
Tina Satchwell's sister saw Richard Satchwell as an ‘obsessive' and ‘controlling' person
The relationship between
Richard Satchwell
and his late wife
Tina
was 'odd' and he was a 'controlling' person, her sister has said.
Sarah Howard told the
Central Criminal Court
trial of Mr Satchwell, who denies murdering of his wife at their home in Youghal, Co Cork in March 2017, that the accused would call her sister his 'trophy' wife.
'I didn't think that was right,' she added.
She said Mr Satchwell was 'obsessive' and wanted to know where his wife was at all times and who she was speaking to.
READ MORE
Ms Howard said the accused would 'find some fault' with every friend his wife ever made and that her circle of friends 'got smaller' as a result.
'I thought it was controlling and odd,' she said of the relationship.
Ms Howard, called as a witness for the defence, agreed with Brendan Grehan SC, for Mr Satchwell, that she made an initial statement to gardaí in May 2017 following her sister's disappearance. She provided a longer statement in August 2020, more than three years before the discovery of Ms Satchwell's remains in October 2023.
Ms Howard said she was 'angry' with Ms Satchwell when she answered questions posed by gardaí in 2020, believing her sister had put the family through 'untold stress'.
She said Mr Satchwell had accused his wife of taking money and made her out to be a violent person. However, she said she revised her views after Ms Satchwell 'was discovered dead and buried'.
'He is the person I should have aimed the anger that,' the witness said.
Ms Howard was asked in detail about her statement of August 2020.
She had said Mr Satchwell was 'obsessed' with her sister and that he knew she 'was above his league'.
She had said he spent every penny on Ms Satchwell 'to dress her up'. She agreed with counsel that she had described her sister as 'high maintenance'.
Ms Howard was asked by gardaí if Ms Satchwell might have had depression, to which she replied that she had concerns.
She said her brother had died by suicide and Mr Satchwell had portrayed her sister as depressed and 'extremely violent'.
'I had never seen violence, we had many arguments and she never once went to out a hand towards me,' she said.
Ms Howard had described her sister as a having a 'Jekyll and Hyde' personality with her, sometimes they would be friends, sometimes not. Both of them had a 'vicious' temper, she said.
The witness agreed that she said she had seen scratches on Mr Satchwell's back, but said she did not know in what context they arose. Mr Satchwell, like her own husband, works in building and often saw scratches on her husband, she said.
She said that when she was aged 15, Ms Satchwell, who was three years older, told her that she had slapped Mr Satchwell in the face, but she did not know in what context that arose.
Ms Howard said Ms Satchwell knew she could not get away from her husband and that 'he would follow her to the ends of the earth'.
She said Mr Satchwell had told her Tina had changed her Littlewoods account from her name into his. She did not see him as controlling at that time, 'but definitely possessive'. She has revised her views on that since, she said.
She was not fully aware of aspects of the couple's relationship which came to light after she heard things from others having made the 2020 statement. She also agreed she had told gardaí that Ms Satchwell 'loved herself'.
Ms Howard said Mr Satchwell showed her 'every scar' on his body after his wife went missing and blamed her sister for them. He had never referred to her sister as violent before she went missing and that was why she told gardaí she felt concerned about Tina's mental state, she said.
Ms Howard was the only witness for the defence in the trial of Mr Satchwell (58) who has pleaded not guilty to the murder of his 45-year-old wife at their home at Grattan Street, Youghal, between March 19th and 20th, 2017.
The next stage in the trial will be closing speeches, followed by Mr Justice Paul McDermott's charge to the jury of seven women and five men.
Ms Satchwell's decomposed skeletal remains were discovered during a forensic search of the property on October 11th, 2023, about 6½ years after Mr Satchwell reported her missing.
After the discovery, Mr Satchwell told gardaí his wife had come at him with a chisel on the morning of March 20th, 2017. He said he used the belt of her dressing gown to fend her off, but that she 'went limp' and died.
Assistant State Pathologist Dr Margaret Bolster has told the jury that advanced decomposition meant Ms Satchwell's cause of death could not be determined at a postmortem carried out in October 2023.
Earlier on Thursday, Ms Howard said her mother is Mary Collins. For a long time, she said, she had considered Ms Satchwell to be her aunt but later found out she was her biological half-sister. Ms Collins was Ms Satchwell's mother but they have different fathers, she said.
Ms Satchwell found out Ms Collins was her birth mother around the time she was making her Confirmation because she went to look for her birth certificate, she said. Ms Satchwell was shocked and maybe felt she had been lied to, Ms Howard said.
Ms Satchwell had been raised by her grandmother, Florence Dingivan, Ms Howard said, adding that she saw them as mother and daughter and they got on really well.
She and Ms Satchwell were best friends growing up, she was in her house almost every day and they went to school together, she said.
Their relationship changed when Ms Satchwell found out she was her sister, not her aunt. Ms Satchwell felt she was 'given away', which was not the case, while Ms Howard was kept.
Ms Satchwell remained close to her grandmother and they later moved to England as a family, she said. There were years when Ms Satchwell was in her life and years when she was not.
Ms Satchwell got on with her mother Ms Collins at times and did not at others.
There were good and bad times and it always came back to her 'feeling somehow abandoned', Ms Howard said.
Ms Howard said she and Ms Satchwell adored their brother Tom and his death by suicide affected both of them a lot. She said half of Ms Satchwell's ashes are with her grandmother in her grave and half are with her brother in his grave.
Hashtags

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


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Value of sanctions against Irish landlords for breaches reaches highest rate ever, RTB figures show
The value of sanctions against Irish landlords for breaches of rental law has grown to its highest rate ever, according to new figures released by the Residential Tenancies Board (RTB). In 2024, it published 75 sanctions with a total value of €238,299. This is almost four times higher in monetary value than what it gathered in 2023, at €64,360. In July 2019, the RTB was given new powers to investigate and sanction landlords who engage in breaches of rental law, known as improper conducts. The significant increase in the value of sanctions issued against landlords last year came amid renewed focus within the RTB investigations unit on a smaller group of landlords seen to be repeatedly breaching rental laws. READ MORE In a statement to The Irish Times, the RTB said the work 'involved detailed investigations into complex company structures and rental arrangements that were designed to avoid detection and enforcement of rental law'. 'It involved prolonged investigative work to access properties, serve legal documents and to find tenants who were willing to speak with the RTB's authorised officers,' the spokeswoman said in response to questions. 'These investigations into deliberate and repeated offenders saw the RTB's independent decision makers award higher levels of sanctions than previously seen,' the board said. Among those sanctioned in 2024 was Marc Godart and his company Green Label Ltd, with eight different sanctions amounting to a total of €26,100 in penalties for various breaches, including failure to register a tenancy. [ Under the eye of landlord Marc Godart: how a tenant who objected to CCTV surveillance was evicted Opens in new window ] Another notable case from 2024 was that of Anuj Katyal, who received a sanction of €15,000 for a failure to comply with rent pressure zone (RPZ) requirements at an address in Liffey Valley Park, Lucan, Co Dublin. Landlords John and Patricia Keeling also received a sanction of €15,000 for a failure to comply with RPZ requirements at an address in Derham Park, Balbriggan, Co Dublin. The RTB has published 36 sanctions to date in 2025 with a total value of €102,490, including its highest value single sanction yet on a Dublin-based landlord. Sweet Home Accommodation Ltd, run by Renato Passos, was fined €22,000 for a breach of rental laws at six city centre properties under his control. Investigators established he had failed to register 20 tenancies in properties on Leeson Street, Middle Abbey Street and Upper Abbey Street. During the course of its investigation the RTB discovered Brazilian students were being targeted through language schools and on social media about properties Mr Passos did not actually own but was sub-letting. Investigators found there was extensive overcrowding at multiple properties run by him, with bunk beds crammed into makeshift apartments, mattresses laid on floors and livingrooms converted into bedrooms. In one property, there were 15 people sharing one kitchen. Former tenant Julia Langneck, who lived at a property sublet by Mr Passos on Bolton Street in Dublin 1, told The Irish Times 'it was not really human at all, it was really terrible'. She detailed sharing a room with four other people, all in bunk beds, and paying almost €400 a month in rent. When the house became infested with bedbugs and the landlord asked for tenants to pay to have them removed, Julia decided to move out. However, Mr Passos withheld her deposit. This led to her taking a case against him with the RTB, which ordered him to pay the deposit and damages as part of its dispute resolutions process. The RTB subsequently began its own independent investigation into Mr Passos when media reports detailed serious overcrowding and unstable tenancies in properties he was leasing on Leeson Street. This investigation then led to the €22,000 sanction.


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
‘I don't feel safe in the house': Woman secures interim barring order against sexually abusive husband
A woman who alleged she was raped 'on many occasions' while living with her former partner in rented accommodation has been granted an emergency barring order by the Dublin District Family Court . The woman told the court on Friday that she has suffered sexual and physical abuse from the man 'for years'. She said the man has more recently begun to force her to give him oral sex, with the latest such alleged crime occurring 10 days ago. The man has also been physically and verbally abusive to their pre-teenage children since they were small, she told Judge Gerard Furlong as she made an ex parte – only one side represented – application for the temporary order. READ MORE Temporary orders cover eight working days. A new hearing, which the man has to be served notice of, must take place before an extended order can be granted. The woman said she rented the accommodation where the man, whom she had separated from last year, still lives. She was the main earner and the man had 'lived off me for years', the woman said. When at work, she has to leave the children with their father, though generally she tries to keep them away from him as much as possible. The man, she said, 'screams at me all the time,' says she is 'having sex with lots of men', threatens to kill her and threatens to kill himself. He has recently received a few thousand euro in social welfare back payments, the woman said, and since then is 'constantly drunk'. Last week, she said, he ordered a takeaway meal and became angry when the children said they did not want any. [ Man who threatened to 'slit throat' of TD's wife spared jail after citing psychotic episode Opens in new window ] The man started 'screaming in Polish in front of the children' and 'we were all terrified'. But the next morning, she said, he acted 'as if nothing had happened'. The woman contacted the Garda and engaged with its Domestic Violence Unit. She said she was 'very fearful' about making the application as she felt the man would now have 'nothing to lose'. Judge Furlong said he was granting the order 'without hesitation'. In another ex parte case, a married woman told the judge about repeated alleged sexual abuse from her husband and the father of their four children. 'I don't know if that is valid for a couple, but I know it is too much for me,' the woman said. 'I was always hoping for a good relationship.' In recent days he had come up behind her when she was doing the cleaning and forced his hands into her underwear despite her objections. [ Teens accused of 'savagely' beating man (60s) in south Dublin burglary freed due to lack of detention spaces Opens in new window ] He was also exposing himself to her in the house, which makes her feel 'disgusted' and anxious about her adult daughter being present. He is 'doing it over and over again', she said. 'I don't feel safe in the house.' Three or four years ago, she said, she was in bed with their youngest child when the man got in beside her and, despite her objection, 'did what he wanted'. 'I don't know if this is valid,' she added. The couples' four children live with them in the house. She said she feels 'awful' after being sexually abused and is exhausted, disgusted, humiliated and scared. 'I want peace and dignity and to be free from abuse,' the woman told Judge Furlong. The Garda, she said, was now investigating her complaint and had taken away items of clothing for examination. After the judge explained that the Garda would be notified of the interim barring order, and would remove the husband from the home, the woman said she wanted to ask a question. 'What will I say to the children when they ask where their father is?' Judge Furlong said it was not really a question he could answer. She knew the truth as to what had happened and knew her children best. Perhaps, he suggested, she could discuss it with a friend. In another case, a woman made a successful ex parte application for a temporary barring order against her sons, one in his early 40s, the other in his early 30s, both of whom have serious drug problems and live in homeless accommodation. The woman said she lived in a senior citizens' community and had been warned by Dublin City Council there was a 'high risk' she would be made to leave unless she got the barring orders. [ Man stabbed partner in face and chest in child's bedroom, court hears Opens in new window ] The two men had recently called to her home with a woman she did not know, had been drinking and were abusive to her when she asked them to leave. When they were taken away by the Garda, one of them later returned and smashed her windows and damaged the toilet. 'I was scared all that night,' she told Judge Furlong. The two men ask her for money and shout at her, and one of them had once broken her arm. However, she said she still lets them in because she feels sorry for them. The woman told the judge she has health issues, suffers from depression and was on a lot of medication. 'Everything that is happening with the boys is making my health much worse,' the woman said.


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Boylan brothers: Gang leaders in Drogheda feud have been on the run for five years
When gardaí burst into a house on the Moneymore estate in Drogheda, Co Louth , to rescue Aaron Rochford, the 22-year-old was already in a grave condition. Earlier that night – November 11th, 2018 – he had been abducted off the street as part of the Drogheda gangland feud that had exploded months earlier. Armed Support Unit gardaí found Rochford crouching naked in the bath in a stunned condition. He was covered in blood and had suffered a broken jaw as well as slashes to his torso and head. A Stanley knife and crossbow were found at the scene. Josh Boylan (26), Moneymore, Drogheda, Co Louth, and Keith Boylan (30), Park Heath, Drogheda, Co Meath , were among four men charged in relation to the Rochford abduction and beating. READ MORE However, in June 2020 a sitting of Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard the brothers, who are from Drogheda, had 'gone off the radar' after being granted bail. Bench warrants were issued for their arrests but they could not be found. The Irish Times has learned that, five years later, they remain at large abroad. They are believed to have spent time in Turkey, Dubai, Spain and Thailand – not always together. More recent garda intelligence has placed them in South America. Last week, when a number of women appeared before Dundalk Circuit Criminal Court on money-laundering charges, the Boylans were named as the leaders of the Boylan organised crime group involved in the Drogheda feud. The money laundering the women were charged with related to the activities of the Boylans in 2020 and 2021. Garda John Walsh of Drogheda Garda station named Keith Boylan as the leader of the Boylan organised crime group and said Josh Boylan was second in command. [ 'Everybody is affected in a different way': Drogheda aims to put drugs feud behind it Opens in new window ] He said the group was involved in the importation of drugs into the State. The Moneymore local authority estate in Drogheda, where the brothers are from, is regarded as deprived. It was one of seven small areas in Drogheda, the Republic's largest town, prioritised in the Government's Revitalising Areas by Planning, Investment and Development (RAPID) programme launched in 2001. The brothers were involved in the drugs trade in the region from a young age. Along with a number of their friends they were junior members of the criminal network run by the local Maguire brothers – Owen and Brendan. The Maguires, who are much older than the Boylans, were allied to another senior criminal from the region, Cornelius Price, who is suspected of several drug-related murders. However, the Boylans and their young associates outgrew their underling status in the Maguire-Price drugs gang and decided to take on their bosses. They were vying for control of the lucrative drugs market in Louth. Whoever wore the crown would also have a large chunk of the market in Meath and into parts of north Dublin. When they decided to take on the Maguire-Price mob, Keith Boylan was aged 22 and his brother was 18. Cornelius Price leaving Wheatfield prison in May 2019. Photograph: Padraig O'Reilly Tensions had been simmering for some time before the feud erupted when the Boylan group tried to murder Owen Maguire in a gun attack in July 2018 on Cement Road in Drogheda. He survived but was paralysed in the shooting, which was carried out by a Boylan ally Robbie Lawlor. Among the more notorious incidents that followed was the effort to blow up a car, fitted with two gas cylinders, outside the Boylan family home in Moneymore. It was intercepted by the Boylan gang, who immediately accused Aaron Rochford of driving the car. He was abducted and subjected to a vicious assault. From late 2018 into 2019, homes and vehicles were destroyed in petrol bomb attacks, a marked tactic in the Drogheda feud. Brendan Maguire and Keith Boylan were wounded in tit-for-tat attempts on their lives in 2019 but both survived. In March 2019 local Sinn Féin politician Ruairí Ó Murchú , a councillor, told the Drogheda Joint Policing Committee – a forum where gardaí discuss co-operation on policing issues with local authorities, elected representatives and community figures – that he was aware of a man who paid one of the gangs €40,000 to clear a debt they said was owed by his daughter. 'People are afraid, they are embarrassed, they just want it to go away, so they pay,' he said. House damaged in petrol bomb attack in Loughboy, Drogheda, Co Louth in April 2019. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill Residents in May 2019 held a rally against the spate of violent incidents in the town. But almost immediately another feud attack left a man wounded. Keith Branigan (29), a close friend of Keith Boylan, was shot dead at the Aisling Caravan Park in Clogherhead in August 2019. [ Personal grudges and taunts ratcheting up Drogheda gang violence Opens in new window ] In November of that year Richard Carberry (39), who was also close to Keith Boylan, was shot dead in Bettystown, Co Meath. However, Carberry's killing, which is unsolved, may not have been feud related. Two months later came the most shocking killing in the feud, the murder of 17-year-old Keane Mulready-Woods – a Maguire associate – at a house in Drogheda in January 2020. His dismembered remains were found days later in two locations in north Dublin. Keane Mulready-Woods (17) was last seen alive in Drogheda on January 12th, 2020. He was murdered in a house in the town and his remains were found in two locations in north Dublin Robbie Lawlor, whose shooting of Owen Maguire in 2018 began the feud, was the chief suspect. But in a sign of the attritional nature of the drugs trade, especially during times of gun feuds, the leadership and 'muscle' tiers on both sides of the dispute began to fall apart. Gardaí mounted Operation Stratus at the start of the feud in an attempt to contain and eventually stop the violence. [ Mother of Keane Mulready-Woods tells court of impact of teenager's 'brutal, tragic and horrifying' murder Opens in new window ] Ultimately, gardaí gathered the evidence required to press charges against some of the key figures driving the violence. Some have been jailed and others have fled abroad in an attempt to outrun the charges. A number of the most menacing men who directed and carried out the violence are now dead. Robbie Lawlor (35) was shot dead in a well-planned ambush in April 2020 in the Ardoyne area of Belfast. His murder was linked to dissident republicans and Limerick's McCarthy-Dundon gang. Lawlor's death was a blow to the Boylans, who quickly skipped bail and fled abroad. Dubliner Robbie Lawlor was shot dead in a well-planned ambush in April 2020 in the Ardoyne area of Belfast Another of the Boylans key allies, Paul Crosby (29), Rathmullan Park, Drogheda, was jailed for 10 years in 2023 for aiding the murder of Mulready-Woods. On the Maguire-Price side of the feud, Owen Maguire has not been seen in public since he was paralysed in the gun attack by Lawlor that started the feud in 2018. His brother, Brendan Maguire, like the Boylans, disappeared after being charged in Ireland with feud-related crimes around weapons and violent disorder. Now living in the UK, he has a bullet lodged in his neck from the 2019 attempt on his life and has suffered mental health issues. Cornelius Price (41), the Maguires' chief ally, was in 2020 diagnosed with limbic encephalitis, a serious brain condition, and died in the UK in early 2023. Garda sources said the disappearance of the Boylan brothers was a significant concern. They believe the brothers will have learned much from being drawn into an outbreak of extreme violence that made them prime targets for their rivals and the Garda. 'They are still involved,' said one Garda source of the brothers' involvement in drugs trafficking. 'And when they pop up back into the radar at some point, you'd never know what you'd be dealing with. They could be much more serious players.' Ó Murchú went on to become the Sinn Féin TD for Louth since speaking up at the Drogheda Joint Policing Committee at the height of the feud in 2019. Though the feud has dissipated, he said, much chaos and deprivation remains. [ Dublin gangland figures involved in Drogheda feud that killed 17-year-old Opens in new window ] Ó Murchú said the Drogheda feud happened when 'gangs got a rush of blood to the head and decided they were bigger than they were'. 'But when you put it up to the State, they will put your lights out. And that, I think, is what happened,' he said of serious criminal charges eventually brought against the key players in the feud. 'But sometimes when someone [a drug dealer] gets put out of operation ... they can be replaced by very chaotic characters.' Sinn Féin TD Ruairí Ó Murchú raised concerns about the Drogheda gangland feud when he was a councillor in 2019. Photograph: Nick Bradshaw The killing of Mulready-Woods had been an especially difficult period in the feud, while the destruction of houses in arson attacks created a lot of fear in Drogheda. 'The amount of council houses destroyed, the impact this was having across the board ... of course people were frightened. You were also dealing with criminals who had decided to do everything out in the wide open,' said Ó Murchú. 'There was very little in the way of restraint. They bit off more than they could chew, but it was really brutal for the people who had to live through it. 'And let's be clear: the issues in relation to drugs – organised and disorganised – are far from gone.'