Court rules Patrick O’Brien’s sentence for abusing daughter too lenient

Father of Fiona Doyle had been sentenced to 12 years in prison, with nine suspended

Patrick O’Brien had pleaded guilty to 16 charges of rape and indecent assault at Mackintosh Park, Pottery Road in Dun Laoighaire from 1973 to 1982. Photograph: Alan Betson
Patrick O’Brien had pleaded guilty to 16 charges of rape and indecent assault at Mackintosh Park, Pottery Road in Dun Laoighaire from 1973 to 1982. Photograph: Alan Betson

The prison sentence imposed on the father of abuse victim Fiona Doyle was "unduly lenient" the Court of Appeal has found.

Patrick O’Brien (75) had pleaded guilty to 16 charges of rape and indecent assault at Mackintosh Park, Pottery Road in Dún Laoghaire from 1973 to 1982.

Trial judge Mr Justice Paul Carney had described it as one of the worst cases of abuse one could possibly find.

Mr Justice Carney, taking into account O’Brien’s health problems, sentenced him to 12 years in prison, suspended the final nine and granted him continuing bail pending an appeal. Bail was taken from him a few days later.

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President of the Court of Appeal Mr Justice Seán Ryan said the court was satisfied that the sentence imposed on O’Brien was unduly lenient and the three judge panel acceded to the Director of Public Prosecutions’ application to review his sentence.

Mr Justice Ryan, who sat with Mr Justice Garrett Sheehan and Mr Justice Alan Mahon, said the Court of Appeal will give reasons for its decision on January 19th next and will impose a new sentence on O'Brien on January 26th.

Counsel for the DPP, Brendan Grehan SC, said the Director had brought her appeal on grounds that O’Brien’s age was not sufficient alone to mitigate his sentence.

Mr Grehan further submitted that there was insufficient evidence to say O’Brien’s medical conditions would make prison life intolerable, for example, there was no evidence that he had a terminal illness.

The proper evidential foundation was not submitted to enable the sentencing court to take the view that it did, Mr Grehan said.

That was the negative evidence, Mr Grehan said, and against that there was positive evidence from Frances Nagle O’Connor, director of Nursing Services with the Irish Prison Service, who said none of O’Brien’s medical conditions were such that the prison authorities could not deal with them.

Mr Grehan said the Supreme Court had held that even if the age of a person suggested they would spend the rest of their lives in prison, that could not be considered a life sentence.

O’Brien’s barrister, Mary Rose Gearty SC, said Mr Justice Carney was one of the most experienced judges in this area and he was entitled to suspend the period that he did.

She said it was accepted that the 12 year sentence reflected the horrendous offending behaviour.

Mr Justice Seán Ryan asked Ms Gearty if she could think of another case where mitigation had reduced a sentence by three-quarters. In response, Ms Gearty said a a three-year jail sentence was significant and a 12 year sentence was “not nothing”.

She said O’Brien was now facing a proportion of his life in jail which “could be the rest of his life”.