Irish Independent

Woman lied to save face and the lies built up, rape trial told

- Lesley-Anne McKeown

A WOMAN allegedly raped by two rugby stars lied to save face, a jury has been told.

In his closing submission, Arthur Harvey QC, representi­ng Blane McIlroy who denies exposing himself to the alleged victim, said lies were built on lies.

“What had she to gain from telling an untruth?” he asked.

“The simple thing, in literature as in life, is that lies do not start off necessaril­y as a malicious intent to cause harm to others, but lies build on lies.

“If you have a sense that you are about to be shamed on a network which your friends access, your first reaction is ‘how do you deal with that shame’ and mostly it is ‘how do I save face’.

“And that’s the reaction she had because she said that in her ABE (achieving best evidence) interview. She was mortified because of her foresight as to what the consequenc­es would be.”

The lawyer said that the momentum of the woman telling her friends about the alleged rape led to the complaint being made to police.

And, pressing the point further, he added: “What had she to gain? The answer is her reputation.”

Mr Harvey spent almost two hours addressing the jury of eight men and three women who have listened to eight weeks of evidence presented at Belfast Crown Court.

Drawing his speech to a close, he said: “When you look at the facts in relation to Mr McIlroy in this case, you could never be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt. Almost the reverse.

“There is neither a hook nor a hinge upon which you could hang any doubt upon his innocence.”

Earlier the barrister outlined a “volume of inconsiste­ncies and contradict­ion” in accounts the woman gave to friends, medics, police and in court.

She was an “unreliable” witness, he suggested, providing “a variety” of answers and “narratives” about what went on in the bedroom of Paddy Jackson’s house during the early hours of June 28, 2016, the court was told.

“Which is true?” asked Mr Harvey. “Is it the last account? Is it the middle account? Or is it the first account?”

By contrast, the defence counsel claimed McIlroy had been truthful. “Mr McIlroy has told the truth. The truth is simply not compatible with the account of [the complainan­t],” Mr Harvey said.

Referencin­g prosecutio­n allegation­s that McIlroy had “delivered the wrong lines” after allegedly concocting a cover-up with his friends a day after the alleged assault, the lawyer said: “What is wrong here is that the theory is full of paradoxes.”

It was unlikely anyone would risk incriminat­ing themselves just to protect their pals, he suggested.

“What rational, reasonable, sensible, intelligen­t individual would present himself in the police station to give an account before he knew what any of the allegation­s are specifical­ly against him. To incriminat­e himself in a potentiall­y much more serious charge?

“Quite simply it does not bear examinatio­n,” Mr Harvey said.

Earlier, the court was told that when McIlroy walked into the police station on June 30, 2016, his life changed. He was unaware of the legal system and how it worked, jurors were told.

Mr Harvey said: “His life changed and it changed irrevocabl­y. There is nothing that can bring back the last 20 months of his life. There is nothing that can restore the last 20 months of his life.

“He has come before you, a young man. For three years he had been studying in the United States. He was one semester, three months short of completing his degree. He has been unable to complete it. He’s not looking for sympathy. He is looking for his legal entitlemen­t.”

The case continues.

 ??  ?? Rape accused Stuart Olding (left) and Paddy Jackson
Rape accused Stuart Olding (left) and Paddy Jackson
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 ??  ?? Blane McIlroy’s barrister said ‘lies were built on lies’
Blane McIlroy’s barrister said ‘lies were built on lies’

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