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.

Emer O'Loughlin. Garda Press Office

Inquest jury returns verdict of unlawful killing in death of art student Emer O'Loughlin in 2005

Emer’s remains were discovered in a burnt out mobile home on 8 April 2005 near Tubber in Co Clare.

AN INQUEST JURY has returned a verdict of unlawful killing in the death of art student Emer O’Loughlin (23) whose charred remains were discovered in a burnt out mobile home 20 years ago near Tubber in Co Clare.

As Clare County Coroner Isobel O’Dea read out the verdict at Kilrush courthouse today, Emer’s sister Pam wept in the public gallery after earlier urging O’Dea to recommend to the jury the verdict of unlawful killing.

As part of the long-running investigation into Emer’s death, Gardaí are seeking to speak to the owner of the burnt out mobile home, John Griffin (58), formerly of Mervue, Galway, to assist with their inquiries.

Griffin’s whereabouts remain unknown.

After the inquest today, Pam O’Loughlin made a fresh appeal to those who have information around her sister’s death and the person of interest in the case.

“People know where he is and they communicate with him and I would appeal to people to come forward even anonymously to let the Garda know where he might be and that is the only way this is going to move forward,” she said. 

Pam O’Loughlin said that the family is “absolutely delighted with the verdict”.

“It is the first time that the State has acknowledged that Emer O’Laughlin was killed by someone else,” she said. 

Until now we have had ‘suspicious death’ and this is the first time we have had it confirmed that Emer was killed by someone else. It was what we came here today for.

“The Garda investigation will continue and that won’t be affected by this whatsoever. This was more for our family and a personal thing for our family to get the acknowledgement that after 20 years of everything being wishy washy and not having a definite cause of death and it is now confirmed she was killed by someone else.”

Pam said that the O’Loughlin family hope that “we will get a suspect into court at some stage and justice for Emer”.

Emer O’Loughlin’s extensively fire-damaged remains were found in the burnt out mobile home at an area known as the New Line, Ballybornagh, Tubber on 8 April 2005.

One of the first on the scene of the afternoon on 8 April 2005, Cronan Forde of Carron, Co Clare, told the inquest that he saw Emer’s skull “a foot or two” from her body.

O’Dea told the jury that retired deputy State pathologist Dr Michael Curtis was not able to provide an anatomical cause of death in his post mortem conclusions.

However, she said that in his evidence, Curtis agreed that the injuries “were consistent with deliberate violence committed by a third party”.

O’Dea also pointed to evidence in Curtis’s post mortem that found that there was no evidence of soot in Emer’s lungs or carbon monoxide, indicating that she had unfortunately died before the fire.

After evidence concluded in the case, Pam O’Loughlin addressed O’Dea in the absence of the jury to state that the evidence “points to the involvement of another person in the death of my sister”.

In his post mortem, which was carried out the following day at University Hospital Galway (UHG), Curtis concluded that the cause of death was undetermined.

He said that Emer O’Loughlin’s remains “were extensively carbonised and destroyed” and that the distal upper limbs and lower limbs were absent while the skull had detached.

He said that the extreme degree of heat destruction made large parts of the body unavailable for examination

“The neck and throat regions in particular were absent and it is thus impossible to exclude strangulation and or a cut throat injury as possible causes of death,” he said. 

Detective Garda John Keating of Gort Garda Station gave evidence of being at the scene in 2005.

At the conclusion of his evidence, Pam O’Loughlin asked Keating with all of the knowledge he knew about the case, if the circumstances of Emer’s death pointed to the involvement of another person.

In response, Keating said that notwithstanding two post mortems were unable to provide a cause of death, “I believe the circumstances of the death are connected to the actions of a third party”.

In response, Pam O’Loughlin said: “Thank you very much”.

Earlier in evidence, Keating said that Emer O’Loughlin, a native of Ennistymon, Co Clare, had lived with her boyfriend Shane Bowe at their mobile home at New Line, Tubber since May 2004.

He said that on 8 April 2005, Emer had a day off from her college in Galway as it was closed to mark the funeral of John Paul II and Bowe went to work in Lisdoonvarna.

He said that Bowe last saw Emer at 10am that morning and advised her to call to neighbour, John Griffin, to get her mobile phone charged as they were having problems with power in their own mobile home.

Keating said that Bowe later died in 2018.

Under questioning from O’Dea, Keating said that no evidence of an accelerant was found at the scene.

He said that the most intense part of the fire was where Emer’s remains lay.

The inquest also heard evidence via Zoom from Dr Laureen Buckley, a forensic anthropologist, who carried out a second post-mortem examination after Emer’s remains were exhumed in May 2010.

Buckley was also asked by Pam O’Loughlin if the injuries to the vertebrae were consistent with deliberate violence by another person.

“It could have been, but I couldn’t say with certainty,” he said. 

Close
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds