Kerry man gets 13 years for raping pensioner
Anthony Hussey, aged 26, was wearing a balaclava and dressed in dark clothing when the woman found him in her bedroom. He told her that his boss was making him do it and that he didnât want money.
âItâs just one thing and you are going to like it,â Hussey said before he told the woman there were three more men outside.
She screamed and struggled with him but he pushed her to the floor and placed his hands over her mouth. He bent the woman over her bed, removed her trousers and underwear and sexually assaulted her. He then raped her both vaginally and anally.
Afterwards he said âyou enjoyed that didnât you?â. He covered her with a duvet and left her home.
Hussey, of Ardshillane, Sneem, pleaded guilty at the Central Criminal Court to rape and anal rape at the womanâs home on September 20, 2014.
âOne runs short of words to describe the seriousness of some of the offences that come before the court, particularly offences of a sexual nature,â Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy said.
âThis must be regarded as a sexual offence, of its class, of the serious conceivable kind.â
The judge said a hallmark of the case was the womanâs immense courage and determination. He commended her as âa deeply impressive witnessâ who took the stand to deliver a powerful victim impact statement as part of her healing process.
âShe was violated in the vilest manner in her own home,â he added. âThe intrusion makes this case stand out in its seriousness.â
In mitigation, Mr Justice McCarthy said he was considering Husseyâs âotherwise good characterâ, his letter of apology and, most importantly, his guilty plea. He said this entitled him to a discount to his sentence of between a quarter and a third.
He imposed a 13-year sentenced which was backdated to when he went into custody in 2014. The judge also imposed a five-year post release supervision order.
Sergeant Michael Quirke told Tom Creed, prosecuting, that Hussey had been at the womanâs house earlier that morning. She had woken to loud knocking and banging on the doors and windows of her house.
He claimed he had gone there by mistake having been drinking heavily through the night and went home. He then returned, broke into her house and raped her. She called the emergency services to report the rape just before 8am.
He was a bar manager at the time and has never come to Garda attention before or since. He was registered as a sex offender when he entered his plea last March.
In the days after the rape, Hussey told acquaintances he was âlooking at timeâ. He told his friends he had gone to the womanâs house wearing a balaclava but said it was âonly a fuckinâ break-inâ and claimed he hadnât raped her.
His DNA was later found on a fleece the woman had been wearing. He admitted to gardaĂ he had been at her home earlier that morning but said he couldnât remember going back afterwards.
The woman read her victim impact statement. She said after the rape she was sobbing uncontrollably like a small child, âbroken, terrorised, waiting for my deathâ.
âThis phantom out of the darkness, standing in front of me demanding sex. I had no option but to fight. My feeble attempts to push him away. I was too weak or clumsy to defend myself, which seemed to amuse him. He started mocking me. When I pulled at his balaclava he said âah you want to see my face nowâ.
âThe belittling comments continued. He threatened me with a gang outside... I knew I had no chance of winning his game.
âHow can he behave with such brutality? A woman three times his age. He could be my grandson.â
She said it was more than a year and a half since the rape and she felt âashamed, naked, raw and so old, disgusted, betrayed and humiliated. There are not enough wordsâ.
âI canât stop screaming inside. My heart is bleeding with shock... I feel ripped open, stood naked to the core of my being, reduced to nothing. I feel so hollowed out. I feel so small, having been reduced to a puppet like from a Punch and Judy show,â the woman continued.
She said she felt âgutted in the truest sense of the wordâ.
She spoke of a hill near her home that she used to walk up but could no longer do so without company. âThe day will come when I walk to the top of my hill, stand tall, lift up my arms to the sky and scream, scream for all those children and women who have been abused and who canât cry out in despair, those who had to suffer in silence.â
Michael Bowman, defending, handed in a number of testimonials confirming that Hussey and his family were well thought of in the local community.
He said a report from a forensic psychologist stated that Hussey did not have common characteristics that would be found in the personality profiles of sexual predators and concluded that he did not present a future danger to others.
The reports made reference to Hussey watching âhardcore pornographyâ.




