Judicial system 'weaponised' against woman domestically abused by garda husband
Domestic abuse victim Margaret Loftus speaking in the AV room Leinster House on Wednesday. Picture: Sam Boal/Collins
Former garda Margaret Loftus, who had been domestically abused by her Garda husband, has said the judicial system was âweaponised" against her.
Ms Loftus spoke to TDs and senators on Wednesday, just weeks after Detective Garda Trevor Bolger avoided jail having received a three-month suspended sentence for his âprotracted and viciousâ assault.
Ms Loftus said she was appearing as a survivor of domestic abuse, but also a survivor of a âsystem that caused as much damage and as much trauma as the abuse itselfâ.
It comes as new figures from the Department of Justice outline how 10 gardaĂ have barring orders or protection orders against them.
A barring order prevents individuals accused of abusive behaviour from entering the victimâs home, while a protection order bans the accused from contacting, threatening, or being near the victimâs home.
Ms Loftus said Mr Bolger was later promoted by gardaĂ and given access to firearms, after he had been investigated for threatening to kill her.
His access to firearms was later withdrawn, after a story about the case appeared in the press.
She criticised the gardaĂ, saying she had been intimidated and punished for seeking to protect herself and her children.
âI had transfers cancelled. I had my pay stopped by unauthorised gardaĂ. Iâd unauthorised Garda welfare checks done on my children where patrol cars were coming into my house to check on them.â
Ms Loftus criticised the operation of the judicial system, saying it had been âweaponisedâ against her.
She called for TDs to make changes to the legal system.
âYou have responsibility to the women, men, and children in this country to deliver a professional, impartial judicial system that should not be causing as much trauma as the crime that occurred to bring them before the system,â Ms Loftus said.
âHe [Bolger] was rewarded, allowed to flourish, while I was punished and intimidated.â
Sinn FĂ©in TD Rose Conway Walsh, who organised the briefing, said Ms Loftus had shown âextraordinary bravery and courageâ by coming forward to share her story.
âAfter 14 years of navigating coercive control, silence and systemic failure, she chose to stand up not just for herself, but for every woman who has been failed by the system,â Ms Conway Walsh said.
âHer harrowing experience exposes serious flaws in how victims of domestic abuse are treated within our justice system when their abusers are serving members of An Garda SĂochĂĄna, and we must now ensure meaningful reform follows.â
In a statement, a spokesperson for Mr OâCallaghan described the meeting as âvery constructiveâ.
A Garda spokesperson said that commissioner Justin Kelly has made it âvery clear that there is zero tolerance for domestic abuse outside and inside of An Garda SĂochĂĄnaâ.
âAn Garda SĂochĂĄna provides a wide range of internal welfare supports to Garda personnel and such supports should have been provided to the victim and her allegations taken seriously at all stages,â the spokesperson said.
âAn Garda SĂochĂĄna encourages any Garda personnel who are victims of domestic abuse to come forward and reassures them they will be treated sensitively and will be listened to.â




