logo
‘We finally have justice' – Family of Tina Satchwell speak out as husband Richard convicted of her brutal murder

‘We finally have justice' – Family of Tina Satchwell speak out as husband Richard convicted of her brutal murder

Key updates
Watch: Family of Tina Satchwell speak after guilty verdict
In Profile: Tina Satchwell - 'she was loved, happy'
In Profile: Richard Satchwell - a bundle of contradictions
The six brazen lies that sealed Richard Satchwell's fate – and how holes were poked in his stories
Richard Satchwell to be sentenced for his wife's murder on June 4
LATEST: Richard Satchwell convicted of wife's murder and now faces life in prison
Richard Satchwell (58) has been found guilty by a Central Criminal Court jury of the murder of his wife Tina (45) whose body was discovered buried under the stairwell of their Youghal, Co Cork home.
The jury returned a unanimous verdict after nine hours and 28 minutes of deliberations following a five week trial.
Satchwell now faces mandatory life in prison.
The English truck driver kept his head bowed as the Central Criminal Court jury returned a guilty verdict on the 23rd day of the Central Criminal Court murder trial.
Mr Justice Paul McDermott was told that the jury of seven women and five men had reached a unanimous guilty verdict.
The jury had commenced their deliberations at 3.05pm on Tuesday and returned with their verdict on Friday afternoon.
He pleaded not guilty to the murder of his wife at a time unknown on March 19/20, 2017, at his home at No 3 Grattan Street in Youghal, Co Cork, contrary to Common Law.
Satchwell has been in custody since he was first charged on October 14, 2023, with his wife Tina's murder.
However, sentencing will be adjourned to allow for the preparation of expert reports – and for the Fermoy woman's family to consider the delivery of victim-impact statements at the sentencing hearing.
For six-and-a-half years the truck driver had told 'lie upon lie upon lie' as he maintained his wife had gone missing from their Youghal home on March 20, 2017, with two suitcases and €26,000 in their life savings.
He informed gardaí in Fermoy four days later that she had disappeared from the family home – at the very time her body was in a chest freezer awaiting burial.
His insistence his wife had disappeared prompted a six-and-a-half-year missing-person investigation which included major offshore searches and a week-long trawl of an east Cork woodland in 2018.
The murder trial opened at the Criminal Courts of Justice in Dublin on April 28.
It sat for five weeks and the jury heard from a total of 57 witnesses as well as watching multiple video and audio interviews Satchwell had conducted with gardaí and Irish media organisations including the Irish Independent.
The jury were told Satchwell had drawn in 'anyone who would listen to him' to promote his false narrative that his wife was missing, possibly running off with another man.
He conducted lengthy interviews with the Irish Independent, RTÉ, TV3/Virgin Media, Today FM, Red FM, 96FM and CRY FM.
Prosecutor Gerardine Small SC said his account was full of 'guile', clever lies and 'conniving' behaviour.
She described him to the jury as 'an arch-manipulator'.
Leicester-born truck driver Satchwell also spoke from March 2017 about how his wife had regularly beat him – telling a man at a car-boot sale six days after his wife's death that she was 'a street angel and a house devil'.
He also floated stories that she was depressed, had possible mental health issues and may have had an affair with a Polish man.
Satchwell gave multiple interviews to television and radio stations, but visibly disliked newspaper journalists – once commenting that they were 'mentally incapable of reporting what I say'.
Two members of Ms Satchwell's family gave evidence to the trial including her cousin, Sarah Howard, and her half-sibling, Lorraine Howard.
Sarah Howard sobbed during her evidence when asked about Satchwell offering her for free the chest freezer in which he had temporarily stored his wife's body before later burying her under the stairs.
Prosecutors said this offer was 'cynical' – while even Mr Satchwell's own counsel, Brendan Grehan SC, described his actions after his wife's death as 'reprehensible and disreputable'.
The trial heard that Satchwell later placed an advert on Done Deal for a chest freezer weeks after his wife's death which he said was free if collected and that it 'just needs a clean'.
Sarah Howard said she was very suspicious of the claim Ms Satchwell had left home with the €26,000 – insisting she would never go anywhere without her beloved dogs, Heidi and Ruby, who were left behind in the Youghal property.
Jurors also heard that the Satchwell's pets – including the dogs and a parrot – were like their children.
Ms Satchwell had wanted to adopt two marmoset monkeys, Terry and Thelma, but the trial heard her husband had sent a significant amount of money for the animals to an international monkey organisation which was probably a scam.
Lorraine Howard said she did not like the way Mr Satchwell referred to her half-sibling initially as his 'trophy girlfriend' and latterly as his 'trophy wife'.
She said Tina Satchwell also confided to her that she could not get away from her husband.
'She knew she could not get away from him. She would confide in me that he would follow her to the ends of the Earth – she could not get away from him,' she said.
'He [Satchwell] knew she was above his league – his words not mine. He would tell everyone that. He would never go off with anyone else. Even if she came back in the door after all she had put him through, he would take her back.'
The truck driver told gardaí his wife regularly assaulted him and that, just days before she went missing, had told him: 'I wasted 28 years of my life with you.'
He said he was 'besotted' with his wife and catered to her every need – including bathing her each evening and rubbing oil on her body while she lay naked on the bed.
Further, he claimed he was twice arrested for shoplifting clothing he thought his wife wanted.
Satchwell maintained his wife had gone missing for six-and-a-half years, but sobbed as he changed his story to gardaí on October 12, 2023, as an intensive search of his home finally revealed his wife's secret grave under the stairs.
That search was ordered by Garda Superintendent Ann Marie Twomey who assumed responsibility for the case in 2021.
With Detective Garda David Kelleher, she conducted a full review of the case file and consulted with forensic archaeologist Dr Niamh McCullagh who focused her doctoral studies on domestic homicides in Ireland and where bodies were stored in cases where the assailant tried to evade detection.
The trial heard Dr McCullagh recommended an invasive search of the three-storey Youghal property with particular attention being paid to an area under the stairwell.
Satchwell's house was previously searched on June 7, 2017, by a 10-strong team of gardaí.
One detective photographed the area under the stairs – including the shoddily built brick wall which Satchwell had erected to conceal his wife's burial site.
However, gardaí did not conduct an invasive search of the property and Ms Satchwell's body would not be found for a further six years.
Gardaí did seize a number of laptops and mobile phones at the property and these would prove crucial in the subsequent investigation.
Detectives learned Satchwell had conducted an internet search about quicklime on March 20, 2017, and later watched a YouTube video of the effects of combining quicklime with water.
He also sent emails – after his wife was already dead – claiming she was about to leave him over the failure to secure the two pet monkeys she wanted.
Gardaí also noted six key lies which Mr Satchwell had told about his relationship with his wife and the circumstances of her disappearance.
Supt Twomey's four-day search from October 10, 2023, involved contracted builders, ground-mapping radar, forensic archaeologists, the Garda Technical Bureau and, crucially, a Northern Ireland-trained cadaver dog, Fern.
The dog immediately focused on the area under the stairwell and, when gardaí broke through a concrete slab, discovered Tina Satchwell's skeletonised and mummified body which had been buried in an old blanket and heavy-grade plastic.
She had been buried face-down along with her purse, containing several identity cards.
When confronted with the discovery, Satchwell sobbed to gardaí that he had acted in self-defence after his wife attacked him with a chisel.
He claimed he fell to the ground and held his wife away from him with his outstretched hands – and she went limp after the belt of her dressing gown went up around her neck with the full weight of her body bearing down upon it.
However, he insisted to gardaí he could not remember details of how his wife died – and refused to re-enact the manner of her death to detectives.
He maintained he acted entirely in self-defence and was 'fearful' he would be stabbed in the head.
Mr Small SC dismissed the account as 'self-serving' and 'farcical' – and claimed Satchwell was once again lying to protect himself.
Assistant state pathologist Dr Margaret Bolster, who has performed over 30,000 post-mortem examinations, could not determine a cause of death for Ms Satchwell such was the skeletonised, badly decomposed and partly mummified condition of her remains.
Forensic anthropologist Dr Laureen Buckley confirmed that no fractures were detected on the remains – and no bones showed any sign of old fractures having healed.
Satchwell explained to detectives that, when he buried his wife with fresh tulips under the stairwell of their home, it was like 'a genuine funeral'.
'When I was burying Tina… it was the final goodbye… I wanted to make her comfortable,' he told gardaí.
'I spent the night [March 20] on the floor, with Tina laying across me. I spent the night sitting on the ground, holding Tina's dead body. I didn't have food, nothing. I just held Tina all night.
'I have a conscience… I still dream of Tina. I have not lost the desire to be with her.'
He maintained he had been subjected to a campaign of domestic violence by his wife over the course of their marriage and was left with cuts, bruises, swellings, scratches and even bite marks.
Satchwell claimed he had teeth broken from blows by his wife – and said she had knocked him unconscious on two occasions.
He replied to gardaí when first charged with the murder of his wife at Cobh garda station on October 13, 2023: 'Guilty or not guilty – guilty.'
Ms Small, in her closing argument, noted that Satchwell had given a more respectful funeral to their dog Heidi than he had to the wife he claimed he had loved from first sight.
Ralph Riegel
Today 08:35 AM
Today 08:21 AM
Today 08:21 AM
Tina Satchwell, pictured in younger years, with one of her beloved pets
Today 08:20 AM
In Profile: Tina Satchwell - 'she was loved, happy'
'She was loved, happy, a lovely young girl' – Tina Satchwell remembered as an outgoing person known for her sense of style, Catherine Fegan writes
Read the full article here:
'She was loved, happy, a lovely young girl' – Tina Satchwell remembered as an outgoing person known for her sense of style
With her flamboyant sense of fashion and peroxide-blonde hair, Tina Satchwell cut a striking figure as she walked around the coastal town of Youghal in Co Cork.
www.independent.ie
Today 08:18 AM
In Profile: Richard Satchwell - a bundle of contradictions
A bundle of contradictions – how Richard Satchwell promoted himself as devoted, while others saw a controlling husband, Ralph Riegel writes
A bundle of contradictions – how Richard Satchwell promoted himself as devoted, while others saw a controlling husband
Manipulative, obsessive, cunning, devoted, thoughtful, cynical and a skilled liar – Richard Satchell (58) emerged from his Central Criminal Court murder trial as a mass of contradictions.
www.independent.ie
Today 08:17 AM
Today 08:16 AM
Today 08:15 AM
The six brazen lies that sealed Richard Satchwell's fate – and how holes were poked in his stories
Six lies ultimately helped gardaí rip apart Richard Satchwell's intricate web of deceit, Ralph Riegel writes.
The six brazen lies that sealed Richard Satchwell's fate – and how GPs and car-boot sale enthusiasts poked holes in his stories
Six lies ultimately helped gardaí rip apart the intricate web of deceit that Richard Satchwell (58) had woven over the true fate of his wife Tina (45).
www.independent.ie
Today 08:14 AM
Richard Satchwell to be sentenced for his wife's murder on June 4
Mr Satchwell has been in custody since he was first charged with his wife's murder on October 14 2023.
Sentencing was adjourned to June 4 to allow for the preparation of expert reports - and for the Fermoy woman's family to prepare the delivery of victim impact statements for the sentencing hearing.
Several members of Ms Satchwell's family broke down and wept in court as the guilty verdict was confirmed.
Ralph Riegel
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man (20s) and teen charged after firebomb attack on family's home in Ballyfermot
Man (20s) and teen charged after firebomb attack on family's home in Ballyfermot

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Man (20s) and teen charged after firebomb attack on family's home in Ballyfermot

The family had been injured and their dog burned to death after their home was targeted in the early morning attack A man in his 20s and a teenager have been arrested and charged by gardai investigating the firebomb attack on an innocent family's home in Ballyfermot, Dublin 10. Both were quizzed at Garda stations in Dublin by gardaí investigating an act of 'criminal damage by fire' that occurred at a residence on Landen Road on Wednesday, May 21. The Curran family had been injured and their dog burned to death after their home was targeted in the early morning attack. Detectives believe it was carried out as part of a worsening city feud involving a young drug dealer and junior associates of gangster Brian Rattigan. In an update released on Thursday night, a Garda spokesperson confirmed that the man and the teenager had both been charged in relation to the incident. A spokesperson said: 'One male, aged in his 20s is due to appear before Criminal Courts of Justice tomorrow morning Friday 4th July, 2025 at 10.30am. 'The second male, a juvenile in his teens, is due to appear before the Children's Court tomorrow morning Friday 4th July, 2025 at 10.30am. Investigations ongoing.' Breda Curran recalled hearing her husband Pat's screams from the sitting room at 2am, where he had been due to having difficulties sleeping. The fire-damaged Curran home News in 90 Seconds - Thursday, July 3 "I heard a big crashing sound… I jumped up and ran down the stairs. I could feel the heat coming up the stairs and it wasn't a normal heat,' Ms Curran said. The couple and their son ran out of the house into the garden, where they noticed that their sitting room window had a hole in it. Ms Curran told RTÉ's Morning Ireland that she grabbed their garden hose and ran back in because their dog had been sleeping in the sitting room. "We were calling his name, but the heat wouldn't let us back in. When we went into the sitting room door, the fire was everywhere,' she recalled. "The whole place was up in flames… we tried to call the dog but it was too late. We just heard him whimpering and then everything went silent.' She told how the family then stood out on the road, and watched on as their home burned to the ground. Mr Curran recalled his own perspective, waking up in the sitting room to breaking glass and seeing a line of fire right in front of him. "It was like waking up in hell… I don't know how I didn't go on fire. All I done was I started screaming, 'Breda, Breda, Breda.' "The thought came into my head, 'what did I do', I thought I was after falling asleep, did I do something to cause this? "This is evil that came to our house,' Mr Curran said. The Ballyfermot couple said being from old stock themselves, they did not have their home insured and would have felt a 'little bit more secure' if it had been. "I don't know if I can even come back here. I don't know if I would feel safe here. I just feel totally different now. I loved me home,' Ms Curran said. She told how she does shift work and would come home, clean up, have a shower and feed the dog. The couple said they don't drink or smoke, and spend their time watching Netflix in the evening. 'All I can think now is, what was all that for? It's gone,' Ms Curran said. They thanked their neighbours, who, since the attack, have been coming over and empathising and even handed the couple money in envelopes. "Strangers come up to us often,' Mr Curran said. 'I have to say, the community spirit in Ballyfermot, it is never talked about. But the respect, compassion, goodwill that is after coming from this community is something to be admired and it keeps me going.'

Prison service hiring hundreds to address overcrowding crisis
Prison service hiring hundreds to address overcrowding crisis

RTÉ News​

time4 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Prison service hiring hundreds to address overcrowding crisis

A recruitment campaign is underway to hire 300 new prison officers in full-time positions. The new officers will help address staffing shortfalls amid an overcrowding crisis among the prison population, which recently exceeded 5,000 in a system with bed capacity for over 4,600. The Irish Penal Reform Trust (IPRT) has claimed that overcrowding in prisons has been persistent since 2023 leading to unacceptable, degrading and dehumanising conditions across Irish prisons. The highest level of overcrowding is at Limerick's Women's Prison, which is currently 48% over capacity. Eighty-three women are in custody there, but the prison has a bed capacity of just 56. As of Thursday, 3 July, 5,477 people are in prison custody, equating to the prison estate being at 118% capacity. The IRPT said many prisoners are forced to sleep on mattresses on the floor, which is said to increase tensions in ''inhumane and degrading conditions'' The Irish Prison Service's capital budget for 2025 is €53 million, which officials say is being used to create additional spaces. Capacity increases in prison system Over recent years, capacity has been increased by in excess of 300 spaces. "This year's campaign is a vital part of a much wider investment in our prison systems.'' said Minister for Justice, Home Affairs and Migration Jim O'Callaghan. ''Prison officers are at the heart of our justice system and have the potential to positively impact the lives of some of Ireland's most vulnerable people, as well as Irish society as a whole," he added. The Irish prison service has encouraged anyone looking for a varied and fulfilling career to apply. ''The Government is committed to ensuring that all prison officers are empowered and equipped to lead rewarding careers that make a real difference," said Minister O'Callaghan. Virtual prison tour launched A virtual prison tour through an Irish Prison Service location has also been launched. The interactive web-based virtual tool, believed to be the first of its kind, guides visitors or incoming prisoners on what to expect when visiting a prison location The Director General of the Irish Prison Service said the latest recruitment campaign will run until 1 August, 2025. ''The incredible work of prison officers is complex and often hidden from public view, but our annual competition and the launch of the virtual tour allow us the opportunity to let the public see the team work and the integrity, potential, safety and support that prison officers not only offer to prisoners, but to their colleagues as well.'' said Director General of the Irish Prison Service Caron McCaffrey. Eligible candidates will undergo a comprehensive selection process, including written assessments, physical fitness tests, interviews, and background checks. Successful candidates will receive extensive training to equip them with the skills required for the role. The 2024 recruitment campaign attracted more than 1500 applicants and 271 prison officers joining the Irish Prison Service.

New virtual prison tour launched alongside major prison service recruitment campaign
New virtual prison tour launched alongside major prison service recruitment campaign

Irish Examiner

time4 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

New virtual prison tour launched alongside major prison service recruitment campaign

A new virtual prison tour has been launched to give the public insight into life behind bars. The web-based tool allows visitors, service users, and the wider public to explore an Irish prison, guided by a digitally created prison officer. The project aims to increase public understanding of how prisons function day to day. Justice minister Jim O'Callaghan has also launched a new recruitment campaign, targeting 300 new staff for the Irish Prison Service. Mr O'Callaghan said he hopes the virtual tour will encourage people to consider a career in the prison service. The virtual experience includes overlaid audiovisual information about what to expect when visiting a prison and provides 360° tours of one Irish Prison Service location. Mr O'Callaghan said: 'This innovative project will greatly enhance the public's understanding of how our prisons operate. It can also serve as a positive recruitment tool to provide those contemplating a career as a prison officer with the ability to tour their future workplace.' The primary objective of the initiative is to deliver an informative and educational virtual tour that broadens public understanding while strictly protecting security-sensitive aspects of prison operations. The tool was created to ensure no confidential or operational security information is compromised, and it is also designed to ease visitor apprehension by providing a realistic yet controlled preview of the prison environment. Caron McCaffrey, Director General of the Irish Prison Service said: "The incredible work of Prison Officers is complex and often hidden from public view, but our annual competition and the launch of the virtual tour allow us the opportunity to let the public see the teamwork, integrity, potential, safety and support that Prison Officers not only offer to prisoners, but to their colleagues as well. "I wish to commend all those involved in delivering the Virtual Tour, an innovative and informative project that highlights the professionalism and dedication of our staff across the prison estate." The 2024 recruitment campaign attracted more than 1,500 applicants, resulting in 271 prison officers joining the Irish Prison Service. The 2025 Recruit Prison Officer Competition will remain open until early August.

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