Take part in our readers' research
Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Alamy Stock Photo
Courts

Man who raped woman at house party jailed for seven years

Tadgh Lonergan (28) of Kilsheelan, Clonmel, Tipperary, was handed an eight-and-a-half-year sentence with the final 18 months suspended on strict conditions.

A MAN WHO raped a woman at a house party four years ago has been jailed for seven years.

Tadgh Lonergan (28) of Kilsheelan, Clonmel, Tipperary, was yesterday handed an eight-and-a-half-year sentence with the final 18 months suspended on strict conditions.

Lonergan was convicted following a Central Criminal Court jury last month. He had pleaded not guilty to rape at a house in Tipperary on 6 June 2021.

His victim wishes to retain her anonymity but indicated she has no objection to Lonergan being named in reporting the case.

Imposing sentence yesterday, Mr Justice Tony Hunt said the aggravating feature of this case was the impact on the victim.

He noted that the rape took place in a room where she staying for the night and that she was entitled to feel safe there.

In his sentencing remarks, the judge said the court often sees young men who “seem to think it is their God-given right to roam into bedrooms occupied by people they don’t know”.

The judge continued that it seemed to be “risk-taking of an extraordinary variety” and, based on what the court hears, “seems to be something that is commonplace”.

“This case shows there are serious consequences for people who take those types of risks where it all goes badly wrong,” Mr Justice Hunt noted.

The judge noted there was some limited mitigation, including Lonergan’s work history and lack of previous convictions.

The judge said Lonergan’s personal background makes it “all the more surprising that he should be carrying round the kind of attitudes which led him to this place”.

“One would thought he was capable of learning the lessons life has to offer; apparently, that is not the case,” the judge said, adding that Lonergan has not accepted the jury’s verdict, his wrongdoing or the effect on the victim.

Mr Justice Hunt said the court was, therefore, “entitled to assume the attitude which caused this offending remains intact”.

He said Lonergan’s actions on the night displayed an “egotistical” view of sexuality and that he “should know better”.

Mr Justice Hunt said Lonergan’s denial amounts to a “slur” against the victim, and the court inferred that Lonergan’s position is that she is a “consummate actress who has lied her way” through meetings with gardaí and two trials.

He said the court’s view is that the victim was genuinely suffering from extreme distress, not simply “very good at simulating” the effect of it.

“He needs to stop kidding himself about this matter and his approach to sexual matters”, the judge said.

Mr Justice Hunt directed Lonergan to undergo 18 months of post-release supervision, to have no contact with the victim and not to commit further sexual offences during his lifetime.

At a previous hearing, Mr Justice Hunt acknowledged evidence that Lonergan previously worked in stud farms, including Coolmore Stud in Tipperary.

He accepted a letter from Lonergan’s partner and acknowledged that he had no previous convictions.

“But previous good character goes up in smoke in the context of such an offence,” Mr Justice Hunt said.

The woman took the stand to read her victim impact statement into the record at a previous sentence hearing.

“He has made me feel like a prisoner in my own life,” the woman said before she added that she hoped maybe Lonergan would now use his time in custody to reflect on “how selfish he was – how his behaviour was completely unacceptable and how he has destroyed my life”.

“I am determined that with continued support, I will find the old me again,” the woman concluded before she asked Justice Tony Hunt to “consider the profound and lasting effect this crime has had on my life”.

Coleman Cody SC, defending, said his client was the youngest of three children, and his siblings were in court to support him.

He said there were many “positive aspects” to his client’s character and he handed in a letter from his partner which outlined that Lonergan is in a committed and stable relationship.

“He will still be a young man when he re-enters society,” Cody said before he asked Mr Justice Hunt to acknowledge that a prison sentence would be more difficult for a person like Lonergan than it would be for others who may be more familiar with the criminal justice system.

Cody asked the court to accept that Lonergan would be “publicly known as a person who has been convicted of such an offence”.

Justice Hunt said the evidence in the case was that it had been a “perfectly normal night out” and that now two young people are before the court “whose lives have been totally turned upside down.”

A local sergeant told Eoghan Cole SC, prosecuting, that there were two trials in the case after a jury failed to agree on a verdict in an earlier trial this year.

She said that the woman was 26 years old when she attended a friend’s party in Tipperary. Lonergan arrived later at the house, and the woman said they had some “unremarkable” conversation.

She later went to bed. She had been in the en-suite brushing her teeth, and when she came back into the room, Lonergan was there. He tried to kiss her, but she told him: “No, this is not happening.”

The sergeant agreed with Cole that Lonergan forcibly kissed the woman and bit her neck before he forced her onto the bed and raped her.

The woman later said it “was the worst I ever felt”. She tried to push the man off during the rape. She eventually managed to get to the bedroom door and found it was locked. She managed to get out of the room and went to the bathroom.

The woman said she heard other people asking Lonergan: “What the fuck did you do to her?”

Cole said that the trial heard that people could hear screaming from the room and the woman shouting, “Help….get off me”.

The woman reported the rape to the gardaí and was later treated in the Sexual Assault Treatment Unit. She was found to have bruising on her neck, thigh and ankle.

Lonergan was arrested on 29 June 2021, and interviewed six times. He denied any wrongdoing.

He claimed that the woman had touched him on the leg affectionately earlier in the night.

He said he had been upstairs and saw the woman in one of the bedrooms. He went in to talk to her. He claimed she asked him if he was involved with someone else before there was consensual kissing and consensual sex.

Lonergan said someone knocked on the door, and the woman told him to stop, so he stopped.

He claimed that the reason she made up the allegation was because she was simply embarrassed by the fact that they had sex.

Victim impact statement

The woman said the rape had torn her life into pieces and “made me feel pain at a level that I never thought possible, impacting my physical, emotional and psychological wellbeing”.

She said she never thought something like this could ever happen to her and described the rape as “an outer body experience”. She said she felt “completely powerless, felt disgusted and felt horrible in my own body”.

The woman described scrubbing herself so hard that her skin became irritated and sometimes bled. She described her hair falling out in clumps and numerous incidences of infections, which her GP attributed to her experiencing high-stress levels.

She described an unhealthy relationship with food and said in the immediate aftermath of the rape; she struggled to keep food down without gagging or vomiting. She described the same issues in the lead-up to the trial.

She said she felt isolated because she felt no one could truly understand the pain and terror she experiences daily, adding that she suffers from flashbacks, nightmares, sleepless nights and bouts of severe depression.

“I was living in a constant state of fear – simple tasks like leaving my house or going to work have become overwhelming. I was afraid of meeting him or another predator again,” the woman continued.

She said her “sense of security had been replaced with a feeling of vulnerability”.

She said she was not the person she once was, and so overwhelmed by the whole process.

The woman said that at the time of the rape, she had “a dream job in a city that I loved – I long for that time back”.

She said she left her teaching position and didn’t know if she would be able to continue with her career in education, but she left to live nearer home and be closer to her family and friends.

The woman said she secured a new job but still struggles at work and sometimes needs a colleague to step in to cover her class.

She said she would have loved to have gone travelling, but she is not able to do that now, adding that the rape “hugely impacted my dreams to go travelling and my quality of life”.

The woman said Lonergan “shattered my love of life”, adding that the rape affected not only her but her loved ones too, as they “have watched me suffer and felt helpless in their attempts to support me”.

She said the rape had “a ripple effect that has reached every corner of my life, and it is something I will carry forever”.

Describing having to give evidence at trial, the woman said it was “horrible to be in a courtroom so close to him (Lonergan)”.

“My physical wounds have healed, but emotional scars will stay forever,” the woman continued.

She said has had “a complete loss of confidence since he raped me” and described “low self-esteem”. She said she has felt so worthless because of Lonergan.

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

Author
Sonya McLean and Eimear Dodd
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds