logo
Woman killed in Galway fire named as former death row inmate Sunny Jacobs

Woman killed in Galway fire named as former death row inmate Sunny Jacobs

Irish Examiner2 days ago

A 76-year-old woman who died in a house fire in Galway has been named as Sonia 'Sunny' Jacobs who served 17 years in prison, including time on death row, after she was wrongfully convicted of the murder of a US policeman and a Canadian constable.
Jacobs perished after a blaze broke out at her bungalow near Casla in Co Galway on Tuesday. A man in his 30s, who is understood to have been her carer, also died in the incident at Gleann Mhic Mhuireann.
Gardaí and the emergency services were alerted to the fire at 6.20am. The bodies of the man and woman were recovered from inside the property. The scene has been preserved for a technical examination and autopsies will be carried out at University Hospital Galway.
Jacobs was placed on death row in Florida in 1976, having been wrongfully convicted of a double murder. Her son was nine and her daughter was just 10 months old when she went to prison. When freed in 1992, her son Eric was a married father, while her daughter Christina was 16.
Jacobs told the BBC in 2017 that when she went to jail when she was a 'mother, a daughter and a wife', and by the time she came out, she was a 'grandmother, an orphan and a widow.'
Jacobs and Jesse Joseph Tafero, the father of the younger of her two children, were tried separately, convicted, and sentenced to death by the same judge for the murders of two police officers at a rest stop off Interstate 95 in Broward County, Florida in 1976.
The pair had been travelling with their children, Eric and Christina, when their car broke down. They were trying to get home to North Carolina. A man Tafero knew named Walter Rhodes agreed to drive the couple and their children home.
Sunny fell asleep with the children in the back seat, but was startled awake by a policeman knocking on the window of the parked car.
The officer was Philip Black, a Florida Highway Patrol trooper and his friend Donald Irwin, a Canadian constable who was on holiday. She said gunfire broke out and Mr Black and Mr Irwin were killed.
Jacobs and Tafero maintained from the beginning that Rhodes had shot the officers, and that they had nothing to do with it. Although there were two eyewitnesses to events surrounding the murders, neither contradicted Jacobs' and Tafero's version of what happened. Nor was their version contradicted by physical evidence.
Both Tafero and Rhodes had gunpowder residue on their hands, a fact that was consistent with Tafero's claim that Rhodes handed him the gun after shooting the officers. There was no gunpowder residue on Jacobs' hands.
The convictions of Jacobs and Tafero rested primarily on the testimony of Rhodes, who was allowed to plead guilty to a reduced charge of second-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison.
In 1981, the Florida Supreme Court commuted the sentence of Jacobs to life in prison. Tafero was put to death in 1990.
Peter Pringle and Sunny Jacobs who married in 2013. File picture: Andrew Downes
After the execution, Rhodes confessed he had fired the fatal shots, confirming both Jacobs' and Tafero's long-maintained innocence. Jacobs was freed in 1992 when she was 45 years old. She subsequently met and married Peter Pringle in 2013.
Mr Pringle had been sentenced to death in 1980 in Dublin for the murder of two gardaí, John Morley and Henry Byrne, in a bank raid in Ballaghaderreen in Roscommon. He served 15 years in jail before he was released in 1995 after his convictions for the July 1980 murders were deemed unsafe.
Following her release from prison, Jacobs campaigned for the abolition of the death penalty. She met Mr Pringle at an Amnesty International event in 1998. He was also involved in advocacy work. Mr Pringle died on New Year's Eve 2022 at the age of 84.
The pair set up the Sunny Healing Centre in rural Connemara, where they offered a space for healing and respite to individuals who had faced miscarriages of justice.
Jacobs was also an author and spoke at universities and conferences. Oscar-winning actress Susan Sarandon played her in the movie The Exonerated, which was released in 2005.
Read More
Ellen McGarrahan and the search for truth following a grisly execution

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Garda hospitalised after ‘vicious assault' by disruptive passenger on flight to Dublin
Garda hospitalised after ‘vicious assault' by disruptive passenger on flight to Dublin

Irish Post

timean hour ago

  • Irish Post

Garda hospitalised after ‘vicious assault' by disruptive passenger on flight to Dublin

A GARDA was hospitalised after being assaulted by a disruptive passenger who arrived in Dublin on a flight from the US. On June 3, the captain and crew of a United Airlines flight from Newark reported a disruptive passenger on board. When the plane landed, Gardaí attached to the Dublin Airport Garda Station boarded the aircraft. One garda was 'viciously assaulted' as they attempted to remove the man from the plane, the police force confirmed in a statement. 'The man, aged in his 40's proceeded to viciously assault a member of An Garda Síochána,' Gardaí said. 'O.C spray was deployed in an attempt to stop the sustained assault of a Garda,' they added. The man fled the aircraft but was arrested a short time later. He has since been charged with assault and offences under the Air Navigation and Transport Act. He appeared before Dublin District Court on June 3. The Garda who was injured is being treated at Beaumont Hospital for non-life threatening injuries. See More: Disruptive Passenger, Dublin Airport, Garda

Witness appeal after deaths of two people in Galway house fire
Witness appeal after deaths of two people in Galway house fire

Irish Post

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Post

Witness appeal after deaths of two people in Galway house fire

GARDAÍ have appealed for witnesses to come forward after two people died in a house fire in Connemara, Co. Galway. Officers and members of the fire service were called to reports of a fire at a home at Gleann Mhic Mhuireann in Casla at around 6.20am on June 3. Once the fire was brought under control the bodies of two people were discovered at the scene. They have since been named locally as Sonia 'Sonny' Jacobs, a US native, aged in her 70s, who moved to Ireland more than a decade ago. Ms Jacobs had previously served 17 years in a US prison, including time on death row, after she was wrongfully convicted of the murder of a US policeman and a Canadian constable. Sonia 'Sonny' Jacobs died in the house fire A man in his thirties, who is understood to have been her carer, also died in the incident. He has been named locally as Kevin Kelly, who was from the Casla area. Confirming his 'unexpected and tragic death' Mr Kelly's family said he will be 'lovingly missed and always remembered by his mother Fiona, his father Ken, Ken's partner Maureen and her son Jonathan, Kevin's partner Sheree and his siblings Jill and Cúán'. Mr Kelly's funeral will take place at Discovery Church at 1pm on June 7. The family have asked mourners to wear bright colours to the service. 'We respectfully request that we celebrate his wonderful life by all wearing bright colours to represent the fun, laughter and personality of Kevin,' they said. Gardaí have appealing for any witnesses to the incident to come forward. Anyone with information is asked to contact Clifden Garda Station on 095 22500, the Garda Confidential Line 1800 666 111 or any Garda Station,' they state. See More: Connemara, Galway, House Fire

Michael Mosley's family reflect on one year since TV doctor's death
Michael Mosley's family reflect on one year since TV doctor's death

Irish Independent

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Michael Mosley's family reflect on one year since TV doctor's death

Mosley, who died aged 67 while on holiday with his wife Dr Clare Bailey Mosley on the Greek island of Symi last year, was known for popularising diets and fronting science programmes. His wife wrote on Instagram: 'It's hard to believe that a year has passed since we lost Michael. Not a day goes by without thinking of him – his warmth, his laughter, his endless curiosity about the world, and his deep love for our family. 'This past year has been the hardest of our lives. Navigating the loss of someone so central to our hearts and our home has changed everything. We have missed him in the big moments and the small ones. But we have also felt incredibly supported. 'The outpouring of love, stories and memories from so many of you has meant more than we can ever say. We have taken real comfort in knowing just how many lives Michael touched – not only through his work, but through his kindness, humour, and deep desire to help people live well for longer.' The message thanked 'everyone who has reached out, shared their grief, and carried us with their compassion, thank you. Your messages, letters and acts of remembrance have helped us through the darkest days.' It continued: 'We are trying, as a family to look forward. To carry on the work Michael was so passionate about. To live with purpose and joy, as he would have wanted us to.' 'With love and deepest gratitude, Clare and the Mosley family.' We need your consent to load this Social Media content. We use a number of different Social Media outlets to manage extra content that can set cookies on your device and collect data about your activity. Please review your details and accept them to load the content Last month, the family set up a research project to honour his memory, announcing that a new clinical research fellowship will be established in partnership with King's College London and the Chronic Disease Research Foundation (CDRF) to help improve the nation's metabolic health. The Mosleys have been working with King's College London and the CDRF, who will administer the Michael Mosley Memorial Research Fund, to appoint a dedicated research scientist. Mosley, known for fronting BBC and Channel 4 documentaries on health and diet, popularised the 5:2 diet, a form of intermittent fasting, through his book The Fast Diet. ADVERTISEMENT His son Dr Jack Mosley, a GP registrar, who researched GLP-1 drug brands including Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound with his father, has also written a book titled Food Noise: How Weight Loss Medication And Smart Nutrition Can Silence Your Cravings. In December, a coroner said Mosley's death was 'indeterminate' and 'unascertainable', adding that it 'was most likely attributable either to heatstroke (accidental) or non-identified pathological cause'. Mosley had presented BBC Radio 4's Just One Thing, and the BBC series Trust Me, I'm A Doctor, which looked at healthcare in Britain. He would regularly push his body during various programmes, and in a 2014 documentary he ingested tapeworms for six weeks. In a 2015 programme he made two black puddings out of his own blood to showcase its nutritional value. The BBC honoured the doctor-turned-science broadcaster with a day dedicated to him in July 2024, when presenters and audiences where encouraged to do 'just one thing' to improve their wellbeing. His wife Clare accepted the Hall of Fame Award at the British Podcast Awards on his behalf in September 2024.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store