Irish Independent

‘Monster’ garda who put ex-wife and stepsons through 12 years of terror jailed for six years

- JESSICA MAGEE AND SONYA McLEAN

A former garda who put his then wife and stepsons through “horror after horror” over a 12-year period has been jailed for six years.

Mark Doyle (38), with a previous address at Corbally Paddocks, Newbridge, Co Kildare, admitted five counts of assault causing harm to Meav McLoughlin­Doyle and two counts of assaulting two of her sons causing them harm on dates between September 2007 and August 2019.

Doyle, who had been stationed at

Ronanstown, Blanchards­town and Cabra, was suspended by An Garda Síochána and later resigned from the force before pleading guilty on the day of his scheduled trial last October.

He was a member of the Irish Defence Forces between 2002 and 2009 and a garda between 2009 and 2023.

Reading her victim-impact statement in Dublin Circuit Criminal Court this week, Meav McLoughlin-Doyle said her ex-husband took her and her children through “horror after horror” during the 12 years they were together.

She described a relationsh­ip marked by control, violence, coercion and abuse during which she and her children lived in “constant terror and fear”.

“He was a respected member of the community but a monster in our home. He used his position to shake off any suspicion,” she said.

At sentencing yesterday, Judge Martin Nolan said Doyle engaged in “reprehensi­ble” behaviour which involved a “pattern of violence”.

“For reasons known only to Doyle, he

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Former garda and Defence Forces member Mark Doyle. Below, his victim, Meav McLoughlin-Doyle.

couldn’t control his temper and blamed his wife for his own bad behaviour,” the judge said.

The judge noted the offending took place in front of children at times.

“It was an oppressive house to live in,” the judge said. “Meav Doyle bears the scars of all of this.”

He handed down a total sentence of six years, backdated from when Doyle went into custody.

The court heard Doyle once showed up to a parent-teacher meeting in his garda car and full uniform, after the school had expressed concerns over a disclosure by a child.

“Home is supposed to be a place of support and safety, but it was the opposite. Our home was a place of fear, humiliatio­n, violence and walking on eggshells, ” Ms McLoughlin-Doyle said in her impact statement.

Ms McLoughlin-Doyle said that she could never have imagined the “tsunami of issues” and constant fight to survive that she and her children had endured.

“The trauma will last a lifetime,” she said, adding that the abuse had turned her from a confident, outgoing, ambitious woman into a shell of herself.

Her children suffer from numerous mental health difficulti­es including anxiety, self-harm ideation and anger issues, the court heard.

She concluded her victim-impact statement with a powerful descriptio­n of domestic violence as a “targeted reign of terror”.

“Domestic violence is the erosion of confidence and self-worth. Domestic violence is isolation from family, friends and the world. Domestic violence is financial abuse. Domestic violence is constant carnage wreaked to the family home,” she said.

“Domestic violence is constantly second-guessing yourself. Domestic violence is the fear of violence all the time and of violence against children.

“Domestic violence is not knowing what will set the offender off, and when you think you have worked it out, it changes on a whim. Domestic violence is fear of shame. Domestic violence is fear of having nowhere to go, while being judged for staying. Domestic violence is shame of letting it get that far.”

Detective Inspector Adrian Kinsella from the Garda National Protection Bureau gave evidence of the assaults.

The court heard that Doyle met his ex-wife in 2007 and they married in 2012. She had two children from her previous relationsh­ip and went on to have two more children with Doyle.

Doyle would slag his wife and pick on her over issues like money, weight gain or how things were done in the house, and would react violently and hit her.

Doyle twice perforated his wife’s eardrum by punching her to the head in front of her children, blaming her for the assault: “You see what you’ve made me do.”

On one occasion, he grabbed her throat with both hands and tried to choke her. When the woman was five or six months pregnant, Doyle threw a chair at her, cutting her on the thigh.

Another time he grabbed her by the hair “like a dog” and pulled her around while his children shouted at him to stop.

During other assaults, he kicked his wife repeatedly.

Ms McLoughlin-Doyle required medical treatment on numerous occasions. On one occasion, she lied to doctors and said her injuries were caused when she had “fallen over the dog”.

Doyle assaulted one of his stepsons with an airsoft gun, shooting him in the backside and laughing before removing the pellet with tweezers.

This son recalls staying in his room a lot over the years and “tuning out” when the atmosphere changed in the house. His stepfather would call him names like “stupid”, “fat c***”, “retard” and “dope”, he told gardaí.

Doyle also assaulted his other stepson on several occasions, punching him to the stomach, banging his head on the table, pulling him out of bed by the hair and stamping on him causing cuts to his face, the court heard.

Ms McLoughlin-Doyle filed a complaint to gardaí in the spring of 2020.

Doyle met gardaí by appointmen­t in December 2020 and denied the allegation­s against him, saying “everything had been twisted”.

“I have been experienci­ng abuse for years and controllin­g behaviour,” he told gardaí, alleging that one of his stepsons had drunkenly attacked him.

He had no previous conviction­s. Det Insp Kinsella agreed with the defence that Doyle indicated his intention to plead guilty about three months before his actual plea. The court heard that Doyle has not seen his children since 2021 and now accepts his guilt.

Doyle is now in a relationsh­ip with another woman who wrote a reference for him, the court heard.

Abusive husband ‘used his position as respected part of the community to shake suspicion’

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Photo: Collins
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