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Sasko Lazarov via RollingNews.ie

Man acquitted of manslaughter of his mother's former partner

Ronan Byrne (31) was alleged to have fractured James Marren’s leg with a bat during an altercation.

A MAN HAS been acquitted of the manslaughter of his mother’s partner who died days after an altercation involving the two men. 

Ronan Byrne (31) was alleged to have fractured James Marren’s leg with a bat during an altercation. A jury heard that days after the man’s leg was put in a cast at a hospital, a blood clot developed in his leg which travelled to his heart and this clot proved fatal. 

Byrne, of Lohunda Downs, Clonsilla, Blanchardstown, Dublin, had pleaded not guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to the unlawful killing of Marren (57) at that address on 31 October 2013. 

He had also denied production of a baseball bat during a dispute and assault of Marren causing him harm at the same address five days earlier on 26 October 2013. The defendant’s mother, Mairead Byrne, and Marren had been in a relationship for at least 13 years. 

On the ninth day of the trial, the jury returned a unanimous verdict of not guilty on the charge of manslaughter. 

The jury also returned unanimous verdicts of not guilty on the charges of assault and production of an article after deliberating for over three-and-a-half hours. 

During the trial the defendant’s brother Cillian Byrne testified that he was aged 16 in October 2013 when his mother and Marren came home from a day of socialising and were “a bit drunk”. 

He told the trial that over the years he frequently saw Marren turn into “a different man” when he was drinking whiskey. He said the deceased would verbally abuse the defendant and often struck him or choked him. 

Byrne said the defendant was afraid of Marren and would never hit back or speak up for himself. He said Marren was a strong man and was bigger than him or his brothers and that over the years he had often called gardaí to the home. 

He said on the night in question, Marren was calling the defendant “a scumbag” and telling him he was not a good father to his young daughter. He said that the defendant went into his own bedroom to check on his daughter and the deceased followed him. 

Byrne said there was a scuffle and he saw the two men then holding each other in a headlock and he tried to separate them. Marren ended up on the ground and the witness said he was holding him down and telling him to relax. 

He said he did not want Marren to get back up and attack the defendant again. He told the jury that his brother had walked off and returned and was holding a wooden bat which he struck the deceased with around two or three times. 

The witness said he was screaming and crying and he rang gardaí. He said the whole incident lasted about 30 seconds and afterwards the defendant left the house with his daughter. 

Marren was brought to hospital in an ambulance and came home the next day with his leg in a cast. He spent the next three days resting and sleeping on a mattress on the ground floor of the house as the cast made it difficult for him to walk and to get upstairs. 

Byrne said that on the fourth morning, he saw Marren getting pale in the face as they were having a chat. The then teenager began to telephone an ambulance and was in the middle of doing so when he Marren’s eyes go to the back of his head. 

“I think he had a seizure. He died shortly after that”. The witness said that Marren was a different person when he was drinking and that when he was sober “he was good to me”. 

Byrne, the mother of the defendant, told the jury that Marren would shout a lot at the defendant, but not her other sons. She said she recalled Marren assaulting and hurting her son the accused. 

She said she thought the abuse started a few years after Marren arrived at the house. 

Byrne agreed that Marren discharged himself from hospital the day after the incident. She said a couple of times he said he was not feeling well and she wanted to ring an ambulance, but he would not let her. 

During an interview with gardaí, the accused man said he hit Marren a couple times to the head and legs and that they could not have been “full swings” as the hallway was narrow. He said he was holding the bat in two hands and that it was not heavy. 

Gardaí asked why he needed to hold it in two hands if it was not heavy. Byrne said the deceased could have gotten the bat off him, that he was trying to defuse the situation and this was the first time he hit Marren in the hundreds of times he had hit him. 

Byrne said the deceased had used objects to hit him in the past. He said he did not specifically aim for the deceased’s head or legs, he just wanted to get him away from him. 

He denied the deceased got him so angry that he lashed out with a bat and hit him “a fair few times”. He said he was not particularly angry, that he just wanted to defuse the situation and get his child out.

Byrne denied that he could have “boxed” Marren, saying that a couple of “boxes” would not have been enough as the deceased was a strong man.

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Brion Hoban
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