logo
Jury in Richard Satchwell trial told they can consider self defence

Jury in Richard Satchwell trial told they can consider self defence

BreakingNews.ie26-05-2025
The jury in the trial of Richard Satchwell, who is accused of murdering his wife before burying her beneath their Cork home where her remains lay undiscovered for six years, have been told by the presiding judge that they can consider the issue of self-defence.
Mr Justice Paul McDermott began charging the jury on Monday in the Central Criminal Court trial of Mr Satchwell (58), who has pleaded not guilty to murdering his 45-year-old wife Tina Satchwell - nee Dingivan - at their home address at Grattan Street, Youghal, Co Cork between March 19th and March 20th, 2017, both dates inclusive.
Advertisement
Commencing his charge, Mr Justice McDermott asked the jurors to approach the case with an open and independent mind and "without emotion and prejudice". "There are aspects of this case which are unseemly and perhaps shocking," he added.
The judge said that if the jurors found things to have aroused their indignation, feelings and emotions, they had to leave these outside the door of their jury room. He asked them to approach the case in a very careful and clinical way.
He said they must return a true verdict in accordance with the evidence and not with emotion, sympathy or empathy.
Mr Justice McDermott said the starting position was that Mr Satchwell is presumed to be innocent of the offence of murder and it was up to the prosecution to establish that he was guilty of the offence.
Advertisement
He explained that the standard of proof in the case was beyond a reasonable doubt, which is not a mathematical certainty but a very high standard; "the highest standard in the administration of justice".
The judge told the jurors that they knew Mr Satchwell had not given evidence in the case, and the accused was under no obligation to do so. "In terms of determining the case it has no relevance, as he has no obligation to prove anything".
When considering the evidence in the case, Mr Justice McDermott said the jury must take into account the evidence they have heard from witnesses, statements read into the record as well as the exhibits and "lengthy media interviews" shown to them. "You are confined to what you hear in the courtroom, nothing else is relevant to you".
Mr Justice McDermott told the jury that they had heard gardai interviews with Mr Satchwell, firstly about his wife having gone missing and then his alleged involvement in her death.
Advertisement
The judge said it was a matter for them to determine what elements of those interviews they could rely on or were credible. "You can choose to accept part of, none of or all that is in the interviews".
He told the jurors that if they do not accept the accused's garda interviews, then they are to stand back and look at the rest of the evidence. "Don't go into default mode and proceed to conviction," he warned them.
Mr Justice McDermott said "lies had entered the case" and lies have a particular set of rules that apply in a criminal trial.
He said when a person tells lies, this may affect the assessment of the credibility of what they are saying, and it was open to the jury to accept or reject what the accused had said.
Advertisement
He said it was the prosecution's case that the lies told in Mr Satchwell's interviews with gardaí were particularly relevant to his state of mind and to his account of what happened at the time his wife was killed.
The judge said it was claimed by the prosecution that Mr Satchwell told lies in both his earlier and later garda interviews to escape criminal liability for killing his wife, that he knew he was guilty of her murder and was avoiding responsibility by initially creating "a whole web of untruths" about her disappearance to hide what he had done.
He said it was also the State's case that the defendant told untruths in his interviews when the floor of his home was about to be excavated and "that the lies which he told indicated he was trying to avoid the guilt for the murder of his wife".
Cautioning the jury, Mr Justice McDermott said in some situations people tell lies in the course of a criminal investigation for reasons that have nothing to do with their guilt for the alleged offence.
Advertisement
He said panic and shame had been put forward by the accused for lies he told in relation to the "concocted account" of Tina going missing and for the motivation for disposing of her remains.
He warned the jury to be careful when considering the accused's motivation for lying and said it is not always linked to a guilty mind.
The judge said the prosecution argued the accused's motive in carrying out the alleged murder was that Tina was going to leave him and had told him she had wasted 28 years of her life with him. "The motive put forward being his reaction to that to ensure that did not happen".
Mr Justice McDermott said for the jury to determine whether Mr Satchwell intended to kill or cause serious injury to Tina, they could determine his state of mind by looking at the surrounding circumstances including how the killing was carried out, the amount of violence or force used, what the accused said about what happened, what he told people in the immediate aftermath of the killing and what he did in the immediate and subsequent years following the killing.
He said if the jury were left with a doubt that Mr Satchwell intended to cause Tina's death or serious injury, then they were entitled to acquit him of murder and deliver a verdict of manslaughter.
Mr Justice McDermott said the jury had been invited to consider the issue of self-defence, and the onus lay on the prosecution to prove that Mr Satchwell was not acting in self-defence.
He said a scenario had been presented to the jury that the accused was attacked by Ms Satchwell and had sought to defend himself in the manner described in his interviews with gardaí.
He said if the jury decided the force used by Mr Satchwell was reasonable in the circumstances as he honestly believed them to be, then they must acquit him of murder and manslaughter and return a verdict of not guilty.
He said if Mr Satchwell honestly believed he used no more force than was reasonably necessary, but the degree of force used was not what a reasonable person would have used, then he was not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter.
He said if self defence didn't apply, then they could find the accused guilty of murder, provided they were satisfied he intended to kill or cause serious injury.
Mr Justice McDermott will continue his charge to the 12 jurors tomorrow morning.
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,e found her decomposed remains in a grave that had been dug almost one metre deep 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.
The Assistant State Pathologist has told the trial that Tina's cause of death cannot be determined due to the skeletal nature of her remains.
Ireland
'Mr Fishy' terrorised family during home invasion...
Read More
Last Friday in her closing speech, Gerardine Small SC, for the Director of Public Prosecutions, told the jury that Mr Satchwell's narrative of how his wife died after he held her off by the belt of her bathrobe was "absolutely farcical" and had "more holes in it than a block of Swiss cheese".
Ms Small submitted that the British truck driver had woven "a web of deceit" and continued his "fabricated narrative" over the years. Counsel said Mr Satchwell's objective from the very outset was "always to put everyone off the scent" and that this was done because he had murdered Tina.
In his closing address, defence counsel Brendan Grehan SC told the jurors that there was no doubt Mr Satchwell was guilty, but asked the jurors what exactly he was guilty of.
He argued that although the accused had lied "to the people of Ireland", the lies do not make him a murderer or relieve the prosecution of the burden of proving the ingredients of murder.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man pulled from water in Co Donegal dies in hospital
Man pulled from water in Co Donegal dies in hospital

BreakingNews.ie

time41 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Man pulled from water in Co Donegal dies in hospital

A man who was pulled from the water in Co Donegal has died in hospital, gardai said. Emergency services were called to Bundoran after they were alerted to a man in the water at around 5.20 pm on Saturday. Advertisement RNLI removed the man, aged in his 70s, from the water, and he was taken to Sligo University Hospital in a serious condition but later died. Gardaí do not suspect foul play was involved in the incident.

Man (47) jailed for sexually assaulting his estranged wife while she was sleeping
Man (47) jailed for sexually assaulting his estranged wife while she was sleeping

BreakingNews.ie

time4 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Man (47) jailed for sexually assaulting his estranged wife while she was sleeping

A man who sexually assaulted his estranged wife on two separate occasions while she was sleeping in her bed with her young children has been sentenced to prison for four years. The 47-year-old father of two, who cannot be identified to protect the identity of his victims, pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual assault on his wife at their family home in Wicklow two years ago. Advertisement Detective Garda Catherine O'Rourke said the couple, who are both non-Irish nationals, had separated in January 2023 but they had both continued to live in the same house. The witness told a sitting of Wicklow Circuit Criminal Court that the accused entered his wife's bedroom without her permission where she was sleeping with their two very young children on the night of November 10th, 2023. Det Garda O'Rourke said the woman woke up at one stage and had the feeling she was being touched in some way. The woman said husband had remarked: 'Sorry, I was horny' after she found him leaning over her before telling him to get out of her room. Advertisement The court heard that he had digitally penetrated his victim who reported the matter to gardaí the following day. Det Garda O'Rourke said the woman also informed them that there had been another incident sometime earlier in March 2023 when she woke suddenly, while she was sleeping in bed with one of her children, to feel being touched on her skin under her nightdress. She said the woman had screamed at her husband to get out of the room when she realised he had been touching her bum. When arrested, Det Garda O'Rourke said the man claimed he had been in his wife's bedroom and had lifted his daughter and had gotten an erection as he had placed her back in the bed. Advertisement She agreed with Mr Kelly that the accused was in denial about his offending but had cooperated with gardaí. The court heard the defendant, who had six previous convictions for road traffic offences, only pleaded guilty after a trial had commenced last February as his wife was about to give evidence. In an emotional victim impact during which she broke down repeatedly, the woman said she felt very unsafe and violated after the two incidents but she had nowhere to go and did not think the authorities would believe her. The woman said her husband, from whom she has now filed for divorce, would not move out of the house after their separation. Advertisement 'He would be remorseful for a few days and then say he did nothing wrong,' she recalled. She said he would also accuse her of being difficult and dramatic and attempted to portray her as being promiscuous and a bad mother. The woman said the second assault had devastated her life forever with her children still asking questions about their father. She told the court that her main concern was to keep a family routine for her children despite her own personal feelings about their father. Advertisement The woman said she believed that after securing a protection order that it would protect her from any further attempt to hurt or scare her. 'I was very wrong,' she added before breaking out in tears. She said her ex-husband continued to act brazenly in the house which would leave her whole body shaking and feeling 'in survival moment every time.' The woman said she could no longer sleep in the bedroom where the assault took place and would have to make up an excuse for her children why she was sleeping on the floor of their room. The court heard that she stopped wearing make-up and nail polish and took to wearing long-sleeved clothing because she felt the need to hide and make herself invisible, while she also developed severe skin conditions from stress. The woman said she had to take extended sick leave from her job after breaking down hysterically after returning to work several weeks after the second assault. She described how she had developed thoughts of suicide and had made an actual plan to take her own life while her children were with their father. 'My children are the only reason I am still alive. They are the reason I didn't do it,' she observed. The woman also fought back tears as she explained her belief that her neighbours no longer invited her children on playdates because of gardaí calling to her house. After a period of living elsewhere for a period, the woman said her ex-husband had returned to the house in January 2024 without her permission and refused to find alternative accommodation. The court heard he subsequently began to live in his car which was parked in front of her house which made her feel she was under surveillance all the time. The woman said what happened had also caused her great financial difficulties. She again broke down as she explained how she tried to keep co-parenting her children after the assault for their sake, despite her not being able to talk to or be in the same space as her ex-husband. The woman said his conviction came as a 'massive relief' because she did not believe she would ever be truly remorseful for what he had done. Ireland Plans for Cork student accommodation on site of fo... Read More Judge John Martin sentenced the accused to four years in prison for the second sexual assault and 18 months for the first offence to run consecutively. However, the judge said he would suspend the final 18 months of the sentence on condition that the defendant keep the peace for a period of two years after his release from prison and have no further contact with his wife without her express consent. He said an aggravating factor in the case was how the accused had twice assaulted his wife in the same bed where his children were sleeping for his own 'gratification or power trip.' Noting the man was now on the sex offenders register, Judge Martin said his children were also secondary victims in the case, although he accepted the accused's expression of remorse as genuine.

Prayer service to be held in Clare for mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting
Prayer service to be held in Clare for mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting

BreakingNews.ie

time5 hours ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Prayer service to be held in Clare for mother and children killed in Fermanagh shooting

A prayer service will be held in Co Clare for a mother and two children killed in a shooting incident in Co Fermanagh. Vanessa Whyte (45), a vet originally from Co Clare, her son James (14) and daughter Sara (13) were killed in a suspected triple murder and attempted suicide at a house in Maguiresbridge on Wednesday morning. Advertisement Ms Whyte was originally from Barefield, a village near Ennis in Co Clare. A murder investigation has been launched, while an adult male remains in a serious condition in hospital. A prayer service will take place at the Church of Immaculate Conception in Barefield on Sunday evening. A notice on the parish website describes it as a service to remember Vanessa, Sara and James. Advertisement Barefield parish priest, Fr Tom Fitzpatrick, said the community wanted to gather together to remember the family. The prayer service has been organised to take place on Sunday evening to allow for Ms Whyte's brother, Ivor, to travel home from Australia. 'The prayer service was organised by the community, myself and the pastoral council. We planned it days ago,' Fr Fitzpatrick said. 'The purpose of the service is to gather as a community and be with the family and let them know we are thinking of them and we are here in shock and in pain. Advertisement 'When something happens in a rural community, even to one person, it affects everybody. We are coming here with hearts broken. A lot of the community knew Vanessa and she was so well loved.' It's understood that the funeral of the mother and her two children will take place in Barefield later this week. On Saturday, detectives from the major investigation team, who are carrying out the murder investigation, said they are continuing with their inquiries and appealed for information involving the movements of a vehicle. Detective Chief Inspector Neil McGuinness said: 'Our investigation is ongoing and we are working tirelessly to determine the exact circumstances of this tragedy. Advertisement 'I would continue to appeal generally for anyone with information to come forward, and more specifically, I would ask anyone who saw a silver Mercedes saloon car being driven in the Clones Road area of Newtownbutler, or between Maguiresbridge and Newtownbutler, on the evening of Tuesday July 22 to call detectives on 101, quoting reference 276 23/07/25. Ireland Tributes paid to government vet Vanessa Whyte afte... Read More 'Anyone who was travelling in the area and who may have captured dashcam footage which could assist, please get in touch.' The man who remains in a serious condition in hospital was a member of the same household, the PSNI said. On Friday, hundreds of people attended a community vigil for the family in Maguiresbridge. Advertisement

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