We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Matthew Healy.

Family of man (88) killed in hospital asks court to impose maximum sentence on attacker

Dylan Magee (33) was found guilty of the manslaughter of Matthew Healy by reason of diminished responsibility.

A MAN WHO attacked a sleeping 88-year-old patient who then died of a heart attack in his bed should receive the “maximum sentence permitted by law,” his family have told a sentencing hearing.

In December last year, Dylan Magee (33) was found guilty of the manslaughter of “true gentleman” Matthew Healy by reason of diminished responsibility.

He had been charged with the murder of the pensioner on 22 January 2023 at the Mercy University Hospital (MUH) in the city.

A trial at the Central Criminal Court sitting in Cork heard that the men, who were not known to each other, had been placed in the same hospital ward.

Matthew Healy was taken to hospital on 13 January 2023 after he fell out of bed and hit his head at his home in Berrings, Co Cork. His wife Delia had passed away earlier that month.

Magee, of Churchfield Green, Churchfield in Cork, was admitted to the hospital on 19 January 2023 following a referral by his doctor. He was in a hallucinatory state, seeing dead people and hearing voices.

Magee had been on an anti-depressant for a month before his hospital admission. He had self-medicated with cannabis and claimed to have taken 120 benzodiazepines in the week before his hospital admission. A hospital toxicology screening also showed that he had morphine and cannabis in his system.

The jury heard that Magee was placed in the same ward as Matthew Healy. Shortly after 5am on the morning of 22 January 2023, Magee became agitated and began attacking the elderly hospital patient who was asleep in another bed in the ward.

Magee punched Matthew Healy between four and six times. Staff attempted to intervene. Magee struck the man another three times before staff managed to drag him away.

One nurse broke a finger in the process of trying to restrain Magee, who yelled: “This man ate my son.”

When interviewed by gardaí in the aftermath of the attack, Magee claimed that a person had been tormenting people on the hospital ward. No such person existed.

He admitted that he had “lost the plot” and started beating Matthew Healy. He was of the mistaken belief that the pensioner was a named person in his twenties and that he had “ate his son.”

Both the defence and prosecution consultant psychiatrists in the case had agreed that the ability of Magee to refrain from the attack was impaired.

Today at a sentencing hearing in Cork, Matthew Healy’s daughter Claire said that hearing her father had died was a “sucker punch in itself.”

“When I heard that he had been attacked by another patient, I was convinced I must be trapped in a nightmare that I would eventually wake from. But I will never wake up from that nightmare.

My brother was burdened with the horrendous ordeal of having to formally identify Dad’s beaten body in the morgue. I was spared that trauma, but it also meant that I never got to say goodbye.

Claire Healy said that her father deserved “to slip away from this world as gently and kindly as the man he was.”

“Not lying in bed terrified, then choking on his own blood after being beaten to death by a man shouting that our Dad had eaten his children.”

She continued: “Words can’t express how traumatising it has been to discover that the attack was carried out by someone who went on a drug binge, suffered delirium from the withdrawal, and then pleaded diminished responsibility.”

She described the verdict of guilty of manslaughter by reason of diminished responsibility as being only suitable for “genuinely ill individuals.”

“Not for those suffering delirium due to self-induced drug withdrawal. We are the product of our choices, and I will never accept excuses suggesting the perpetrator was not responsible for his actions. His own life choices led to him punching our Dad to death.”

She asked that the court impose the “absolute maximum sentence permitted by law” and said that no member of her family “should ever have to fear crossing paths” with Magee again.

Claire Healy said that her father was a “gentle soul” with a “beautiful heart.

She said that her father was no doubt “absolutely petrified about what was going on in his room at the Mercy Hospital, but too polite to say anything.”

She also spoke of her distress at the behaviour of the media in the wake of the tragedy. She said that headlines were sensationalised and information was inaccurate.

Magee, through his Senior Counsel Brendan Grehan, expressed his remorse for the pain caused to the family and friends of the deceased.

Ms Justice Siobhan Lankford offered her condolences to the Healy family following their loss. She previously said that one could reasonably conclude that both men were let down by the system.

The judge she would need time to consider the matter of sentencing.

Magee was further remanded in custody for sentencing on 17 April next.

Close
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds