logo
Lough Derg worker who sexually assaulted women at retreat jailed for four years

Lough Derg worker who sexually assaulted women at retreat jailed for four years

Irish Times2 days ago

A four-year jail term has been imposed on a Lough Derg pilgrimage site worker who duped unsuspecting women into helping him so he could sexually assault them.
Tomas Gallagher of Rathanlacky, Dunkineely, Co Donegal asked five female victims to help him repair washing machines and tumble dryers as part of a move to sexually assault them.
Gallagher (42) pleaded guilty at Letterkenny Circuit Court to four counts of sexual assault on adults, two counts of sexual assault on children and one charge of invitation to a child to sexually touch.
Judge John Aylmer on Wednesday sentenced the father-of-one to five years, with the last 12 months suspended during which he must remain under the supervision of the probation service.
READ MORE
He said the crimes were 'deceitful', 'premeditated' and 'egregious acts of violence in a sacred place of pilgrimage'.
In mitigation, he noted an early plea, the fact the accused had no previous convictions, that he appeared to be remorseful and ashamed of his actions. The judge said Gallagher has been ostracised in the local community.
Gallagher pleaded to a total of seven charges against five different women at the holy island on the shores of Lough Derg.
He pleaded to six charges of sexual assault at St Patrick's Purgatory.
He also pleaded that in the same period and location, he did attempt, by inviting, inducing, counselling or inciting a child to sexual touching.
The victims, who cannot be named to protect their identity, ranged in age from their early teens to older women.
The offences took place in 2022 when Gallagher worked as a maintenance man at the retreat, as well as transporting pilgrims by boat.
Statements given to gardaí by victims told how Gallagher had approached them, asking them to come into a laundry room as he needed help fixing various machines.
The women were asked to reach behind them into the machines while Gallagher fixed a 'pipe.'
They thought were holding a pipe but instead they were gripping the accused's penis.
One young woman eventually came forward and told a person in charge what happened which led to others coming forward making complaints of a similar nature against Gallagher.
He was interviewed by gardaí on three occasions and initially denied anything untoward had happened.
During one interview Gallagher admitted asking one woman to hold a pipe on a tumble dryer as it had been leaking.
He said the woman had got up and left for no apparent reason and he had been left nervous and embarrassed by the incident.
However, he later admitted the offences and entered a guilty plea.
A victim impact statement read out by one young woman told how despite being the victim she felt ashamed and disgusted by what had happened and often thinks about if she could have stopped this from happening to other women.
A statement read out from a teenage victim said she has been forced to attend counselling because of anxiety and that she is now always on edge and simply cannot trust men.
She decided not to come to court as she feared that seeing Gallagher again would trigger her anxiety.
Gallagher took to the witness stand and said he wanted to apologise to his victims.
He said he 'truly regretted' his actions and was sorry for the hurt and pain he had caused his victims and their families.
His barrister, Colm Smyth, SC,
said his client accepted full responsibility for his actions, that he had now lost his employment and had become a pariah in the local community.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘It is our Christmas': Eid celebrations in Tallaght a mix of faith and fun
‘It is our Christmas': Eid celebrations in Tallaght a mix of faith and fun

Irish Times

time31 minutes ago

  • Irish Times

‘It is our Christmas': Eid celebrations in Tallaght a mix of faith and fun

At the National Basketball Arena in the Dublin suburb of Tallaght, it was a mix of quiet holiness and children's laughter. Men and women bowed and prayed fervently in one part of the venue while children played everywhere else. That was a precursor to when the praying ended and a fleet of bouncy castles sprouted, seemingly out of nowhere, like mushrooms in a field following a hot August night. About 4,000 people attended Eid al-Adha, with food stalls positioned inside and out. The aroma of barbecued meat filled the air and flavoured the day. Eid marks the end of Ramadan fasting and is one of the two great festivals in the Muslim calendar. 'It is our Christmas ,' said Mohamed Nasr from Egypt, who works in tech and has been in Ireland for five years. He was at the arena because of the dispute at the Islamic Cultural Centre (ICCI) in Dublin's Clonskeagh which has resulted in its closure. The dispute has arisen out of the alleged unlawful appointment of new directors to the centre's operating company, the Al Maktoum Foundation CLG. READ MORE Nasr lives near the ICCI. 'I'm listening to both sides,' he said, noting that the next High Court hearing involving the centre will be in late June. Regardless of the closure, he says 'people have to celebrate, they have to enjoy themselves'. Eid at the arena was hosted by the South Dublin Islamic Centre, which was set up in 2020. Eid celebrations also took place at Croke Park on Friday. It was Ahmed Elsayed's first Eid at the arena. Normally, he would celebrate it at the ICCI. Elsayed, who also works in tech, said the Tallaght venue was 'the place to be on a nice day'. Outside the arena, a man registered his displeasure that such an event was taking place there. He had a camera phone in one hand and the leash of his calmer German Shepherd in the other. He made unfounded claims about St Patrick's Day now being called Green Day, along with other anti-immigration rhetoric.

‘Arts' dropped from department's title after series of renamings following Coalition shake-up
‘Arts' dropped from department's title after series of renamings following Coalition shake-up

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

‘Arts' dropped from department's title after series of renamings following Coalition shake-up

Arts has been dropped from the name of a Government department as part of series name changes in recent days to reflect a shake-up of their responsibilities following the formation of the new Coalition. The old Department of Tourism, Culture, Arts, Gaeltacht, Sport and Media is now known as the Department of Culture, Communications and Sport. The Tourism and Gaeltacht responsibilities now come under the remit of the, now renamed, Department of Enterprise, Tourism and Employment and the Department of Rural and Community Development and the Gaeltacht. Those functions officially transferred on June 1st. READ MORE Asked about the dropping of the word 'Arts' from the Department's name – and whether this signalled any downgrading of priorities in this area – a spokeswoman said: 'The title Department of Culture, Communications and Sport more succinctly captures the full remit of the Department. 'The word Culture includes the Arts and is a common term used in the title of equivalent Ministries in the EU, noting also that EU Ministers meet at the Education, Youth, Culture and Sports Council.' She also said: 'It should be noted that a previous format of the Department was the Department of Culture, Heritage and the Gaeltacht.' The old Department of the Environment, Climate and Communications is now known as the Department of Climate, Energy and the Environment. The Department of Justice is now called the Department of Justice, Home Affairs and Migration, reflecting a significant change in function with the responsibility for housing asylum seekers transferring from the Department of Children, Equality, Disability, Integration and Youth . It is now known as the Department of Children, Disability and Equality. A Department of Justice, Home Affairs and Migration spokesman said the order changing its title took effect on Thursday. The transfer of functions from the Department of Children took effect on May 1st and 'this included responsibility for all aspects of international protection accommodation, Ukraine accommodation and integration'.

Leaving Cert maths: Some students left deflated by ‘off-putting' higher-level exam
Leaving Cert maths: Some students left deflated by ‘off-putting' higher-level exam

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Leaving Cert maths: Some students left deflated by ‘off-putting' higher-level exam

Many higher-level Leaving Cert maths students were left deflated by paper one, but it had many manageable elements and was less wordy than in previous years, teachers have said. Eoghan O'Leary, a teacher at Hamilton High School in Cork and head of maths at , said students welcomed a return to more maths and less writing. In recent years, teachers and dyslexic students have repeatedly raised the wordiness of the maths paper, saying that it disadvantages them and is unnecessary. 'The paper was dominated by calculus, sequences & series and algebra,' said Mr O'Leary. READ MORE 'Students who hadn't revised sequences were in trouble because they featured in two long questions, so therefore could not be avoided.' Louise Boylan, a maths teacher at the Institute of Education, said that paper had an off-putting appearance, but was approachable. 'Students likely won't feel triumphant as they leave the exam hall, but they shouldn't feel defeated,' she said, adding that there were many novel elements on the paper. 'While there was a lot that was out of the box – logic puzzle style questions, material that hasn't appeared since the course's overhaul – there was much that would be welcome. Algebraic skills, rates of change, differential calculus, and sequence and series would all have fallen into the familiar,' Ms Boylan said. Stephen Begley, subject expert and head of maths at Dundalk Grammar School, said that the paper was more prompted and scaffolded than usual, and didn't appear as dense as it had in the past. 'While the short questions were rather delightful in ways, the long questions were a little light in parts and were heavily scaffolded,' Mr Begley said. 'Beneficial in ways, the examiner was generous throughout in pointing out what methods and techniques students should use to approach a question, for example by indicating to use a certain formula or technique.' This view was echoed by other teachers, including Ms Boylan. 'Later in the paper, question seven's wall of text will have caused some to pause, but once that was parsed, the underlying sequences and series were familiar,' she said. Overall, Ms Boylan said it was a challenging paper for everyone sitting it as the question setter continues the trend of drawing from all corners of the course. 'As such there was material examined on the paper that simply wasn't present in past exams and some students will rightly feel that they were pushed beyond their comfort zone. However, with much that will earn them marks, they shouldn't focus solely on the negative – the marking will reflect the challenge,' she said. Mr O'Leary said that some students were concerned that, with some students finding it too easy, there was concern that it would be harshly marked. 'I hope there will be fairness there,' Mr O'Leary said. On the ordinary level paper, Mr Begley said that it was a fair paper spanning the usual suspects of financial maths, complex numbers, algebra, calculus, functions, patterns and area. 'While parts were certainly not without challenge, the short questions in section A were quite nice and students could play to their strengths answering any five of the six,' he said. 'Those who prepared using past papers would have benefitted from the familiarity of question styles from years gone by. 'The long questions in Section B had students answer any three of the four. The topics covered here were functions, differentiation, financial maths, number patterns and area. 'Topic wise it followed suit with previous exams and students were well prompted and guided in parts. Overall, a good start to the ordinary level maths exams and all eyes will be on paper two on Monday, for which I advise students to take a look at their statistics, trigonometry, coordinate geometry of the line and circle and probability over the weekend, as these are always the main players,' Mr Begley said. Try this one at home: Leaving Cert maths, higher level, Q6(a) Write down, in descending powers of 𝑝𝑝, the first 3 terms in the binomial expansion of: (2𝑝𝑝 +3)7 Give each term in its simplest form. For example, the first term should be of the form ap 7, where a is a constant.

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