Businessman jailed for abusing ‘neglected’ sisters

Man moved children from UK to Co Louth after social services ramped up engagement

A businessman convicted of sexually abusing two girls targeted them when they were being neglected by their mother and moved the family to Ireland to avoid detection.
A businessman convicted of sexually abusing two girls targeted them when they were being neglected by their mother and moved the family to Ireland to avoid detection.

A businessman convicted of sexually abusing two girls targeted them when they were being neglected by their mother and moved the family to Ireland to avoid detection.

The 37-year-old, who cannot be named to protect the identity of his victims, was found guilty at Dublin Central Criminal Court of three counts of rape and eight counts of sexually assaulting two girls at addresses in Dublin and Louth between December 3rd, 2010 and March 10th, 2011. The girls were aged 10 and 12 years old at the time.

Mr Justice Michael White noted that the man still maintains his innocence and disputes the verdicts. He said a mitigating factor of a guilty plea was not available to him in sentencing.

The judge said these were “grave offences” and crimes at the most serious level. He said it was clear the offences had had a “devastating” effect on the two victims who would have to live with the breach on their innocence for the rest of their lives.

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He imposed a 14-year custodial sentence but suspended the last two years on condition that the man keep the peace for the entirety of the sentence.

An investigation began after two girls were taken into care in 2011 and the man fled to Chile. He was extradited from the United States in 2014 after gardaí­ heard he was planning to fly to Florida for a business trip. He was brought back to Ireland after US marshals handed him over to gardaí­.

Det Garda Michael Scanlon told Pauline Walley SC, prosecuting, the girls were living with their mother and younger siblings in the UK. The man came into their lives in early 2010 and shortly afterwards, the family moved into his house in a nearby upmarket area.

Gifts

He showered the children with gifts, holidays and trips to theme parks. UK social services had already been heavily involved with the mother and children and they became increasingly concerned that the man had daily control of the children and appeared to be involved in their “physical grooming”.

In November 2011, when UK social services ramped up their intervention with the family, the family left the jurisdiction “under the control” of the man and moved to Co Louth.

The court heard the mother was often absent from the family home, travelling to the UK or other parts of Ireland. The man regularly sexually assaulted both girls in bed at night by digitally penetrating them. This progressed to rape on a number of occasions.

Det Garda Scanlon said that in December 2010, the man and the older girl travelled to Dublin and got caught up in snowy weather. They ended up staying in a hotel and the man sexually assaulted and raped the girl in their room.

Later that night, when the girl was asleep, gardaí­ called to the room to check up on her. This was due to a notification in the system from UK social services.

They found nothing untoward, saw that the girl was asleep and left. Afterwards the man woke the girl up and sexually assaulted her again.

There was a delay in communication between UK and Irish social services, with Irish social services getting involved with the family in January 2011. Teachers also became concerned when they saw the man kissing the youngest girl on the lips a number of times.