logo
Farmer found dead on Cork road lost his home in fire recently

Farmer found dead on Cork road lost his home in fire recently

Irish Timesa day ago
A 77-year-old retired farmer who lost all of his possessions following a house fire two months ago was
found dead on a road in Bandon, Co Cork
on Saturday morning.
Gardaí in the town are investigating the circumstances surrounding the death of Gus Dempsey. They were alerted after the pensioner was found unresponsive in the Kildarra area of Bandon shortly after 6.30am yesterday. He was pronounced dead at the scene a short time later.
The coroner has been notified and the deceased has since been removed to the mortuary at Cork University Hospital. A postmortem examination will determine the course of the garda investigation. However, foul play is not suspected.
Mr Dempsey, who was a bachelor, lost his home in Horsehill, Ballinadee near Bandon on May 5th after a blaze broke out on-site.
READ MORE
He stayed with a neighbour following the fire and was also approved for emergency accommodation by Cork County Council.
Mr Dempsey was featured in a recent edition of the
Southern Star newspaper
where he said that he farmed all his life and wanted to stay living in the countryside.
He said he was fortunate not to have been home when the fire broke out at his rural property.
'Thank God I was out when the fire took hold but it has left me without anything. All the top floor went. There was smoke and water damage and everything downstairs was destroyed. It is gone.
'I was living there since early 1993 so it was a bit of a shock. I wouldn't wish it on anybody. I had little bits and pieces, mementos inside that were precious. They were lost which is an awful shame. I was very sad about it.'
Independent Ireland TD Michael Collins recently raised his plight in the Dáil. While commenting on a housing motion he spoke of the absence of social housing in west Cork and said Mr Dempsey was keen to remain living in a rural community.
Meanwhile, gardaí are appealing for witnesses to come forward over his death. In particular, they are seeking information regarding a male observed cycling on roads in the vicinity of Kildarra in the early hours of Saturday morning
Additionally, any road users who may have camera footage (including dashcam) and were travelling in the area at the time asked to make it available to investigating officers.
Anyone with any information is asked to contact Bandon Garda station on 023 885 2200, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111, or any Garda station.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man who sexually assaulted young daughter jailed for 12 years
Man who sexually assaulted young daughter jailed for 12 years

Irish Times

timean hour ago

  • Irish Times

Man who sexually assaulted young daughter jailed for 12 years

A man who sexually abused his young daughter and forced her to watch pornography has been jailed for 12 years. James O'Reilly (63) was convicted by a Central Criminal Court jury of oral rape, five counts of sexual assault and three counts of sexual exploitation at the family home in Waterford on dates from 2010 to 2014. The court heard on Monday that Bridget O'Reilly waived her right to anonymity to allow O'Reilly, of Williamstown Halting Site, Waterford, Co Waterford to be named. O'Reilly's son Thomas gave a character reference on his father's behalf and said he and his mother were in court to support him. O'Reilly is the father of a large family. READ MORE Imposing the sentence, Ms Justice Eileen Creedon said it was an 'egregious breach of trust' by a father towards his daughter. She said the offending took place over a significant period of time, was 'accompanied by a level of violence and threats' and took place in the family home where the a young child should have been safe and protected. Ms Justice Creedon noted there had been no acknowledgment by O'Reilly of the verdicts, and no expressions of remorse or empathy towards the complainant. The judge said there was 'very little by way of mitigation', but she noted O'Reilly's previous convictions do not include sexual offences. She set a headline sentence of 13 years and suspended the final year for 12 months on strict conditions. Speaking outside court, Ms O'Reilly said she wanted other children who have been victims of abuse to know that 'when one door closes, another one [ ...] will always open'. 'It's hard but it will get easier at the end. It was not easy, but I'm really happy that I got the justice I deserve,' she said. Ms O'Reilly, now in her 20s, said she wanted other victims of abuse to know that it's 'not easy, but they will get there'. An investigating Garda previously told the court the offending occurred when the complainant was aged between six and 10 years old. The abuse included oral rape and sexual assault, involving inappropriate touching. She was also sexually exploited by being forced to watch pornography by her father and forced to watch him touch his penis. She said her father would slap and hit her when she did not comply. She said her father was not supposed to do that, that he was meant to love and take care of her. She also said he told her it was her fault because she made him do it. The case involved four trials. The first was aborted due to a legal issue, in the second, the jury failed to reach agreement and in the third the jury were discharged. In the fourth trial, a jury convicted O'Reilly of all nine charges. In a victim impact statement, Ms O'Reilly described the devastating effects of the abuse on her life. She said she felt unsafe and worried for her family's safety. She thanked those who have supported her. Defence counsel asked the court to consider the comprehensive probation report regarding his client and that O'Reilly had been assessed as at low risk of reoffending. He said O'Reilly has several health issues andasked the court to be as lenient as possible.

Man who recorded himself murdering his wife said he killed her after ‘freaking out', court hears
Man who recorded himself murdering his wife said he killed her after ‘freaking out', court hears

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Man who recorded himself murdering his wife said he killed her after ‘freaking out', court hears

A father of two who recorded the moment he stabbed his wife to death told emergency responders he killed her after he 'freaked out', a court has heard. Stephen Mooney (53) was on Monday sentenced at the Central Criminal Court to life imprisonment for the murder of his wife Anna Mooney, née Shuplikova. Mooney pleaded guilty to his wife's murder earlier this year after gardaí accessed the contents of his phone and discovered video footage of the build-up to the murder and an audio recording of the murder itself. Outlining the evidence, Det Sgt Basil Grimes told the court how Mooney called emergency services at 1.09am on June 15th, 2023. He reported that a person had been stabbed at his home on Kilbarrack Road, Kilbarrack, Dublin 5, and when asked who did it he replied: 'I did.' READ MORE A Dublin Fire Brigade officer was first on the scene and found Mooney kneeling over his wife's lifeless body, speaking to emergency services on the phone. She had a knife lodged in her chest. The defendant told the paramedic: 'I've killed her ... She's my wife. This has been going on for years. I'm really sorry. She's been having an affair.' A garda who arrived a short time later took a note of Mooney saying: 'She's having an affair. It got out of control, I tried to save her. Everyone's lives are ruined.' He also said: 'It's awful. I'm sorry to put you through this. I saw something on her phone about sex and everything else and freaked out.' He later said: 'There is no suspect. I am the guilty one. There's nothing worth this.' Det Gda Jeanette O'Neill found blood pooling on a couch and blood spatter on the wall immediately behind it. Ms Mooney was lying on the kitchen floor when paramedics arrived. Pathologist Dr Sallyanne Collis said the stab wound to Ms Mooney's chest tracked to 13.3cm and pierced the heart, diaphragm and abdominal cavity. There were further stab wounds to her back and her upper arm and incised wounds to her hand and arm. The pathologist said death was caused by multiple sharp force injuries. Det Sgt Grimes said that, weeks before Mooney was due to go on trial, gardaí accessed his phone using updated software that can access content protected by a password. Analysis of the phone uncovered a 90-minute video clip that included footage of the murder, he said. He said Mooney could be seen leaving the room where the murder happened and returning with the weapon. The moment when Ms Mooney died happened off-camera, he said, but the audio recorded 'all events leading to her death'. Det Sgt Grimes said the video went quiet before Mr Mooney could be seen returning to the kitchen where he drank three glasses of water and ran water over his hands while making the 999 call. The detective said it appeared that Mooney himself set the phone to record in an elevated position with a view of the kitchen table. Detectives believed Mooney set it up that way to record his wife entering her pin number into her own phone, so he could use it to find out who she was contacting. The detective confirmed Mooney had worked as an estate agent and had no previous convictions. Under cross-examination, he agreed with Michael Bowman SC, defending, that Ms Mooney moved to Ireland from Ukraine in 2004 and the pair married in 2005. They have two children together. Det Sgt Grimes agreed the investigation confirmed Ms Mooney was having a relationship with a man in Germany. Her brother, Anton Shuplikova, listened to the proceedings from Ukraine using a video-link and an interpreter. Following the detective's evidence, Mooney took the stand to apologise to his wife's family. 'I am truly sorry for what happened that night,' he said. 'It is the burden I go to bed with every night and wake up with every day.' He also said: 'I wish to apologise to my kids for the terrible suffering I have caused everybody. I hope one day everybody will be able to forgive me,' he said. Mr Justice Paul McDermott imposed life imprisonment. He said he had no discretion in sentencing and Mooney's future would be determined by a parole board.

Married farmer to serve almost 10 years in jail for rape of another man
Married farmer to serve almost 10 years in jail for rape of another man

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Married farmer to serve almost 10 years in jail for rape of another man

A married farmer from County Cork was sentenced on Monday to a total of 19 years in jail for raping another man twice, but he will serve less than ten years for just one of the offences. Thomas 'Tossy' Nyhan (60), of Crookstown, Co Cork, was sentenced to 11.5 years with the final year suspended, for raping the man, in April 2019. Nyhan, who has four children, received a second sentence of 8.5 years for raping the man, in January 2011. The rapes occurred at a location in Limerick, the court heard. READ MORE As both sentences are to run concurrent to each other, Nyhan will only serve part of the total. The sentences were backdated to June 23rd last when Nyhan first entered custody. He has no previous convictions. Nyhan had contested two counts of anal rape of the victim, but he was unanimously convicted by a jury of both rapes, following an 11-day trial, held at the Central Criminal Court, sitting in Limerick, last May. Ms Justice Mary Ellen Ring had previously lifted reporting restrictions allowing Nyhan be named. The judge also directed that the victim was entitled to his anonymity and ordered that he not be identified. The victim told the trial that the rapes were so painful they were like 'barbed wire' inside him. 'He (Nyhan) raped me twice. This was not a moment of confusion,' the victim said in an impact statement. 'It was cold, calculated and violent – he knew what he was doing – and eight years later he did it again." He said he disclosed the second rape to his GP in 2019, because, he said, he 'could not hold the weight of his abuse any longer'. Later he told Gardaí he had also been raped by Nyhan in 2011. 'He (Nyhan) is a rapist and that will follow him for the rest of his life and it should,' the man said. When questioned by Gardaí in May 2019, Nyhan accepted sexual activity had occurred between him and the victim, yet he denied raping him. During the trial, and under cross-examination by Nyhan's barrister, senior counsel Mark Nicholas, the victim agreed that he had remained in regular contact with Nyhan following the first rape in 2011. The victim described as 'lies' unfounded claims by Nyhan that he had asked the farmer for money for sex and that he had grabbed Nyhan's 'crotch' a number of times and removed his own clothes to have sex with Nyhan. The victim told Mr Nicholas: 'I told him (Nyhan) to stop, I didn't like it.' DNA swabs taken by forensic gardaí of a stain at the scene of the 2019 rape matched Nyhan's DNA profile. Nyhan's wife, Mary Nyhan, supported her husband to court every day of his trial and throughout the criminal proceedings. In mitigation, the judge took into consideration Nyhan's age, no previous convictions, health difficulties and that he has been a hard-working family man.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store