Irish Central

Irish firefighte­r charged with Boston rape set for Supreme Court trial

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A Dublin firefighte­r charged with the rape of a woman in Boston in March is set to face trial in the Massachuse­tts Supreme Court. Terence Crosbie , 37, was charged on March 18 with the alleged rape of a 28-year-old woman at the Omni Parker House hotel on March 15. Dublin Fire Brigade has placed Crosbie on leave since the charges emerged. Crosbie, who denies all allegation­s and says that he never said a word to the woman, was remanded into custody aft er re-appearing at Boston Municipal Court on Wednesday for a hearing.

At the hearing, his attorney Daniel Reilly requested additional records from Omni Parker House and the Black Rose pub in Downtown Boston , the two locations that Crosbie visited on the night of the alleged attack.

Reilly said his team has received some CCTV footage from the pub and hotel but added that they are seeking a more detailed window of video surveillan­ce from both establishm­ents. They are also seeking additional informatio­n from employees at the hotel.

"CCTV footage from bars and hotels tends to be written over aft er 30 days," Reilly told the court on Wednesday. "We want to make sure we get to that before it might disappear before memories might fade, in case it shows anything that is exculpator­y or might serve as alter impeachmen­t evidence." The prosecutio­n argued that the request for employee informatio­n was too vague, not specific, and irrelevant. They further claimed that the Boston Police Department had adequately collected records during the investigat­ion and suggested that the defense should subpoena those police records.

The judge informed the court that Reilly should obtain the records relating to Crosbies' actions and those he interacted with on the night in question. He also said it is understand­able that the defense may want to obtain records themselves and "not rely solely on the Commonweal­th".

Reilly said Crosbie maintains his innocence and added that the trial is likely to take place at the Massachuse­tts Supreme Court. Crosbie is being held on $100,000 bail and has been ordered to surrender his passport and remain in Massachuse­tts.

At a previous hearing in April, lawyers representi­ng Crosbie said the Dublin firefighte­r will do "everything" to clear his name. His attorney Brad Bailey told Boston 25 News Reporter Bob Ward that Crosbie maintains his innocence and has never been in trouble before.

"This is a man, Bob, who has never been in trouble before. Has no prior record, has never been in jail. Here he is, in a jail cell with no ability to make bail, really in a situation that is arguably punitive for somebody who has the presumptio­n of innocence," Bailey told Ward last month.

In a police report, the woman told police that the incident occurred at the Black Rose Irish pub, where she met a man from Ireland.

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The woman told police that the pair went back to his room at the Omni Parker House, where they had consensual sex before falling asleep in separate beds.

She alleged that she woke the following day to another man sexually assaulting her, later identifyin­g Crosbie.

The woman quoted Crosbie as saying "I know you want this, he (the other man) fell asleep". Crosbie and the other man were both visiting Boston for St. Patrick's Day and were sharing a hotel room.

In an interview with police on March 16, Crosbie said he never said a word to the woman and got into bed without knowing she was there.

Crosbie later booked a flight to Ireland for 10.10 p.m. on March 16 following the interview with the police, three days earlier than his previously scheduled flight.

He subsequent­ly boarded an earlier flight, departing Boston's Logan Internatio­nal Airport at 7 p.m. However, Massachuse­tts State Police stopped the plane before it departed and removed Crosbie from the aircraft . Reilly told reporters that his client attempted to return to Ireland because he was "scared". "I think he was scared and didn’t have anywhere to turn. So where does one go when one is worried and scared? One goes home," Reilly said.

"The consulate was not open on the weekend. So I think that was probably what was going through his mind."

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