
Married Cork farmer (60) jailed for rape of man
Thomas 'Tossy' Nyhan, 60, Crookstown, Co Cork, was sentenced to 11.5 years with the final year suspended, for raping the man, in April 2019.
Advertisement
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.
As both sentences are to run concurrent to each other, Nyhan will only serve part of the longest sentence.
The sentences were backdated to June 23rd last when Nyhan first entered custody. He has no previous convictions.
Advertisement
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 last May 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.
Advertisement
The victim wrote in a victim impact statement that, there were "not words strong enough to capture the pain" he had suffered.
"He (Nyhan) raped me twice. This was not a moment of confusion. It was cold, calculated and violent – he knew what he was doing – and eight years later he did it again," the man said.
"This is what he chose. This is who he is. I trusted him and told him about my trauma and vulnerabilities and he controlled, degraded and violated me in the most horrific way."
The man said that Nyhan spoke about his own children during one of the rapes, which the victim described as "twisted and inhumane".
Advertisement
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.
The man told how he continues to feel like he is being watched and feels "trapped" by feelings of being "constantly sick with anxiety".
'I am a ghost of the man I used to be. I am broken, alone. I have no one, because my barriers are always up," the man said.
"He (Nyhan) is a rapist and that will follow him for the rest of his life and it should."
Advertisement
The victim encouraged others similarly affected by sexual crimes to seek help and try and bring the perpetrators to justice: 'Please hear this – standing up and speaking out is one of the most hardest things but it is powerful and life-changing.'
Previously, the victim asked Ms Justice Ring to impose a sentence on Nyhan that reflected his crimes: 'Let it say this matters – we matter. Please show what I lost matters. What he did Matters.'
The man thanked the jury "for listening and for believing me – that has meant more to me than you will ever know".
When questioned by Gardaí in May 2019, Nyhan accepted sexual activity had occurred between him and the victim, yet he denied raping him.
The prosecution case was presented in court by senior counsel Fionnuala O'Sullivan, barrister Lily Buckley, who were instructed by Aoife O'Halloran, Chief State Solicitor's Office, after an investigation by Gardaí attached to the National Garda Protective Services Bureau, (NGPSB), at Henry Street Garda Station, Limerick City, which deals solely with sexual crimes.
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.'
When asked by the barrister what he was doing when he alleged that Nyhan was removing his trousers and underpants, the victim replied: 'I was just scared, I just froze.'
The victim described as 'bullshit' further unfounded claims by Nyhan, put by the barrister, that the victim had been in possession of 'a knife' at the time and that Nyhan 'was afraid' he'd harm himself, and that Nyhan 'pretended to go along' with sex.
The victim told the court Nyhan threw him on the bed, and 'thrust' himself into the victim telling him he 'loved' him, despite the victim's pleas 'No'.
The victim told the court Nyhan's denials were 'lies'.
'It was like barbed wire ... it was like hell, like something burning you,' the victim said, breaking down in tears.
Nyhan's wife, Mary Nyhan, supported her husband to court every day of his trial and throughout the criminal proceedings.
Before he was being led away to prison today, members of Nyhan's family cried, roared and hugged him.
Judge Ring said evidence accepted by the jury was that, during one of the rapes, Nyhan used a shoelace tied around his own penis in an effort to make it erect as he suffered with erectile dysfunction after he had cancer.
'Nyhan complained it (his penis) wasn't working, and the victim described that he then kissed (the victim's) balls. Nyhan said he would pay him and left €150,' the judge said.
"Nyhan then proceeded to masturbate while sitting on the bed and ejaculated onto the floor next to the bed. Nyhan then left. The victim spoke about washing with really cold water and going outside to burn the money.'
DNA Swabs taken by forensic Gardaí of a stain at the scene of the 2019 rape matched Nyhan's DNA profile.
The judge said Nyhan had told the victim that 'he couldn't have sex' with his wife.
'Nyhan said to the victim if he had sex with him he could go home and have sex with his wife. He then took the victim into a bedroom, took off his pants and had anal intercourse.'
Commenting on Nyhan, the judge said: 'He is a man without prior criminal convictions, and to all intents and purposes lived the quiet, hardworking life of a farmer.'
Ireland
Inmates given almost €550,000 in 'bus money' over...
Read More
The judge said Nyhan, who was represented by Mark Nicholas SC, Liam Carroll BL, instructed by solicitor Sarah Ryan, had acted in a 'serious and sinister' fashion.
'It is clear that Nyhan knew that the victim had not told anyone of the 2011 rape, and thus he had the confidence to rape again in 2019, assuming that the victim would stay silent again,' the judge said.
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.
If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this article, you can call the national 24-hour Rape Crisis Helpline at 1800-77 8888, access text service and webchat options at drcc.ie/services/helpline/ or visit Rape Crisis Help.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
25 minutes ago
- The Independent
Watch live: Brian Kohberger sentenced for murdering four Idaho students
Watch live as Brian Kohberger is sentenced for murdering four college students in Idaho. University of Idaho students Kaylee Goncalves, 21, Madison Mogen, 21, Xana Kernodle, 20, and Ethan Chapin, 20, were stabbed to death by the 30-year-old in a frenzied attack at their college home on November 13, 2022. On Wednesday (23 July), Kohberger will be sentenced after admitting to the killings for the first time at a plea-deal hearing to avoid the death penalty. In pleading guilty, Kohberger waived all rights to an appeal. The students had enjoyed a Saturday night out in the small college town of Moscow before returning in the early hours. As most of the roommates in the house slept in the six-bedroom home, Kohberger - dressed in all-black with a balaclava - broke in around 4am and crept through the kitchen sliding door before killing the four students. Prosecutors said there's still no known connection between the victims and Kohberger, who had been planning the murders for months.


The Independent
25 minutes ago
- The Independent
Reform wants you to think London is a terrifying hellscape – here's why they're wrong
I write this from under my bed, in the dark, heart pounding, fearing for my life. Yet another wave of violent crime is rampaging through the streets of London, and as the sinister mob closes in on terrified residents like myself, I… wake up from this mad fantasy and realise it's just another sunny day in Hackney and everything's fine. In fact, I'm thinking to myself, what a brilliant summer we're having. Not that you'd know any of this if you listened to the hyperbolic bleatings of those trying to convince you otherwise. Whether it's Trump calling London 'a war zone', Nigel Farage or TV's tough guy-wannabe-mayor Ant Middleton calling it a 'murder capital', there's clearly a new script in play. London, they want you to believe, is out of control; a terrifying hellhole where every minute is spent holding on to your phone for dear life, or just holding on to your dear life, for that matter. It's not the new script when you're living in this town, though – I write this from my kitchen table, a friend having just cycled round to bring back a Tupperware that I lent her after my backyard birthday party. (And I live on a street where they filmed a lot of the gritty drama Top Boy, so it's not as if everything's twee round here.) My Polish, Caribbean and French neighbours have all been invited to my housewarming party, and have commented how nice it has been to see my garden coming along. Turns out they were more worried about my poor geraniums than the doom spiral headlines about what is going on outside in the hard-knock streets. And yes, I am happy to be bringing up my child here too. As I write, my 13-year-old daughter is in town with her friends, using the underground and buses to celebrate the end of term at her outstanding state school. They may be shopping at Camden Market, perhaps chilling out on Hampstead Heath or swimming at the lido. I am not sure where they are, but I am sure they are all having a thoroughly lovely time. Which is why I couldn't help laughing while watching a woman called Laila Cunningham telling Sky presenter Sophy Ridge about her fears for the city. Cunningham, a former CPS prosecutor and Conservative councillor, is now a councillor for Reform and on their law and order team. Fixated on London's descent into the pits of hell, she recounted a recent trip to Chicago and New York, where people we concerned for her safety and said to her: 'We've heard what's going on in London, are you guys okay?' A bemused Sophy Ridge responded by saying, 'We are okay though. I mean, I live in London?' Thinking of something that must be protecting the presenter from the terror stalking the streets, Cunningham replied, 'You're okay because… maybe you come to work in a taxi!' Ridge barely stifled her giggles, as she explained that, no, she gets the bus. The Reform types love to hate Sadiq Khan, who came into power in 2016 at a time of huge policing cuts. They conveniently forget that while the Met has had to cope with an increase in knife crime in the capital, 18-19 police forces have also reported year-on-year increases in knife crime, including Avon and Somerset (31 per cent), Cambridgeshire (14 per cent), and Hertfordshire (14 per cent). Terrible things do happen, and poverty kills, but that's also true from Cornwall to Carlisle. And yet, London is being relentlessly talked up as a hellscape of epic proportions. Ant Middleton, the former SAS telly personality, is in full rapture of this loopy narrative and how in a 'twisted grip', Khan's London is 'rotting from the core' and 'needs cleansing from the inside'. One piece of advice for free: don't start your campaign by slagging off London. You won't seduce a city like this one without loving it. Yes, there are high costs, everyday chaos and cruel collisions of wealth and want. But even on the days we love to hate this dirty old town, something exciting happens and you realise you can't leave. God knows I've considered trading it in, often scrolling Rightmove to imagine a bigger house and a smaller mortgage elsewhere. But would those places let me go from a fascinating book launch to a funny film screening to an outdoor rave all in one night? How can I move from a place that houses 170 museums, 300-plus live music venues, and serves up everything from Shakespeare's Globe to Stormzy? I've never even learned to drive, not even with a kid in tow – the taxi service of mum and dad isn't really a thing here. Cycling and walking are though, as 47 per cent of London is green space – parks, commons, heaths and canals. And isn't it strange that those who spend their lives clutching their pearls over the 'state of things' and how 'multi-culturalism has failed' are often doing so from their crunchy drives in Guildford or Kent. That old-fashioned 'white-flight' doesn't seem to have changed much, and while our mash-up of cultures and backgrounds might not always be plain sailing, it definitely makes us stronger overall. Londoners don't bat an eyelid at sharing their buses, schools, parks and supermarkets with newcomers from across the world. You are just as likely to be sharing your bus with a quantum physicist as a grime producer, and 300 languages are spoken here – more than in any other city on Earth. In an international city, the micro speaks to the macro – the children at my daughter's school have a global awareness and it shows. I did a BA in modern languages and still ended up less worldly at 23 than she is at 13. How is any of this bad? I think back to what it was like when I first moved to London from Yorkshire in the mid-Nineties, jealously guarding my handbag on the tube for fear of the pickpockets I'd heard so much about. Thirty years later, I still haven't been pickpocketed once, and the only man who groped me in a crowd was a former boss at a Christmas party. I'm sorry if anyone doesn't feel safe to roam London's historic streets, as Middleton claims, but I enjoy roaming them all the time. Sometimes on a nice summer's evening, I'll even walk back from a party, whether I'm 10 minutes or an hour away from my door. In the Cotswolds or Somerset, there might not even be a pavement to walk home on. You're far more likely to end up in a dark ditch on the side of a dual carriageway. Here in the big, disgusting, beloved smoke we can at least count on street lamps and paths made out of concrete to keep us safe and the people to keep it interesting.


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
CCTV images released in Huddersfield drive-by shooting inquiry
CCTV images have been released of car a detectives want to trace following a drive-by shooting at a garage which left three men suspects opened fire from a Nissan Juke as it passed S Auto's garage in Bulay Road, Huddersfield, on Tuesday said the car, which was black with red wing mirrors and damage to its bonnet and sides, was travelling on false registration plates.A man, aged 20 suffered injuries to his arm and stomach in the attack while a 30-year-old received a foot injury and a third man, aged 36, was hit in the knee. Det Ch Insp James Entwistle, who is leading the investigation, said officers were working to understand the motive behind the attack and "every possible resource needed" was being used in the area."This exceptionally dangerous act could quite easily have resulted in far worse consequences, and I want to reassure residents a full investigation is underway," he said. Police said the car turned left from Nelson Street onto Bulay Road just before the shooting, and then made off, turning right onto Springdale Road and then Manchester Entwistle appealed for anyone who had footage of the car in or around Bulay Road or Manchester Road to come said communities would continue to see a large police presence in the area and extra uniformed patrols. Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North