Man Sentenced to Jail for Raping Sleeping Woman
A man has been sentenced to seven years in jail for raping a woman while she was sleeping and continuing to assault her after she tried to escape. The victim shared the impact of the traumatic incident, expressing her struggles with anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. The court imposed a sentence of eight years, with the final 12 months suspended, emphasizing the need for rehabilitation.

A man who raped a woman while she was sleeping and continued to rape her after she managed to escape the first attack, has been jailed for seven years at the Central Criminal Court. The 37-year-old man pleaded guilty to two charges of rape on 29 September 2019. The father of five has a number of previous convictions, both in Ireland and outside the jurisdiction. He cannot be named to protect the woman's right to anonymity.
The woman said in her victim impact statement that she had managed to get away from the man that night, but he followed her and continued to rape her. She said she felt as if she were \"a rag doll\" during the rape. She said that because of the anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder she has suffered as a result of the rapes, she finds herself locking herself in her bedroom at home. She has missed out on many special occasions with her children as a result. She described having a panic attack at her son's Communion after she struggled to attend it in the first instance. \"I have lost the years my children needed me the most, important years that I will not get back,\" she said.
She said today she was \"passing the shame on to him the accused because I don’t deserve the shame\". In an updated statement read to the court today, the woman said that she previously believed crying to be a sign of weakness, but now feels it is not. She said the words in her statement reflected her strength and that she is a \"strong woman who survived that night\" and did not give up, despite delays in the legal process.
The woman told the man that she hopes he reflects on his actions, that his attitude towards women changes and he learns to treat women with respect. Mr Justice Paul Burns imposed a sentence of eight years, with the final 12 months suspended on strict conditions for three years in order to encourage rehabilitation. Mr Justice Burns noted the man appeared to have singled out the woman for \"unwanted attention\" and ignored her rejections of his advances. He said the man took advantage of the woman's \"sleeping and probably intoxicated condition\", ignored her protests, appeared to mock her and used a degree of violence beyond that inherent in the act of rape.
The judge noted the mitigation, including the man's guilty plea. He directed the man to place himself under the supervision of the Probation Service for three years post-release, and that the defendant is to be given credit for any time served in custody on the matter. A local sergeant told Bernard Condon SC, prosecuting, at an earlier sentence hearing that the man was visiting family in Co Donegal when his cousin was out socialising with the victim. He joined them, and over the course of the evening, he regularly engaged in conversation with the woman.
At one point, he put his hand on her leg, but she pushed him away. On another occasion, he grabbed her while she was passing by and danced with her in a provocative way. She again pushed him away. On the car journey home, which they shared with several other people, he told her he couldn't wait to get her home, advising her that by the time he was done with her, she would be pregnant with another child. The man offered her vodka in the car, but when she said she would not drink it because it caused her to black out, the man replied, \"All the better\". She ultimately gave in and took a sip of the vodka.
The sergeant told Mr Condon that when they reached the woman’s friend’s house, the man continued to speak to the woman in a sexualised way. She struggled to keep her eyes open and eventually fell asleep on a couch. She woke to find the man trying to kiss her while he was raping her. She told him to stop and said she did not want it. She continued to try to escape before she managed to get off the couch.
The woman said she tried to get up off the floor but was unable to get to her feet, and he attacked her again, raping her and leaving her in intense pain. The rape was reported afterwards and she was treated in a local Sexual Assault Treatment Unit. The man was arrested and interviewed, and while he initially denied there was any contact between them, he was re-arrested following DNA analysis. He then accepted that if anything had happened, he had been asleep at the time and could not offer any further explanation.
The woman prepared a victim impact statement, which was read into the record by the investigating sergeant. She said that the impact of what the man did to her that night has followed her for six years. She described his behaviour as \"disgusting and unforgivable\". She said she suffered panic attacks and sleep deprivation, and now needs medication for anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder.
The woman said she has found herself unable to work on several occasions and has experienced panic attacks while at work. She was thankful for her family and thanked her husband for his support. Dominic McGinn SC, defending, said his client was not from Ireland and was visiting family that night. He has five children from two different relationships. He asked Mr Justice Burns to take into account his client's pleas of guilty as the most significant mitigating factors in the case.
Mr Justice Burns suggested that the man’s comments to the woman over the course of the night were \"indicative of some element of premeditation\". Mr Justice Burns noted the impact of the offending on the woman, who he said had \"found the strength to speak up in court today\", and acknowledged that the legal process had been difficult for her. He commended her bravery in coming forward and said the court hoped with the support of her family and friends and appropriate interventions, she would make further progress in dealing with the aftermath of the events.
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