A FORMER priest who indecently assaulted five schoolboys 30 years ago has been given an 18-month sentence.
The
76-year-old, who cannot be named for legal reasons, pleaded guilty at
Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to five counts of indecent assault on the
boys on dates between 1979 and 1981.
The boys were aged between 11
and 13 years at the time of the offences, which took place in the then
priest’s home and at a nearby school.
The man has no previous
convictions.
The court heard two 11-year-old boys were invited into the
accused’s house on the premise of delivering leaflets, and were abused
there.
Another boy, also 11, was told by the accused he had been
selected for a trip abroad, and was abused when he went to meet the man
to find out about the trip.
A 13-year-old boy was indecently
assaulted after being invited into the house to be photographed for a
parish magazine.
The fifth victim, aged about 12, was abused at school
when the accused came across him in the corridor after he had been put
out of class.
Judge Margaret Heneghan noted the man was now
elderly and suffered health difficulties but also that the offences
involved multiple victims and a breach of trust.
She noted that
the maximum penalty for these offences was two years’ imprisonment, and
that she must decide where the incidents lay in the range of indecent
assaults.
Judge Heneghan noted that the guilty pleas had been
entered following legal argument in his trial and before the victims had
to give evidence, but said the guilty pleas did not have the same
weight as if they had been entered at an earlier date.
She said she did
not think the circumstances of the case warranted consecutive sentencing
and imposed 18 months on each count to run concurrently. She backdated
the sentences to June 2011 to reflect part of the time he has spent in
custody.
The complainants had made statements to gardaí between 2002 and 2009.
Garda
Michelle Carey told Mary Rose Gearty SC, prosecuting, that when gardaí
interviewed the accused in 2010, he denied the offences but made
“quasi-admissions” about being aroused by young boys. He denied any
inappropriate touching.
David Keane SC, defending, said the
accused had instructed him to offer a sincere apology to each
complainant.
The man had been laicised in the 1980s and had settled
abroad.