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Man who sexually abused five children in his family has been jailed for eight-and-a-half years

Ms Justice Biggs said the abuse occurred over a sustained period of time and “involved fear, shame, degradation and confusion” on children who were supposed to be in the man’s care.

A MAN WHO sexually abused and assaulted five children has been jailed for eight-and-a-half years.

The Central Criminal Court heard that the man was in a relationship with the mother of the children and was the biological father of the younger two children.

The 53-year-old man pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual assault of one boy on dates between 2004 and 2011, when the child was aged between 11 and 18 years old. He also pleaded guilty to three counts of sexual assault of a second boy on dates between 2006 and 2013 when the child was aged 12 and 19.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of child cruelty in relation to a third boy on dates between 2013 and 2015, the boy was aged between 12 and 14.

He further pleaded guilty to sexual assault of two girls on dates in 2015. One girl was aged 14 at this time, while the second girl was aged nine.

The court heard these pleas were representative counts from an indictment with 107 charges.

It was indicated to the Ms Justice Caroline Biggs today, that the victims in this case wish to retain their anonymity.

Passing sentence, Ms Justice Biggs apologised to the victims for the delay in the case coming to court and added that she is aware that she is part of that court system.

She said she had considered the “extremely poignant and harrowing” evidence from their victim impact statements.

“The events that occurred involved coercion, control and intimidation with threats of violence and use of violence in an environment that facilitated child cruelty and sexual violence,” Ms Justice Biggs said.

She said the abuse occurred over a sustained period of time and “involved fear, shame, degradation and confusion” on children who were supposed to be in the man’s care.

“It caused them irreparable and profound psychological damage,” Ms Justice Biggs continued.

She noted from various reports before the court that the man is beginning to understand the harm he caused his children and step-children and acknowledged that he is considered to be a medium risk for sexual re-offending and low risk for violent re-offending.

Ms Justice Biggs said the aggravating features included the fact that it involved multiple incidents with multiple victims and featured “gratuitous degradation” of children who were under the man’s care.

She said the offences represented an “awesome breach of trust” and said the man had taken advantage of the victims’ vulnerabilities.

She acknowledged his plea of guilty and the recent letter of apology indicating his remorse.

Ms Justice Biggs imposed consecutive sentences totalling 11 years and suspended the final two and half years for two and half years on strict conditions.

The judge said she was suspending part of the sentence to encourage rehabilitation and to give the man the opportunity to change. “He seems to be at a stage of infancy in coming to terms with what he has done to his family,” Ms Justice Biggs remarked.

She said the other reason she was suspending part of the term was to ensure the man is supervised on his transition back into the community so that his risk of re-offending is limited.

Ms Justice Biggs thanked all of the victims, naming each of them individually, for their patience and victim impact evidence. She wished them all the best for the future.

The investigating garda told Paul Greene SC, prosecuting, that the mother of the children presented at a garda station in 2015 following the breakdown of her relationship with the man.

All five of the woman’s children made disclosures of sexual, physical and emotional abuse and cruelty at the hands of the man. Two of the children were by now adults and no longer living at home. The court heard one of the victims was a vulnerable child, with a number of medical difficulties.

The complainants variously outlined being beaten by the man with implements, including with a stone rolling pin. He sexually abused four of the children and subjected them to humiliating acts of sexual violence.

They outlined how he enjoyed inflicting pain and playing cruel games with them. He pretended to knock down the family dog, who was later found to be fine but then sold by the man.

Following the disclosure by the family members, the man was interviewed. He denied the allegations, describing them as disgusting and nonsense.

In their victim impact statements, the siblings outlined the effects the devastating abuse had on their lives, family, mental health and relationships.

The oldest complainant told the court that as he gets older, the abuse follows him like a shadow as he replays events in his mind. He said the stigma made it hard for him to seek support, leaving him isolated in his pain. He described how the abuse has left a long lasting impact on his life.

He said he asks himself what he could have done differently so his brothers and sisters would not have to go through what happened to them.

His younger brother described to the court how he turned to alcohol to try and blank out his pain and how this has affected every part of his life.

“He took my life away from me and I hope he gets the justice he deserves because my life is well and truly gone,” he told the court.

The youngest boy described how his earliest memories are of being afraid. He said he believed the man enjoyed inflicting pain, only stopping when the child was emotionally broken down.

He told the court about the cruel games the man played and how the man locked him outside in all weathers.

He described how he suffers with his mental health and self esteem and told the court he experimented with drugs to try and block out the pain. He said he feels damaged and tainted.

The man had altered, affected and shaped every aspect of his life through his cruelty, he said.

The youngest girl told the court she feels nothing but hatred for the accused man. She said he had groomed her and breached her trust. She described how her dog had been her one comfort but the man led her to believe he had killed her pet.

She said the accused man was a very violent man and he had ruined her and her sister’s lives in so many ways. She said the trauma she endured had never left her.

She said the accused man had made everyone believe they were liars and left them with nothing because they told the secrets they were supposed to keep.

“I hope he never gets to inflict this on anyone else,” she told the court.

Her sister, who has medical difficulties and is a vulnerable person, told the court in her version of a victim impact statement that she could not get the accused out of her head when she sleeps. She said the accused man made her feel sad and she is happy he is going to jail.

In his plea of mitigation, Hugh Hartnett SC, defending, said the man was “restricted” to working on the family farm with his father for much of his life. He said the man was “suffering from significant confusion in his life in relation to his sexuality and where he stood in the world”.

The court heard the man was someone who should “never have married”, that he has come out as gay and that prior to going into custody, he was living with a new partner who was in court to support him.

He said the man is “beginning to understand the harm he has done and is developing remorse for his actions to this family”. The man is anxious to receive therapy and counselling for the “significant confusion in his life”. He has suffered from depression and anxiety, the court heard.

Defence counsel said the man “saved these young people, to whom he apologises, the burden of having to come to court and give evidence before a jury”.

Prosecution counsel told the court this was the first time the man had expressed any remorse to the family.

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