Irish Daily Mail

Woman warned over online post

- By Liz Farsaci

A WOMAN who identified her allegedly abusive husband on Facebook has been told she will be in contempt of court if she does it again.

The woman told a family law court in Dublin that she posted a picture of her husband online and wrote: ‘Now everybody sees your face and you don’t hit me anymore.’

Her husband was applying to the court for a safety order because he claimed that his wife had threatened to kill him.

He said that after a court date last May, when she obtained a safety order against him, she put an ‘urgent notice’ to women on Facebook, alleging that he was a violent person.

He told the court that his wife said she will destroy his life if he doesn’t go back to his ‘f**king country’.

Family law proceeding­s are governed by an ‘in camera’ rule, which means nobody can be identified outside of court.

The woman admitted to Judge Gerard Furlong that she had previously taken a photo of her husband in court. Judge Furlong warned her that a person can go to prison for breaking the ‘in camera’ rule.

She asked the woman to undertake that she would not threaten her husband, put him in fear or post anything about him online.

Judge Furlong told her: ‘If you ever put anything up about family law on the internet you will be in contempt of court. ‘It’s not tolerated.’ She told the Dublin District Family Court, sitting in Dolphin House, that she had since removed the posts.

Judge Furlong denied the husband the safety order. He noted that the husband was currently appealing his wife’s safety order against him.

Yesterday, the wife was applying for spousal maintenanc­e, and the husband applied for a safety order against her. They have no children together and separated in April.

Judge Furlong ordered the husband pay €40 per week to his wife towards her rent.

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