Accused claims Swiss girl's death 'an accident'

A GALWAY man accused of murdering Swiss teenager Manuela Riedo has told a jury at the Central Criminal Court that her death was…

A GALWAY man accused of murdering Swiss teenager Manuela Riedo has told a jury at the Central Criminal Court that her death was “an accident”. The body of Ms Riedo (17) was found in an area of wasteland beside a pedestrian walkway known as “The Line”, close to the Lough Atalia area of Galway city.

She had arrived in Galway, where she was studying English with fellow Swiss students, three days earlier.

Gerald Barry (29), Rosan Glas, Rahoon, Galway, has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Ms Riedo at Lough Atalia, Renmore, Galway on October 8th, 2007. He has pleaded guilty to stealing a camera and a mobile phone at the same place on the same date.

Mr Barry told Martin Giblin, defending, he met Ms Riedo near a shop in Renmore, outside Galway city centre, sometime after 7pm on the night of her death. She was staying with a family in Renmore.

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“She asked me for the time. I gave it to her,” Mr Barry said.

He said that he asked her where she was from and how long she was in Ireland. “I asked her if she was going sightseeing.” He told the court Ms Riedo said she was walking into Galway city to meet some friends.

Mr Barry said he told her there was a quicker way and she accompanied him. He said that they both walked along a grassy path toward Galway city.

While walking, he asked her how long she had been in Ireland and what she thought of it. “She asked me where I was from.” Mr Barry said that they reached an area where a track leads up to the Line.

He said he showed Ms Riedo how to get from where they were up to the Line and that she stepped between a gap in the bushes. “I presumed she’d gone,” he said.

Mr Barry told the court he sat down on a telegraph pole and proceeded to “skin a joint”.

He said Ms Riedo came back. “She said ‘are you not going into town?’. I told her I was having a joint. She sat down on the other side of the pole and asked me why I was smoking that. I told her cos I liked the buzz of it; it relaxes me. I asked her if she wanted to smoke it. She said No.”

Mr Barry said he asked her if she had a boyfriend in Ireland and she said she hadn’t. I told her I thought she was beautiful and I leaned in and kissed her. She kissed me back.

“We were kissing and fondling and a few minutes later I suggested we lie down on the grass. I put my jacket down and she put her jacket down. I suggested we have sex. She asked if I had a condom. I said I did.” Mr Barry said that they lay there after having sex.

“I asked her if she was cold. She said she wasn’t, that it was a lot colder in Switzerland.” He said Ms Riedo sat up and said she had to go meet her friends. “I sat up behind her and grabbed her from behind. I told her not to go, to stay with me for a while longer.

“I made a joke. I told her she could even tell them about me.” Mr Barry said Ms Riedo “never responded”. “I kind of sat up and took my arm away. She kind of slid. . . on to the ground. Her head kind of flopped. I shook her and got no response.”

Mr Barry said he then pulled Ms Riedo’s body to where it was found the following morning. “Why did you do that?” Mr Giblin asked.

Mr Barry replied: “I don’t know, to be honest with you.” He also told Mr Giblin he was still wearing the condom and that he started to urinate because of “the situation – a dead girl in front of me”. He said he took off the condom and threw it away.

Mr Barry told the court he then placed Ms Riedo’s jacket over her.

“I don’t really know why. Out of respect or something, I don’t really know.” He said he placed a stone over the jacket so that it wouldn’t come off her body.

He said he “tossed her clothes into the bushes”. “When her bag hit the ground, her camera and phone came out. I just took them.” He said he couldn’t explain why he took them. “I don’t know. It’s just something I did,” he said.

Mr Giblin asked Mr Barry why he lied to gardaí in the days after Ms Riedo’s death. “Because I thought if I kept denying it, it’d just go away.”

“What would go away?” Mr Giblin asked.

“The whole situation,” Mr Barry said.

The court has previously heard from State Pathologist Prof Marie Cassidy that an “unusual” injury was found on Ms Riedo’s left groin where a piece of skin had been “removed using a sharp object, most likely a knife”. Mr Barry said he did not inflict that injury.

The court has also heard that one of the buttons from the front of Ms Riedo’s coat was missing and that a button was found on the pedestrian walkway above the area where her body was found.

The jury heard this button visually matched the buttons on the coat and the remaining threads on the coat appeared to have been pulled.

During cross-examination, Isobel Kennedy, prosecuting, asked Mr Barry if he could explain the presence of that button on the walkway and the pulled threads which remained on the coat. He said he couldn’t.

“Could it be explained that you met her on that walkway and dragged her in over that wall?” Ms Kennedy said. “No, that’s not what happened,” Mr Barry said.

“And continued to drag her down the embankment?”

“That’s not what happened.” Mr Barry said that he could not explain how some hairs were found “snagged on the bushes” on the embankment between the Line and where Ms Riedo’s body was found.

Mr Barry told Ms Kennedy he put his arm around Ms Riedo’s neck and pulled her back to go back into a lying-down position. “I put one arm around her neck,” he said. He said that he remembered seeing her face went red.

When asked if she had died immediately, he said he did not know how she had died.

Ms Kennedy asked Mr Barry if he knew how Ms Riedo had got the laceration to the back of her head. “I don’t know, unless it happened when her head flopped,” he said.

He said he did not know how she had got bruises underneath her scalp. “Did you punch or slap her in the head area to get her to submit to you? “No,” he replied.

Mr Barry said he did not urinate in the condom to “conceal DNA”. “Did you force her to undress at the bottom of the embankment?” “No,” he replied. “Did you use a knife?” “No, I didn’t,” said Mr Barry who said he knew “nothing at all” about the injury to Ms Riedo’s groin area.

He said he also did not know how injuries to Ms Riedo’s vaginal area had occurred.

Ms Kennedy said: “I’m suggesting that you attacked her, murdered her.”

“It was an accident. I didn’t mean to cause her any harm,” Mr Barry said.

“Did you hold her at knife-point to make her take off her clothes?” she asked.

“No. She chose herself to come down there with me.”

Ms Kennedy asked Mr Barry why he did not call 999. He said: “Because she was dead.”

Earlier, the court heard from forensic scientist Dr Patricia Wiltshire, who said that if the meal in her stomach had been provided at 6pm, the time of her death would have been about 8pm.

The trial continues.