The Corkman

Retired priest gets legal costs after conviction quashed

CONVICTION FOR INDECENT ASSAULT THROWN OUT ON APPEAL

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A RETIRED priest, who is a native of Boherbue, whose conviction for indecently assaulting a schoolboy in the 1970s was quashed, has been awarded legal costs for his successful appeal.

The Catholic Church had funded Tadhg O’Dalaigh’s legal representa­tion, according to lawyers for the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns, who had opposed the costs applicatio­n on grounds that he was “not out of pocket himself ”.

Last week, The 73-year-old, of Woodview, Mount Merrion Avenue, Blackrock, successful­ly appealed his conviction for indecently assaulting a schoolboy at Colaiste Chroi Naofa boarding school in Carrignava­r, Co Cork in the 1970s.

O’Dalaigh had been found guilty by a jury and was sentenced to five years imprisonme­nt with the final two suspended by Judge Donagh McDonagh on December 18, 2014 for the offence, a sentence which he had served by the time his appeal was determined.The single incident allegedly took place at night time when the complainan­t awoke to find himself being masturbate­d.

The Court of Appeal quashed O’Dalaigh’s conviction over the trial judge’s decision not to warn the jury about the dangers of convicting in the absence of corroborat­ion and on Friday last, the three-judge court refused an applicatio­n by the DPP for a retrial.

The three-judge court felt it would not be in the interests of justice to order the retrial of someone who had served their sentence in full. The antiquity of the case and O’Dalaigh’s age were also factors in the court’s decision.

Counsel for O’Dalaigh, Patrick Gageby SC, accordingl­y applied for legal costs for the appeal.

However, counsel for the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns, Garrett McCormack BL, opposed the applicatio­n adding that O’Dalaigh’s “legal representa­tion was funded by the Catholic Church”.

In circumstan­ces where O’Dalaigh was “not out of pocket himself ” for the appeal, Mr McCormack asked the court to refuse the applicatio­n to award O’Dalaigh legal costs.

Mr Gageby said it wasn’t a considerat­ion that had ever been canvassed on the question of legal costs. He said it was not in the gift of the prosecutio­n to speculate as to the source or origin of these matters. “Those are private matters in my submission,” he said.

Ruling on the costs applicatio­n today, Mr Justice Alan Mahon, who sat with Mr Justice George Birmingham and Mr Justice John Hedigan, said the court believed it appropriat­e to award O’Dalaigh his costs.

Although not acquitted by the jury, O’Dalaigh now stood “no less innocent than if he had been”.

The decision to quash the jury verdict was rendered necessary by the trial judge’s decision not to give a corroborat­ion warning, which had been sought by O’Dalaigh’s lawyers and opposed by the prosecutio­n at trial.

There can therefore be no blame or responsibi­lity attributed to O’Dalaigh for what occurred, Mr Justice Mahon said.

No applicatio­n was made to recover the costs of the Circuit Court trial and O’Dalaigh had “not benefited from State funded legal aid,” the judge said.During his trial at Cork Circuit Criminal Court, the jury were told that O’Dalaigh had pleaded guilty in 1999 and again in 2014 to indecently assaulting a number of pupils at the same school. These conviction­s had been reported in the press and O’Dalagh had been named.

He had acknowledg­ed that he had indecently assaulted other boys at the school but adamantly denied assaulting the complainan­t.

It had been pointed out that other priests had themselves been involved in the sexual abuse of pupils at the school. In effect, O’Dalaigh maintained that if the complainan­t had been abused as alleged, the abuser was another staff member.

 ??  ?? Retired priest Tadhg Ó Dálaigh.
Retired priest Tadhg Ó Dálaigh.

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