Eamonn Lillis to be freed after serving sentence for killing wife

Former television executive had told gardaí an intruder attacked Celine Cawley

File photograph of Eamonn Lillis being escorted to a prison van. Lillis was jailed in 2010 for the manslaughter of his wife, Celine Cawley. Photograph: Collins Courts
File photograph of Eamonn Lillis being escorted to a prison van. Lillis was jailed in 2010 for the manslaughter of his wife, Celine Cawley. Photograph: Collins Courts

Former television executive Eamonn Lillis is set to be released from prison on Friday after serving the sentence imposed on him for killing his wife Celine Cawley.

Now aged 57, Lillis was jailed for six years and 11 months in February 2010. A model prisoner according to sources, he was entitled to remission of 25 per cent. He has served just short of five years and two months and is due to leave Wheatfield Prison in west Dublin.

He has been involved in an acrimonious legal dispute with his wife’s family and his daughter after the division of the family home, which has been sold, and the television production company run by the couple.

Lillis was also entitled to a pension payment from the TV production firm and proceeds from the sale of an investment property and bonds.

READ SOME MORE

Lillis, who has one adult daughter, killed his wife Ms Cawley during a row at the family home on Windgate Road in the north Dublin suburb of Howth in December 2008.

Originally from Terenure in south Dublin, he was charged with murder but he was found guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter after the jury accepted he had not intended to kill his wife.

Ms Cawley (46) died in hospital at 10.56am on Monday, December 15th, after suffering blunt force trauma to the head.

Lillis initially told gardaí an intruder was attacking his wife in the back garden of their home when he had returned from leaving his daughter to school.

However, the investigating team suspected from the outset he was the killer and searched the house for a number of days. On the third day of searching they found a suitcase in the attic with a set of his clothes covered in his wife’s blood inside it.

He persisted with his account he had disturbed an intruder attacking his wife, saying the attacker knocked him out and escaped. Lillis supplied the name of a local man as a suspect.

It was not until the first day of a three-week trial that he conceded there was no intruder.

He claimed after coming home from leaving his daughter to school, his wife argued with him over cleaning up after their dog and leaving bird feed out. He said they has tussled on the decking in the back garden and his wife had banged her head on the window ledge and fallen twice during what he described as a heated and physical exchange.

He claimed when they both fell onto the decking Ms Cawley bit his finger so hard he thought she would bite it off. He said he pushed her head away and she banged it on an area of decking and there was a brick beside her.

He claimed the argument stopped and they agreed they would tell their daughter they had sustained their injuries when an intruder attacked them.

However, he said he noticed blood on his wife’s head. He said he rested her head on his lap, but she slipped into unconsciousness and he was unable to revive her.

It emerged he had changed his clothes and hidden the bloodstained clothing before he rang for an ambulance for his injured wife.

During the trial, the Deputy State Pathologist Dr Michael Curtis said moderate force would have caused the three wounds found on Ms Cawley's head. These would have resulted in blood loss and asphyxia. Her obesity and enlarged heart were contributory factors in her death, he added.

He said she might not have died if medical help had been summoned more quickly.

Lillis was having an affair with his masseuse Jean Treacy but insisted that relationship was not the reason why he had argued with his wife on the morning she lost her life.

Conor Lally

Conor Lally

Conor Lally is Security and Crime Editor of The Irish Times