Bray People

TEENAGER JAILED FOR RAPING GIRL (16)

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A YOUNG Wicklow man who brutally raped and bit the breast of a vulnerable teenager has been jailed for six-and-ahalf years.

Trevor McDonagh (19) was convicted following a Central Criminal Court trial last month of raping the then 16-year-old girl, sexually assaulting her by biting her breast and engaging in a sex act with a child under the age of 17 at a Co Wicklow location on March 4, 2014.

He had pleaded not guilty to these offences but pleaded guilty to a fourth charge of stealing the girl’s phone on the same date.

The court heard that McDonagh, with an address at Woodlands Green, Lamberton Road, Arklow, and with family links in Kilkenny, raped the girl as she was bent over in pain from him biting her breast.

A local detective garda told Tara Burns SC, prosecutin­g, that McDonagh was 15 years old at the time and had lured the girl down a lane way with another boy.

He pushed her against a wall, rubbed himself against her and bit her on her breast when she struggled to get away from him.

The court heard that McDonagh stopped the rape and ran off after thinking gardaí were in the vicinity. The girl realised her phone was missing when she went to call her mother.

McDonagh co-operated with gardaí on arrest but claimed the penetratio­n was consensual.

Reading from her Victim Impact Statement, the now young woman revealed she suffered hair loss and frequent seizures as a result of the attack.

Described by Mr Justice Paul Butler as a ‘very articulate and intelligen­t young lady’, the woman outlined the invasive sexual assault examinatio­ns she had to endure after the rape.

She said she had never had a sexual relationsh­ip before and that this first experience was ‘disgusting, dirty, unwanted’ down a cold lane where nobody could hear her ‘screaming for my mammy’.

She said the pain from McDonagh’s bite was ‘indescriba­ble’ and that the resulting wound bled for a month and had to be treated by her doctor.

She detailed the prolonged medical testing and treatment she received to prevent any sexually transmitte­d diseases and revealed that she tried to take her own life after the attack.

The woman paid tribute to her mother, who she said slept in a chair beside her each time she was in hospital and bought her a new phone despite serious financial constraint­s.

Addressing McDonagh, she said he had ‘never shown remorse or responsibi­lity’ for what he had done.

‘I am strong, I am not a victim, this will not define me. I have a future,’ she said.

She thanked everyone involved in the case, her friends, family and her ‘patient, kind and gentle’ boyfriend.

Damien Colgan SC, defending, submitted to Mr Justice Butler that his client had been expelled from school at the age of 13.

He asked the judge to be lenient on McDonagh and to provide some structure in his sentence.

Mr Justice Butler took into account McDonagh’s young age at the time, the fact he has no relevant previous conviction­s apart from minor thefts and that he has no formal education.

He imposed an eight-year sentence with the final 18 months suspended on condition he makes no contact with the woman, stays away from her area and and is of good behaviour.

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