Man (45) jailed for raping two women after night out in Sligo

Victim says it is ‘impossible to underestimate what has been done to me’

A man who raped two women in his apartment after meeting them in a nightclub has been jailed for 7½ years.

Clement Limen (45), of North Court, Quayside, Sligo, was convicted after a trial at the Central Criminal Court of raping two women at his flat on June 2nd, 2014 and one count of sexual assault.

Mr Justice Paul Coffey noted the trauma caused by Limen’s actions before jailing Limen.

Garda Sgt Martin McHale told Eileen O’Leary SC, prosecuting, that Limen invited the two women back to his apartment for a party after meeting them.

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The women, who were aged in their 30s, saw Limen inviting others to the party and they initially fobbed him off. However, he was waiting outside the nightclub and the women, who were lifelong friends, decided to go back to his home with 10 others he had invited.

Both women recalled Limen giving them “a very strong drink that tasted like vodka” before “going totally blank”.

Disorientated

One woman said she remembered waking up on a couch, feeling very disorientated while lying on her back, and then realising that Limen was raping her.

Sgt McHale said the woman then found her friend in a bedroom, lying on her back. The second woman told her friend she too had been raped by the defendant. The women then fled the apartment.

During the trial, Limen denied raping either of the women, telling the court he made them “a cocktail with grenadine and vodka”. He told the jury he had consensual unprotected sex with one woman, and denied having sex with the other victim.

In a victim impact statement, one woman told the court that her life had changed dramatically since that night. “I was once carefree and fun-loving. I became introverted and racked with anxiety. I regularly wake with a jolt, thinking he is standing over me,” she said.

She said she sometimes gets up in the middle of the night to check doors and windows are locked. “If he had pleaded guilty and apologised, I could have forgiven him. But he taunted us at every opportunity, he showed no remorse, was arrogant, and told nauseating lies,” she said.

Coming to terms

The second woman said in her victim impact statement that she was still coming to terms with the incident that destroyed the last three years of her life.

“It is impossible to underestimate what has been done to me unless you’re standing in my shoes,” she said. “He carried my listless body into a bedroom where he violated and raped me . . . I am fearful this statement will not do justice to the pain and humiliation I suffered and I’m scared of that failure.”

Both victims said Limen’s refusal to give gardaí­a blood sample, to test him for sexually transmitted diseases, caused them considerable distress.

They both praised their partners, families and friends for supporting them, but said every person in both of their lives have suffered as a result of Limen’s crimes.

Kieran O’Loughlin SC, defending, told the court that Limen was a university graduate from Cameroon, who had been living in Ireland for seven years, and had no previous convictions.

The court heard Limen intends to appeal his conviction as he does not accept the jury’s verdict, and to separately make a constitutional challenge regarding the terms of his detention.