Jury at Cork court finds father not guilty of cruelty to his baby daughter

Their verdicts came today at the end of a trial which ran for two weeks, in which the prosecution alleged that the baby was shaken by her father causing her serious injuries.
Jury at Cork court finds father not guilty of cruelty to his baby daughter

The jury found him not guilty on a third charge – the lesser of the two assault counts - assault causing harm

The seven women and five men of the jury in the trial related to cruelty to a six-month-old girl have found her 31-year-old father not guilty of assaulting and cruelty to the baby.

Moments after Judge Dermot Sheehan told them that instead of unanimous verdicts they could reach verdicts by a 10-2 or 11-1 majority instead, they came back to Courtroom 5 at Cork Circuit Criminal Court after 3.30pm, and delivered their not guilty verdicts to cruelty and assault causing serious harm.

Earlier they had found him not guilty on the third charge – the lesser of the two assault counts - assault causing harm

Their verdicts came today at the end of a trial which ran for two weeks, in which the prosecution alleged that the baby was shaken by her father causing her serious injuries.

The prosecution claimed that the circumstantial evidence pointed inescapably to the infant’s 31-year-old father but the defence said there was a hole in the middle of the prosecution in the shape of the baby’s absent mother.

Outlined

Jane Hyland prosecution senior counsel said the accused was saying in the witness box that the six-month-old drank her bottle, ate porridge and fell off to sleep without difficulty on the morning of January 4, 2021, when he was minding her and that all of her injuries occurred ‘spontaneously’. And the prosecutor outlined the injuries, including bleeding to the retina of both eyes, brain hemorrhage, deep soft tissue injuries to the back of her neck and blood going down the baby’s spine from top to the base.

He replied that he was not saying they occurred spontaneously.

Ms Hyland said, “They happened because you shook her.” 

He replied, “No I did not shake her at all.” 

She reminded him of what he told one social worker: “You told her you don’t know what came over you, you picked (baby) out of the cot and shook her back and forth… It is the only explanation that fits.” 

He replied: “I don’t think it fits.” 

Regarding why he confessed to dropping the child twice and shaking her on two other occasions, when he was now saying that none of these four incidents happened, he said in the witness box: “We were told that as soon as one of us (him or the child’s mother) itted do doing something they would work on reuniting her with the other parent.” 

Ms Hyland said: “You have told so many lies.” 

He replied: “I have also been lied to as well.” 

Alleging

Ray Boland defence senior counsel said the prosecution was alleging that the baby was perfectly healthy on the morning of January 4, 2021, and that they should then look at the period when the defendant was alone with the baby that day. 

But he argued: “Where is the medical evidence? Where is the evidence about how long it would take for a bleed to come on the brain after being shaken? Where is the evidence of that? There is none.” 

Mr Boland said that a huge missing piece in the prosecution case is the absence of the defendant’s then partner and mother of the baby.

“It is a huge (mother’s name)-shaped hole in the case. Does (mother's name) look like a person who would shake a baby? We don’t know. And we don’t know why the DPP did not bring her,” he said.

The acquittal on the assault causing harm charge was unanimous. Where there is an acquittal after a jury has been told that a majority decision is sufficient, it is not revealed whether the verdicts on those charges are unanimous or, if not, by what margin has the majority decision been reached.

more Courts articles

Woman played loud music on her phone as she entered Cork city garda station Woman played loud music on her phone as she entered Cork city garda station
Cork Court: Man attacked ex-partner as their two infant children tried to protect their mother Cork Court: Man attacked ex-partner as their two infant children tried to protect their mother
Symbol of law and justice in the empty courtroom ‘Epidemic’ of applications for domestic abuse orders, says Cork judge

More in this section

Hand pulling seat belt EU move on rental cars will hit Cork tourism says MEP
Opposition councillors in Cork City Council unite behind Raise the Roof protest Opposition councillors in Cork City Council unite behind Raise the Roof protest
Justice Minister voices concern over time taken to find Tina Satchwell’s body Justice Minister voices concern over time taken to find Tina Satchwell’s body

Sponsored Content

Digital advertising in focus at Irish Examiner’s Lunch & Learn event  Digital advertising in focus at Irish Examiner’s Lunch & Learn event 
Experience a burst of culture with Cork Midsummer Festival  Experience a burst of culture with Cork Midsummer Festival 
How to get involved in Bike Week 2025 How to get involved in Bike Week 2025
Us Cookie Policy and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited

Add Echolive.ie to your home screen - easy access to Cork news, views, sport and more