A former Christian Brother has been remanded in custody for sentence
after he was convicted yesterday by a jury of indecently assaulting
three boys at the North Monastery secondary school in Cork in the 1980s.
Edward
Bryan (59), formerly Br Bryan, Martinvilla, Athboy Road, Trim, Co
Meath, had denied 10 counts of indecently assaulting four boys at the
North Monastery on dates between September 1st, 1984, and June 30th,
1990.
Yesterday, after deliberating for more than 12 hours over
three days, the jury at Cork Circuit Criminal Court returned majority 10
to one verdicts of guilty on seven of the charges relating to three of
the boys.
The jury was unable to agree verdicts on three charges
relating to a fourth boy. Dermot Sheehan, prosecuting, said he would
take instructions from the DPP in relation to those charges.
Bryan
left the Christian Brothers in 1994 and later became deputy director of
the National Centre for Young Offenders at Oberstown in Co Dublin.
Statements
Judge
Seán Ó Donnabháin ordered victim impact statements be prepared in
relation to the three boys that Bryan was found guilty of indecently
assaulting while giving them one-on-one basketball coaching at the
school where he was a metalwork teacher.
This was the third time
Bryan had gone on trial on the charges, with the jury in the first trial
convicting him on one count in June 2012 but failing to reach a verdict
on a further 11 charges.
A second trial collapsed in October 2012 when
the jury had to be discharged.
The judge had put a ban at the time
on reporting the conviction from the June 2012 trial, but yesterday,
following the jury’s guilty verdicts on a further seven counts, he
lifted that ban and Bryan will be sentenced on eight counts.
The
judge refused a defence application to remand Bryan on bail, saying “his
status has changed irredeemably and irrevocably” as a result of the
jury verdicts. He remanded him in custody for sentence on all counts on
March 1st.
There were emotional scenes in court as the verdicts
were read out, with the three successful complainants, who are now in
their late 30s and 40s, breaking down in tears as they were hugged and
embraced by family members.