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US businessman given suspended sentence for sexually assaulting student in Shelbourne Hotel sauna
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An American real estate agent who groped inside and outside a young man’s shorts in the sauna at the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin has avoided jail.
Bryan McNeill (55), of K Street, Boston, Massachusetts, USA, was handed a six-month suspended sentence and ordered to pay €10,000 to the 19-year-old college student.
The businessman had been allowed to return to the United States in March, days after the incident in the luxury hotel.
He pleaded guilty to a sexual assault charge when he came from the US for his hearing in Dublin District Court on Monday, and his case was adjourned until Wednesday for sentencing.
In a mitigation plea, defence counsel Oisín Clarke, instructed by solicitor Brian Keenan, had urged the court to leave McNeill without a criminal conviction based on extenuating circumstances: the early plea, remorse, being a sole carer for his mother, a compensation offer to include paying for therapy for the complainant, his lack of prior convictions and previous good character.
Judge Paula Murphy refused, stressing the gravity, culpability, invasiveness and sexualised nature of the touching, and the high level of gross misjudgement and recklessness, given the marked age gap between McNeill and the complainant.
Judge Murphy heard the businessman “misread the situation” until the shocked victim stood up and told him to stop.
McNeill did not address the court. His husband provided a letter confirming the accused’s health had declined due to stress, and he had suffered from vertigo since the incident.
Judge Murphy recorded a conviction and suspended the sentence, on the condition that the defendant does not reoffend within the next year and pays the compensation within six months.
The teenager did not attend the sentencing, but his mother was present to hear the outcome and the judge’s praise for his honest and measured statement. Judge Murphy also emphasised that the young man was extremely blameless.
In evidence, Det Gda Cathal Ryan said the injured party was staying at the five-star hotel in March with a family member and used the gym, and afterwards went to the sauna.
He later reported to gardaí that an older man sexually assaulted him in the sauna.
In his statement, he outlined to the detective that McNeill was rubbing his shoulder and upper torso with his right hand, and “slid” his hands under his shorts to grope his buttocks from within his shorts and then with his left hand grabbed his penis outside the shorts.
McNeill gave gardaí an account claiming it was a consensual interaction, but the complainant stated it was not consensual.
Det Gda Ryan said McNeill, who had been granted €30,000 bail, had no prior convictions in Ireland or any other jurisdiction.
Judge Murphy ranked the offence as mid-range, if not higher, for the jurisdiction of the District Court.
On Monday, the student had told the judge: “I was just enjoying the luxury of being in the hotel and having a general conversation; I did not initiate what happened.”
He revealed that he was in shock afterwards, and it took weeks to process what happened. He could not talk about it when his parents asked how he was.
He said that his family thought he was happier before and is more irritable now. He also stated that he was not ready to face what happened, but wanted it to disappear.
“I do wonder why this was done to me. I am friendly and social, but definitely more worried than I used to be,” the young man had said.
He became withdrawn and believed the assault was partly a reason for failing a college exam during the summer.
The defence said McNeill came from humble beginnings, was the first in his family to achieve a third-level education and “dragged himself up by his bootstraps” from a young age, eventually becoming a real estate agent.
Counsel submitted that a conviction could have “catastrophic consequences” for McNeill in the United States in terms of his livelihood and other features of his life.
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Father urges State to help him get toddler daughter back to Ireland
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In what a judge described as a “heart-rending” case, a father wants orders directing the State to take immediate steps for the return to Ireland of his child who he has not seen since early this year.
The toddler was taken by her mother to her native Poland without her father’s consent and remains there after a Polish court directed her return to Ireland.
The parents are in dispute over the mother’s claim the child will receive better treatment in Poland for her medical condition.
On Wednesday, the man told the High Court’s Mr Justice Micheál P O’Higgins, who was dealing with the court’s vacation list, he has not seen his daughter since he saw her in a Polish court last January. He is “the only one fighting for her rights”, he said.
Paul McCarthy SC, for various State defendants, said this is “a human story” and there was no lack of sympathy from the defendants for the predicament of the man and his child.
It is also a legal matter and the man has no cause of action against the State parties, counsel said. The State is “doing all it can” but there were legal and diplomatic limits on what it can do.
Mr Justice O’Higgins said it was a “heart-rending” matter and the court required further materials and legal documents and submissions before deciding how to proceed.
He made directions for exchange of those documents and returned the man’s application for various orders and declarations to October 8th.
He adjourned to the same date the defendants’ application to strike out the man’s proceedings on grounds they disclose no cause of action and are bound to fail.
The judge made orders preventing identification of the parties.
Earlier, he was told that a Polish ombudsman has sought to bring an appeal there concerning the court orders for return of the child.
The man said he wanted orders for the Irish Government to challenge Poland about the failure to return his child to Ireland. He has been left on his own and has “no time for legal gymnastics”, he said.
Breaking News
Hunt for childcare a desperate gambit for parents, campaign group hears
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A shortage of childcare options is leaving many desperate parents with no option but to treat creche places the way they do city centre car parking spaces, a parent of two young children has said.
Jessica Lee, an early years education lecturer at Technological University Dublin who is currently on maternity leave, was speaking at a meeting of a childcare campaign group in Dublin on Wednesday.
The Together for Public alliance is led by the National Women’s Council and is calling on the Government to roll out public early childhood education and care services in the forthcoming budget.
“The way childcare is being treated at the moment is like parking spaces for children,” Ms Lee told the event in Dublin on Wednesday morning.
“It’s like you drive around until you find an empty space to park your child, to shove your child into, to keep them alive until you come home at the end of the day.”
When Ms Lee’s three-year-old, Henry, suddenly lost his place in a childcare setting last year, it caused the family huge stress, she said, because of the lack of alternatives.
Now, after the arrival of Alice (aged three months), there is the pending problem of paying for childcare for two.
“My son isn’t at the point of starting primary school yet and so we’re going to be paying around €1,200 to €1,500 a month … that’s with the subsidies applied. I don’t know how we’re going to manage it, but we have to because we both have to work. The irony in my case is it’s because I want to go back and train early childhood educators.”
Director of the National Women’s Council, Orla O’Connor, said Ms Lee’s experience highlights the shortcomings in a system that is failing the majority of its stakeholders.
“It’s not working,” she said. “It’s not working for children, for women, for parents, for educators. Providers and families are really being pushed to the brink, and they can’t wait any longer to have real solutions. That’s why we’re saying that with Budget ’26 the Government has an opportunity to signal a new approach, and key to that is what they’ve already committed to in the programme for government.”
She said the alliance, which includes more than 40 civil society organisations, is calling for an additional €30 million to provide 3,000 extra places next year as well as funding to continue the process of reducing fees, investment in infrastructure, ring-fenced money for improved pay and a greater targeted supports for accessibility and inclusivity programmes.
“We met with the Minister [for Children], Norma Foley and she said she is committed to what’s in the programme for government,” said Ms O’Connor, “but those were words, and what we need to see now is action in this budget.”
Wednesday’s meeting at Buswell’s Hotel in Dublin 2 heard from a number of other speakers with experience of the sector, including Minna Murphy, originally from Finland, who runs two services in Co Cork and said many small providers like her own are struggling.
[ Free childcare is key in addressing child poverty, advocacy group saysOpens in new window ]
After 10 years of running one preschool, she said, “I had an opportunity to expand, so I opened my second preschool, and I started an after-school, the first ever after-school service in our village. Now, I’m in a position to pay myself a managerial salary, and I am in a position to pay higher salaries for my staff. I wasn’t able to do that when I was just running one service.”
Louise Bayliss, head of social justice at St Vincent de Paul, said adequate provision of early-years services was key to helping families, particularly those with one parent, out of poverty.
“Tackling child poverty and increasing their wellbeing is not only about income transfers,” she said, “it is also about ensuring access to high-quality, universal public services. And early-years services are absolutely key to that.”
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Bringing back the dodo: Dublin display reveals rare description of bird before extinction
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The dodo is making a comeback – if not in real life, then at least in an exhibition at a Dublin library.
The exotic, flightless bird is one of the best known examples of species extinction, having last been spotted in 1662.
It was only found on the island of Mauritius, with Europeans causing its death through the introduction of predators including dogs and rats.
Last week Colossal Biosciences, a biotechnology company based in Texas, said it wants to de-extinct the dodo along with several other species. It envisages dodos being reintroduced to Mauritius within seven to 10 years.
In the meantime, you can catch a glimpse of the dodo at the Birds Exhibition, which has opened at the Edward Worth Library in Dr Steevens’ Hospital in Dublin 8.
One of the rare books owned by the Dublin doctor Edward Worth includes descriptions and drawings of the bird when it was still present by the Flemish physician and botanist Carolus Clusius.
Along with a detailed description of the bird’s appearance, Clusius recounted why it was never going to be a fixture at the dinner table.
“Sailors name this bird in their language Walgh-vogel, that is, nauseating bird, partly because from after long boiling its flesh did not become more tender, but remained hard and difficult to digest (except its breast and stomach, which were ascertained to be no despicable flavour) [and] partly because they could get many turtledoves, which were found to be delicate and more pleasant to the palate.”
BirdWatch Ireland member Derek O’Reilly said the Edward Worth collection includes “internationally important, beautifully illustrated editions of some of the world’s earliest publications on ornithology.
“Our understanding of birds has come a long way, not least our understanding of the critical challenges of climate change, habitat loss and pollution. This exhibition reminds us of the need to ensure that the wonderful world of birds is preserved and protected into the future.”
Edward Worth Library librarian Dr Elizabethanne Boran said the collection was a huge source of interest in the early modern period.
“We are thrilled to be custodians of this historically important collection. The online exhibition is the Worth Library Trust’s way of sharing the works with as many people as possible.
“A smaller display-case exhibition will be on view in the Edward Worth Library itself and the public are welcome to view a selection of pieces free of charge by making an appointment to visit the library at edwardworthlibrary.ie.”
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