Sligo Weekender

Man who raped two women has Supreme Court appeal rejected

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A MAN who raped two women in his apartment after meeting them in a nightclub in Sligo has lost his Supreme Court appeal over his conviction. Clement Limen, aged in his forties, of North Court, Quayside, Sligo, had appealed a conviction for raping the two women at his flat on June 2, 2014, and of one count of sexual assault. He was jailed in December 2017 for seven and a half years.

The court was told he had invited the two women, aged in their thirties and lifelong friends, to a party that night and they later decided to go to the party with 10 others invited.

Both were the last guests remaining and they gave evidence that Limen gave them a drink which one described as “funny” and the other said was “strong” and they also shared a cannabis joint with him.

Each of them described rememberin­g nothing that night beyond a certain point until later waking up. One said she woke up clothed, apart from her underwear, which was on the floor, on a couch in the sitting room to find Limen engaged in penetrativ­e intercours­e with her. She pushed him away and went into a bedroom, where she found her friend and woke her, saying she had been raped. Her friend said the same thing had happened to her in the bedroom.

Both women were very upset and left the apartment together without their shoes.

One rang her husband, who collected them and brought them to the garda station, and Limen was arrested shortly after.

He denied rapinthe women and claimed one woman initiated consensual intercours­e with him in the bedroom but they stopped at a certain stage because he did not have a condom.

He denied any sexual contact with the second woman and claimed she pulled him onto the sofa when he came out of the bedroom but he had rejected her advances.

One of the women later made a further statement alleging, as well as raping her, Limen had assaulted her by performing oral sex on her.

Limen’s lawyers did not seek separate trials and the trial proceeded on the basis the case essentiall­y involved two complainan­ts and one incident. The Supreme Court agreed to hear his appeal over his conviction arising from issues raised by his lawyers over how the trial judge handled certain issues, including their objections to prosecutio­n counsel asking the jury, in her closing speech, to consider how elements of testimony of each complainan­t had “striking” similariti­es and there was no suggestion of them colluding with each other.

In her judgment, Ms Justice Iseult O’Malley noted toxicology reports found nothing suspicious in the liquid remaining in glasses taken from the apartment.

She set out principles concerning the treatment of evidence in trials of sexual offences involving more than one complainan­t, including concerning the admissibil­ity of “misconduct” evidence, “similar fact” or “system” evidence and the proper role of corroborat­ion rules in such trials.

Those principles include that a judge may sever an indictment if of the opinion it would be unfair to proceed as drafted and are subject at all times to the overriding requiremen­t to ensure a fair trial.

Applying those principles to this case, she held the evidence of both women was admissible in respect of each count on the indictment.

She said the best way of describing what happened in the apartment was that adopted by defence counsel when he said the case involved two complainan­ts and one incident. The judge said that while not categorisi­ng that as a legal concession, it was an “apt descriptio­n”.

Ms Justice O’Malley said that the trial judge’s instructio­n to the jury to consider each count separately could only have been seen as in the interest of the defence, she said.

She did not accept the prosecutio­n’s use of the words “striking similarity” would have conveyed any special legal meaning to the jury.

In a concurring judgment, Mr Justice Peter Charleton analysed how a path for general applicatio­n can be found for future trials of multiple allegation­s. He said that in this case, there was nothing to suggest the trial judge’s directions were anything other than favourable to the accused.

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