is a director of the TOP 8 street dance company, said that a male motorist ātailed me through the streets of Limerick, chasing me toward a well-known roundabout where he finally forced his way in front of me, swerving to cut off any hope of escapeā.
āI watched, paralyzed, as he stepped out of his vehicle wielding a wooden bat. He began to beat my car, then he struck and shattered the driverās side window with the wooden bat which exploded shards of glass, like tiny knives, sprayed across my face and buried themselves deep into both of my eyes.ā
Mr Omoteso claimed the attack occurred āafter a brief exchangeā after he tried to drive out of his home estate.
Mr Omoteso, whose family emigrated to Ireland from Nigeria in the 1990s, after his surgeon father began working here, carved out a career in music dance and youth community service.
Commenting on last Saturdayās attack, he said: āWe were supposed to be celebrating. We had just finished packing the car, the seats heavy with gear and equipment for the fifth edition of our hip-hop and street-dance community festival in Limerick that I co-founded and had been working in across Ireland for over 12 years.ā
āIt was a day meant for music, Dj, street-dance, movement, graffiti, art, unity, and having fun for all regardless of race, religion, gender, age, and ability. Instead, it became the end of life as I knew it.ā
The Limerick-based father of one said he was facing āa long, agonising road of surgeries just to cling to a fraction of the vision I once took for grantedā.
He said his injuries were further complicated by him developing āan onset cataract and a ruptured lens capsule, both of which must be surgically removedā.
āI am currently facing the first of four major emergency operations. Even if every single procedure is a success, I will never see the world clearly again, which ultimately affects my job, work, dance, social interaction and confidence.
āOnce the surgeons have finished rebuilding what was destroyed, and once the wounds have finally scarred over, I will be left to wait. Only then will I know how much of the light I get to keep, and how much of it was stolen by a stranger with a wooden bat.ā
The GoFundMe account (available on gofund.me/ddfcfc495) has raised more than ā¬30,000 so far.
Thanking people or their online donations, Mr Omoteso said he was āblown awayā.
āNothing can beat unity. I lost an eye which I can never get back. But am reassured that with the humans I have in my corner, there will be a way forward.ā


