Irish Daily Mail

Man in steel-capped boots stamped his uncle, 78, to death

Nephew’s vicious assault on pensioner caught on CCTV

- By Alison O’Riordan news@dailymail.ie

‘Compelling picture of guilt’

A CENTRAL Criminal Court jury has unanimousl­y found a man guilty of murdering his 78-year-old uncle by stamping him to death while wearing steel-capped boots.

The jury agreed with the prosecutio­n case that Thomas Lorigan was the man who was caught on CCTV delivering calculated, ‘well-aimed’ kicks as widower John O’Neill lay helplessly on the ground outside his home in Lisdoonvar­na in Co. Clare.

A Garda witness told the jury that the pensioner had been severely beaten to the point where he was ‘unrecognis­able’.

There was no known motive for the murder but State prosecutor­s said the fact that there was no cash robbery and that family photos were found smashed suggested the killing was ‘personal’.

Lorigan, 34, of no fixed abode, had denied the murder on a date unknown between January 6 and 7, 2022.

The Central Criminal Court trial heard that Lorigan was known by the nickname ‘Mossy’ in the Clare area and was the deceased’s nephew. The jury was told that Mr O’Neill lived alone and previously ran a bed and breakfast at his home along with his wife, who died in the summer of 2021.

In her closing speech, prosecutio­n counsel Eilis Brennan submitted that there was a ‘compelling picture of guilt’ in the case, with all the evidence pointing one way.

The barrister described the attack by Lorigan on the pensioner as ‘something personal’ and said there could be no doubt that the defendant’s intention was to kill or cause serious injury.

The trial heard that gardaí recovered a pair of bloodied boots from a house at Gleann Bhreandáin in Lisdoonvar­na, where Lorigan had stayed the night before the body was found.

Witness Walter Burke had testified that Lorigan left his house at one point on the night of January 6 and returned before midnight, telling him that he had a row with his uncle. The witness said the defendant went to bed but during the night mentioned to him that he felt the row ‘was more serious than he first told me’ and that somebody could be hurt.

A forensic scientist gave evidence that a mixed DNA profile was taken from inside the pair of boots recovered from Gleann Bhreandáin. Dr Alan McGee said the boots were heavily stained with Mr O’Neill’s blood and that the mixed profile contained Lorigan’s DNA.

The prosecutio­n argued that Lorigan could be seen in CCTV footage of the attack delivering measured kicks to his uncle and stamps to the head and neck.

Following yesterday’s unanimous verdict, Judge Paul McDermott thanked the jury of five men and seven women and exempted them from jury service for the next 10 years. They returned their verdict after six hours and 30 minutes of deliberati­ons over three days.

When the jury left the courtroom, the judge said all he could do was express his condolence­s to the O’Neill family.

He will hand down the mandatory sentence of life imprisonme­nt to Lorigan on February 19 and remanded the defendant in custody until that date, when the O’Neill family will have an opportunit­y to make a statement to the court.

It was the State’s contention that the defendant had ‘put himself at the scene’ as having a row with his uncle and that this evidence chimed with all the other evidence in the case, with no alternativ­e version of events.

Following the ‘vicious assault’, Mr O’Neill was left on the road outside his house for 40 seconds before being dragged by Lorigan under the archway and into his kitchen. Pathologis­t Margaret Bolster told the trial how she observed the heavily blood-smeared and ‘flattened’ face of the widower lying on his kitchen floor, injuries which she said were ‘in keeping with multiple kicks, blows and stamping’. Mr O’Neill suffered severe blunt force trauma to the face with multiple

Testimony: Walter Burke fractures to the facial bones and a traumatic brain injury.

Defence counsel Michael Bowman said in his closing speech that his client’s face was never identifiab­le on any CCTV footage put before the jury and that the identifica­tion in the case was flawed.

Judge McDermott told the jury that they could return one of three verdicts in relation to the murder charge against Lorigan, namely guilty of murder, not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaught­er, or not guilty.

The judge said the jurors could return a verdict of guilty of murder if they were satisfied that Lorigan caused the death of Mr O’Neill and did so with the intention to kill or cause him serious injury.

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