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NEWS
Son tells court of his hatred for
father who raped him
CAROL COULTER Legal Affairs Editor
The 52 year old man convicted two weeks ago of the rape and sexual
assault of his son will be sentenced on Friday.
The man cannot be named to protect the identity of his victim and other
family members.
On January 15th he was convicted of rape and sexual assault of the boy
on dates between April 11th, 2001, and June 23rd, 2004, when his son was
aged between 12 and 15. He is now 20.
In January 2009 his wife and the mother of their six children pleaded
guilty to incest with another son, and to neglect of all the children.
She was sentenced to seven years for incest.
During the man’s trial the court heard that the family was first brought
to the attention of the social services in 1989. In 2000 an injunction
was granted to the mother in the High Court preventing the health board
from taking the children from her. It was 2004 before the children were
taken into care. How the family was dealt with by the health board is
the subject of an inquiry under the chairmanship of Norah Gibbons of
Barnardos.
Yesterday Mr Justice Barry White heard submissions on sentencing from
the prosecution and the defence, along with a victim impact statement
from the son.
The young man said: “I can’t say when my childhood started or finished
because as far as I’m concerned I never had a childhood.
“The only happy memories I have of [father’s name] as a child were when
he took me fishing and playing pool in the pub. The pub was the centre
of everything else. We went to the pub after my first Holy Communion and
Confirmation.
“He never showed me how to do anything, just told me to do it and I did
it. I did it out of fear. It is an awful thing to live in fear. I never
knew what answer to give him. What I thought was the right answer could
be the wrong one depending on the mood he was in.
“I knew while going to national school and talking and listening to
other children that I was different and things at home were different.
The other children were happy going home, going different places with
their parents, having nice lunches at school, being clean and tidy, but
I had nothing to look forward to going home and things got a lot worse
for me when I left national school. It was then the real nightmare began
when [he] started sexually abusing me.
“All my life I had lived in fear of [father’s name], threats not to give
information to social workers, threats when he came from the pub,
threats not to tell teachers or anyone outside the house what was going
on at home. Sometimes he did not have to say anything because I knew by
that look on his face. Every time he sexually abused me he told me not
to tell anyone. I didn’t because I knew what would happen if I did.
“My aunt and uncle [their names], whom I now live with, have been very
good to me and the rest of my family all our lives. As far as I am
concerned they are my parents. Again during the trial it was brought up
how I made a false allegation against [my uncle] back a number of years
ago. I did make this false allegation but it was [father’s name] who
made me do it so that [aunt and uncle] would not be able to get custody
of me and the rest of my family.I feel different to other people of my
age.
“I feel I will always have a stigma attached to me with people saying
things like, “that’s the lad was abused by his father”. I still have
nightmares reliving him raping me, sometimes have trouble going to sleep
and the fact I was forced to give evidence because of the stance he took
at the trial has brought it all right to the surface again.
“I have referred throughout this report to this man here in court as
[father’s name]. I can’t even bear to call him my father. I hate the man
and I want to tell him here now today that I will never forgive him for
what he did to me and the way he ruined my life. He has given me a life
sentence and I feel he should also be given a life sentence, a life
sentence behind bars where he belongs.”
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