
Tina Satchwell's cause of death unclear due to skeletal nature of remains, court hears
Tina Satchwell's cause of death could not be determined due to the skeletal nature of her remains after they were found buried beneath her Cork home, the Assistant State Pathologist has told the Richard Satchwell murder trial.
The Central Criminal Court also heard today that a dressing gown belt had been knotted to the front of Tina's chest in a "very unusual position", which expert witness Dr Margaret Bolster said is very often used for carrying a body.
Advertisement
The trial has heard that on March 24th, 2017, Mr Satchwell told gardaí that his wife Tina had left their home four days earlier but that he had no concerns over her welfare, feeling she had left due to a deterioration in their relationship.
The accused formally reported Ms Satchwell missing the following May, but her body was not discovered for over six years, when gardaí in October 2023, conducting "an invasive search" of the Satchwell home, found her decomposed remains in a grave that had been dug underneath the stairs.
When re-arrested on suspicion of Tina's murder after her body was removed from their Cork home, Mr Satchwell told gardaí that his wife "flew" at him with a chisel, that he fell backwards against the floor and described her death after he said he held her off by the belt of her bathrobe at her neck.
Postmortem
Giving evidence today, Dr Bolster told Gerardine Small SC, prosecuting, that she went to Grattan Street in Youghal on October 12th, 2023, where the deceased's skeletal remains were uncovered from a hole under the stairs with a depth of approximately 62cms.
Advertisement
The witness said she conducted a postmortem on Ms Satchwell's remains on the evening of October 12th, which continued into the morning of October 13th in Cork city mortuary.
Dr Bolster said the body was recovered in a St Bernard dressing gown in a size 14-16, and it had been wrapped in a soiled sheet and black plastic. She said a gold coloured purse labelled 'Playboy' had been removed from the left pocket of the dressing gown with cards in the name of Tina Satchwell inside.
She said she had cut the belt of the dressing gown to remove it and it hadn't been previously cut.
The belt extended over the left side of the neck, under the right shoulder and right arm, under the body and was then knotted on the front of the chest.
Advertisement
The witness said the dressing gown top had disintegrated, and multiple ribs and vertebrae had come apart through decomposition. The next layer of clothing underneath were pyjamas.
She said the belt had not been threaded through the loops of the dressing gown and that the left-hand side of the belt was across the front of the thorax.
Expert witness
The expert witness testified that four pieces of glass were taken from the scalp and five from the rest of the body.
There was also evidence that the head had been separated from the body through decomposition.
Advertisement
The witness pointed out that part of the body had been skeletonised, and she could not identify external marks and injuries due to this.
She said an internal examination was not applicable as there were no remaining organs.
Furthermore, the witness testified that there was no evidence of any fractures of the bones, including the hyoid bone in the neck. An X-ray of the hands was carried out and it showed no evidence of fractures.
The witness said that, due to a very long postmortem interval, Ms Satchwell's cause of death could not be determined. "It could not be determined due to the skeletal nature of the remains," she concluded.
Advertisement
Dr Bolster said the significance of a dressing gown belt over the front of the neck was unclear. "It was in a very unusual position as there had been significant moving and wrapping of the body after death," she said.
In cross-examination, Dr Bolster told Brendan Grehan SC, defending, that the body was found lying face down and had been wrapped in a soiled sheet like a bedsheet.
The witness agreed with the defence counsel that underneath the sheet, the body was wearing a dressing gown with the belt knotted to the front of the chest, which seemed "quite tight or taught" around the torso.
Reconstruction video
A reconstruction video was shown to the jury as to how Dr Bolster recalled the belt around the remains of Ms Satchwell.
Asked whether the belt appeared to be like "something used to carry the body", Dr Bolster said these were exactly her thoughts. "It's very difficult to move a deceased's body around, and very often I find ligatures are used to move a body from an area," she said.
Mr Grehan put it to the witness that "someone would have put it on to assist in the leverage of a body. "Yes, to move it around," she replied.
She couldn't say where the glass found on the body had come from.
The witness told Mr Grehan that in manual strangulation or throttling cases, it is much more common to find fractures in the hyoid bones. She confirmed there was no evidence of trauma to any bones and no evidence of bruising insofar as she could examine what was left of the muscle.
She agreed that one of the arms was folded up against the chest area as it lay, and that the other arm also flexed.
In conclusion, Dr Bolster said she could "very clearly" see the belt had been knotted "at the front" of the body in a "very unusual position", which is "very often used for leverage of the deceased".
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Erin Patterson denies foraging death cap mushrooms hours before buying food dehydrator, murder trial hears
Erin Patterson denies leading health officials on a 'wild goose chase', and that she foraged death cap mushrooms two hours before buying a food dehydrator, a Victorian court has heard. Patterson, 50, faces three charges of murder and one charge of attempted murder relating to poisoning four lunch guests with beef wellington served at her house in Leongatha, Victoria on 29 July 2023. Patterson has pleaded not guilty to murdering her estranged husband Simon Patterson's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and his aunt Heather Wilkinson, and attempting to murder Ian Wilkinson, Simon's uncle and Heather's husband. Lawyers for Patterson say the death cap mushroom poisoning was a tragic and terrible accident. In her seventh day in the witness box, Patterson was again asked repeatedly by Nanette Rogers SC, for the prosecution, whether she agreed with a series of suggestions about the lunch, and her behaviour in the weeks before and after it. Patterson denied that she deliberately bought separate eye fillet steaks as she wanted to make individual beef wellingtons, and not because she could not source a single larger 'log' of eye fillet, as the recipe had called for. She agreed that she may not have needed to put additional dried mushrooms in the dish, given she had bought enough mushrooms from the supermarket for the recipe, but denied that the dried mushrooms were too 'overpowering' to be included in the 'special' beef wellingtons. 'I thought it was the perfect dish for them,' Patterson said. Patterson also denied she had been wrong to tell police she had been 'very helpful' to health authorities who were trying to find an Asian grocer she had bought dried mushrooms from, nor that she lied about buying these mushrooms. Erin Patterson hosts lunch for estranged husband Simon's parents, Don and Gail Patterson, and his aunt and uncle Heather and Ian Wilkinson. Patterson serves beef wellington. All four lunch guests are admitted to hospital with gastro-like symptoms. Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson die in hospital. Don Patterson dies in hospital. Victoria police search Erin Patterson's home and interview her. Ian Wilkinson is discharged from hospital after weeks in intensive care. Police again search Erin Patterson's home, and she is arrested and interviewed. She is charged with three counts of murder relating to the deaths of Don and Gail Patterson and Heather Wilkinson, and the attempted murder of Ian Wilkinson. Jury is sworn in. Murder trial begins. Jury hears that charges of attempting to murder her estranged husband Simon are dropped. 'You sent them on a wild goose chase, trying to locate this Asian grocer, correct or incorrect,' Rogers asked. 'Incorrect,' Patterson replied. She also said she did not know or suspect that Don and Gail were ill because of eating the beef wellington at the time she decided to feed leftovers of the dish to her children for dinner the night after the lunch. Rogers said it was alleged Patterson visited Loch in April and Outtrim in May after posts were made on the website iNaturalist identifying sightings of death cap mushrooms in the nearby towns. Rogers said that Patterson picked death cap mushrooms in Loch on 28 April 2023, and within two hours of finding them went and bought a Sunbeam food dehydrator to dry them. Patterson denied that she had seen the iNaturalist posts, or deliberately visited the towns on the dates in which the prosecution alleges her phone data suggests she did so. The court has previously heard that Patterson dumped the food dehydrator at a local tip the week after the lunch. It was later recovered by police and a forensic examination uncovered her fingerprints and traces of death cap mushrooms. Patterson admits she dumped the food dehydrator, saying she did so in a panic about a visit child protection authorities were planning to make, and the fact she says Simon accused her of using it to poison his parents. Patterson's supreme court trial at the Latrobe Valley law courts in Morwell continues.


Sky News
2 hours ago
- Sky News
Ballymena riots: It is hard to see where the violence will end - and it could go on for weeks
The ugly, violent side of this Northern Ireland town was on full display once again last night. Angry mobs went on a rampage through the streets of Ballymena for a second evening as riot police from across this country were drafted in to push back against an escalating ambush. Hours of blaring sirens were punctured by the relentless sound of bricks and petrol bombs landing on police vehicles. The main roads became a war zone with fires in the middle of the carriageway, cars ablaze and the crunch of broken glass at our feet as we walked the streets. Masked and hooded young men were blasted with the water cannon as tensions boiled over in a strained, fragile community. This has been rumbling for days and began when a vigil, held for a girl who was the victim of an alleged sex attack was, according to police, hijacked by anti-immigration mobs. Authorities say "racist thugs" used the incident to plot their attacks on foreign people living locally. One family with three children were said to have hidden in their attic on Monday night as yobs ransacked their home. Another man told me how he had to drag his 84-year-old mum from her home of 40 years "kicking and screaming" as it was simply not safe anymore. "I've never seen anything like this," he said. On Tuesday, many displayed posters on their windows in a desperate bid to ensure their house did not become a target. Others draped union jack flags on full display. "British residents," one piece of paper stated. There is a feeling among the crowds here in Ballymena that the police branding them racists has escalated this row further. In a horrifying twist, we got word in the middle of the night that another house had been firebombed. When we arrived at the scene, it was a charred shell. The property was completely gutted. Neighbours described how several hundred "protesters" had gathered outside before hounding the foreign occupants out. One woman was pacing up and down, crying in distress at what happened. Another man, who lived a few doors, down hinted that this community had "had enough" of "people moving in". He lambasted the media and refused to engage any further. As I drove out of Ballymena at 1.30am I witnessed other families dragging suitcases full of their belongings through the streets. They were flanked by riot police, armed with shields, who helped them to safety in a late-night escape. 1:40 It is hard to see where this ends. The talk here is that this unrest is only just beginning. It could go on for weeks - and already there are questions about the pressure that will pile on police who will be desperate to de-escalate this mess.


Sky News
5 hours ago
- Sky News
Ballymena protests: It is hard to see where the violence will end - and it could go on for weeks
The ugly, violent side of this Northern Ireland town was on full display once again last night. Angry mobs went on a rampage through the streets of Ballymena for a second evening as riot police from across this country were drafted in to push back against an escalating ambush. Hours of blaring sirens were punctured by the relentless sound of bricks and petrol bombs landing on police vehicles. The main roads became a war zone with fires in the middle of the carriageway, cars ablaze and the crunch of broken glass at our feet as we walked the streets. Masked and hooded young men were blasted with the water cannon as tensions boiled over in a strained, fragile community. This has been rumbling for days and began when a vigil, held for a girl who was the victim of an alleged sex attack was, according to police, hijacked by anti-immigration mobs. Authorities say "racist thugs" used the incident to plot their attacks on foreign people living locally. One family with three children were said to have hidden in their attic on Monday night as yobs ransacked their home. Another man told me how he had to drag his 84-year-old mum from her home of 40 years "kicking and screaming" as it was simply not safe anymore. "I've never seen anything like this," he said. On Tuesday, many displayed posters on their windows in a desperate bid to ensure their house did not become a target. Others draped union jack flags on full display. "British residents," one piece of paper stated. There is a feeling among the crowds here in Ballymena that the police branding them racists has escalated this row further. In a horrifying twist, we got word in the middle of the night that another house had been firebombed. When we arrived at the scene, it was a charred shell. The property was completely gutted. Neighbours described how several hundred "protesters" had gathered outside before hounding the foreign occupants out. One woman was pacing up and down, crying in distress at what happened. Another man, who lived a few doors, down hinted that this community had "had enough" of "people moving in". He lambasted the media and refused to engage any further. As I drove out of Ballymena at 1.30am I witnessed other families dragging suitcases full of their belongings through the streets. They were flanked by riot police, armed with shields, who helped them to safety in a late-night escape. 1:40 It is hard to see where this ends. The talk here is that this unrest is only just beginning. It could go on for weeks - and already there are questions about the pressure that will pile on police who will be desperate to de-escalate this mess.