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Abuse

Man who sexually abused four young daughters in "horror of a home" sentenced to four and a half years

Judge Patrick McCartan said the man had never shown any remorse for his actions.

A MAN WHO sexually assaulted his four young daughters in a “horror of a home” has been jailed for four and a half years.

Judge Patrick McCartan said that Mayo native Bernard Cunningham (66) has never shown any remorse for subjecting his children to “unspeakable mental and physical cruelty”.

Last April, a jury at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court returned unanimous guilty verdicts on eight charges of indecent and sexual assault committed between 1978 and 1992.

Cunningham of Royston, Kimmage Road West, Dublin had pleaded not guilty to the charges.

At his sentencing hearing Judge McCartan noted how Cunningham had met the case by instructing his lawyers to put it to his daughters that they were lying.

A “very violent man”

He noted the “absolute absence of any remorse” and said the victims had been subjected to the most protracted and careful probing during cross-examination of their testimony.

The women have waived their right to anonymity so that their father can be identified.

The eldest daughter, who was the first and youngest victim, was subjected to the most serious of abuse, the court heard.

Cunningham began abusing her in the late 70s when she was about five years old.

He took her into his bedroom and undressed himself and simulated sex between her legs until he climaxed.

The court heard that after these incidents Cunningham told the child he had made her happy and that it was their secret which nobody would understand.

This woman described her father as a “very violent man” and a “manipulative, powerful bully”.

She said he was a “street angel, house devil” who would brainwash people.

She told Gerardine Small BL, prosecuting, that Cunningham was “the nicest person to anyone looking in” but behind closed doors he was drinking heavily and would get great enjoyment out of seeing his daughter crying and making inappropriate comments when she was physically developing.

A number of references from Mayo people who know Cunningham and knew about his convictions described him as a kind and compassionate man.

Around 19 years ago he separated from his wife, the victims’ mother, and met his current partner and had been a father figure to his partner’s daughters, Tara Burns SC, defending, told the court.

His partner, who continues to support him, told the court that he was a kind man who cared for her dying brother.

Judge McCartan said that although the referees were well meaning, he could not marry their comments to the evidence of Cunningham’s cruelty.

He said the victims were reared in a “horror of a home” where because of their father’s drinking they were subjected to “sustained abuse, physical, mental and sexual”.

He said in the absence of one word of apology or remorse it was difficult to show the mercy that someone of his age might otherwise deserve.

One woman told the court that she had suffered from bulimia, self-harm and mental health problems as a result of the abuse.

Years of abuse

Burns told the court that her client had fought cancer recently but that the chemo and radiotherapy had left him with problems, including issues around ingestion of food and excessive saliva. She said there was a significant risk of a tumour recurrence.

She described him as a man on borrowed time.

Judge McCartan said this left it all the more remarkable that he had not had the “courage and the decency” to say that he was sorry.

Cunningham abused his first daughter on three occasions in the most serious of the offences between 1978 and 1979 at the family home in Dublin.

Some time in 1981 he molested his second daughter while travelling from Mayo to Dublin. This victim was aged seven. He also molested this girl six years later in their family home while her mother was in hospital.

On an unknown date in 1991 he molested his 14-year-old daughter in a caravan park in Co Wexford.

The final offending took place on two dates sometime in 1991 and 1992 when Cunningham twice molested his ten-year-old daughter. This girl raised the abuse with her mother in 1997 and her mother said she must have imagined it.

In victim impact reports one daughter said she had a monster for a father. She said all she wanted was an apology and an acknowledgement.

“Dad’s mission was to make me as miserable as possible,” she said.

She said the suggestion during the trial from Cunningham that she had organised the whole prosecution was “the final confirmation that what I was doing was the right thing to do”.

Another one of the victims said she now realised it wasn’t her fault because she was just a child.

Judge McCartan told the victims they were very brave and stated:

I’m deeply impressed. You never did any wrong.

Read: Family of man who killed parents with axe sought psychiatric help for him, court hears

Read: Man who threw chair at stranger and chased him with knife gets suspended sentence

Author
Declan Brennan and Conor Gallagher
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