Man jailed for 10 years for threatening, assaulting and raping his wife
The 42-year-old is only the third person to
be convicted for marital rape since rape within a marriage was made illegal in
1990.
A MAN HAS been jailed for 10 years for threatening, assaulting and
raping his wife as their marriage was breaking down in 2014.
Sentencing the 42-year-old in
Dublin Central Criminal Court today, Justice Isobel Kennedy said the
assaults were “cowardly” and “brutal”.
“The crime of rape is an attack
upon the bodily and psychological integrity of a woman,” she said.
She said these attacks had
taken place in the context of a marital breakdown but said this did not excuse
or justify his conduct.
“It was terrible for his wife,”
she said.
She was in the impossible
position in ensuring her son had access to his father while protecting herself
against him.
The 42-year-old accused is only
the third person to be convicted for marital rape since rape within a marriage
was made illegal in 1990.
Threats
In June at the Central Criminal
Court a jury of 11 men and one woman convicted him of raping his wife in their
home in May, 2014 and of threatening to cut her face. He was also convicted of
threatening to kill the woman the next day over the phone.
He had previously pleaded
guilty to attempting to cause serious harm to the woman and of assaulting her
mother on 7 August 2014 during the hammer attack outside the mother’s Dublin
home.
The judge imposed a sentence of
12 years for the count of rape but suspended the final two years. She imposed
lesser sentences for the other counts, but ordered they run concurrently with
the rape sentence.
The victim’s ordeal began at
the start of 2014 when she told her husband of nine years that she wanted a
separation.
Marriage under strain
Their marriage had been under
strain for some time. The man was jealous of the woman’s successful career and
believed she wasn’t spending enough time at home. He was also unhappy she was
still breastfeeding their child up to two years of age.
Mary Rose Gearty SC,
prosecuting said he took the proposed separation “very badly”.
On one occasion the woman
returned home to find the man had poured petrol over the living room where he
sat smoking cigarettes as their child slept upstairs.
On 25 May 2014 they were
arguing when he picked up a carving knife and threatened to cut her face open.
He then told her “right, upstairs”.
He followed her up and said
gardaí would never arrive on time if she called them.
He raped her in the spare
bedroom while telling her to open her eyes and insisting they weren’t
separating.
The next day she went to the
Family Court and obtained an interim barring order.
She did not disclose the rape
until five months later because she couldn’t bring herself to admit
it, she said.
Shortly after she obtained the
barring order, the man rang her at her parent’s home and told her she was dead.
In the following weeks, the
woman realised her husband was tracking her phone using an app and knew her
location at all times. On one day in early June he followed her to her work, a
supermarket and their son’s crèche and said that next time he would bring a
hammer.
On 6 August he rang her at home
and said he was going to “end things tonight”. The next day he showed up
at her parent’s house demanding to see their son.
The woman and her mother
refused to let him in. He said he had a present for the boy in his car and
returned with a hammer.
He attacked both women before
passers-by intervened. His wife lost consciousness at one stage and was covered
in blood afterwards. Both victims suffered lacerations.
A passer-by set his dog on the
accused who swung the hammer at them. The dog owner then chased the accused
away and gardaí found him nearby hiding behind a jeep.
Gearty said at one stage the
accused blamed “black magic” and “the occult” for the hammer attack. He said
during interview it was out of character for him.
‘Suffered greatly’
Padraig Dwyer SC, defending,
said his client will find prison very difficult as a foreign national who is
far away from his family. He said the accused was going through a depressive
episode at the time and suffered greatly by being separated from his son.
Last week the woman read a
powerful victim impact report to the court where she said the attacks will stay
with her forever.
“I knew that night there was
nothing I could do to stop him,” she said, speaking of the rape.
The rape left me with a
complete sense of powerlessness , like everything of myself had been taken away
from me.
“I felt so broken and for a
long time, angry with myself for what I saw as letting it happen,” she said.
Referring to the hammer attack
in August 2014, she said that before becoming unconscious she feared that she
was going to be murdered in front of her son after seeing the “cold
determination and focus” of her husband.
“I will never forget, before I
went unconscious, looking down at the door of the room where (my son) was
sleeping and thinking, ‘Whatever happens now, don’t come out, don’t see this,’”
she said.
I believed in that moment I was
going to die. I know if it wasn’t for the actions of (a passer-by) I may not be
alive.
“All my family will be forever
grateful to him.”
Her husband had his barrister
read a letter of apology to the court for the hammer attack but made no
reference to the rape or other charges. He said he was “utterly reckless” and
blamed the “alienation, humiliation and emasculation” he said he suffered
during the breakdown of their relationship.
Dwyer SC said his client was
judged to be at a low risk of committing future violence and that he was
ashamed of his actions.
Ms Gearty contested this,
saying the accused had made phone calls from prison to his wife which showed he
“does not have a positive attitude towards her”. The court heard she is
terrified of him getting out of prison.
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