A FORMER Dublin priest yesterday faced 16 charges in the Circuit Criminal Court involving the sexual abuse of a child.
Six
concern buggery, the remaining 10 are indecent assault.
All allegedly
took place between June 1st, 1979, and June 30th, 1983, when the then
altar boy was aged between seven and 12.
The accused denies all
charges.
Due to media restrictions ordered in this case the identity of
the former priest or his accuser cannot be reported, nor can details
which could lead to either being identified.
All incidents are
alleged to have taken place in the presbytery of a Dublin parish, with
one outdoors. In his evidence the now 38-year-old complainant indicated
that the 16 indictments were sample charges. Over the relevant years he
“was interfered with or raped, or both, once a week . . . sometimes
three times a week”, he said.
One alleged incident at the
presbytery occurred when he was “around 10”.
As usual the priest put on
music and offered him lemonade and sweets. The complainant told Mary
Rose Gearty, for the State, “he asked me to come over to the coffee
table in the room.
He took one of those ropes for priest’s vestments and
he asked me to bend over the table. He tied my wrists to my ankles and
pulled my shorts down.”
As the alleged rape took place and the
then altar boy began to cry the defendant “closed a window and turned
the music up. He said everything was fine and that he loved me”.
A
second allegation of buggery took place at an enclosure near an area
where the complainant and other children used play. The complainant was
“nine or 10” and had a day off school for his birthday, something his
mother allowed.
He met the accused who was driving to visit
someone in hospital. When he came out the accused said they would “go
for a drive”.
They went to the enclosure, the complainant said.
The
alleged rape on this occasion was sudden.
When it ended the defendant
wiped the complainant with “a skinny purple cloth thing that goes around
his neck ”.
A “silver box fell out of the pocket of his jacket”. It was
like two boxes the complainant had seen in the church, “one for oil and
for Holy Communion”.
The complainant also told the court he was
abused by an uncle of his who he told about his abuse by the then
priest.
The uncle asked him to show him what the priest did and repeated
the abuse. He also said he had been receiving counselling and had been
in hospital “on several occasions”.
He agreed with David Keane,
for the defence, that he had made six statements to gardaí about the
alleged abuse, the first in April 1993 which he withdrew in September
1995.
He made “ a substantial statement” in March 1998, a further one in
July 1999, another in June 2001 and a sixth statement in December 2003.
Mr
Keane pointed out that in statements the complainant said the alleged
enclosure buggery took place on his eighth birthday.
He said the
incident couldn’t have taken place that day, a Sunday, as the defendant
had early Mass and two separate baptisms, one in another part of the
city.
“So it wasn’t possible for a lengthy hospital visit,” Mr
Keane suggested. He also pointed out that as part of his duties the
defendant said early morning Mass at a local convent.
The complainant responded that he also served Masses there and at weddings.
“I never heard that before,” said Mr Keane.
SIC: IT/IE