Irish celebrity's version of events 'unbelievable', defilement trial told

The defence closing speech continues on Wednesday before Judge Pauline Codd and the jury. File picture
Prosecuting counsel in the trial of an Irish celebrity accused of the defilement of a 16-year-old girl over a decade ago has told a jury his version of events is âunbelievableâ and âriddled with inconsistenciesâ.
The man (40) has pleaded not guilty to three counts of engaging in sexual acts with a child under the age of 17 at locations in Dublin on dates between August and December 2010.
It is the State's case that the man put his penis in the complainant's mouth on three occasions, once in his workplace and twice in his home. The complainant was 16 at the time, while the man was then 27. He has denied any wrongdoing.
In her closing address on Tuesday, Eilis Brennan SC, prosecuting, told jurors that they had heard âtwo radically different accounts of eventsâ in late 2010 during the trial.
She suggested that the âonly plausible version of eventsâ was the one given by the complainant, while the man's version was âunbelievable, riddled with inconsistencies and matters you could not believeâ.Â
She asked the jury to consider the credibility of both the complainant and the man. The âbottom line is that one is not telling the truthâ. She said the complainant's version was âcoherentâ but the man's version âmakes no senseâ.
Ms Brennan pointed out that the woman knew âkey detailsâ of the man's life. She put it to the jury that it would be unusual for a 16-year-old to know these things about the man's life âwhen on his account he only met her once in 2010 and once in 2011â.
She suggested that the man had âcrafted a narrativeâ when faced with the woman's âcompelling accountâ of events.
She said the man âmade a few mistakesâ in the narrative, including a âkey blunderâ in relation to his account that they had lunch at a restaurant in January 2011. The man gave evidence that this was when the woman told him her actual age.
She said the woman gave evidence that this meeting never happened and she never went for lunch with the man. She noted that the man says he then took the complainant to his office and showed her pictures of his home, although he had discovered she lied to him about her age.
She said the woman was âforthrightâ and didn't seek to do the man down. She noted the defendant acknowledged the woman didn't have a grudge against him.
Referring to the woman's evidence, Ms Brennan suggested the first meeting between the man and the complainant in August was the beginning of a âsecret, furtive relationshipâ.
In relation to the second alleged incident, she said the woman âwas going to meet a fellaâ and it was âa bit far-fetchedâ to suggest that a girl who was âtaking directionsâ should be able to point out the house many years later.
Ms Brennan told the jury that there is nothing in the evidence of the man's movements on December 14, 2010, the day of the Deadmaus concert, that precludes him from having met with the woman at his home.
She noted that she asked the man to categorise his relationship with the woman in 2010 and he provided âno real explanation for how everything developedâ.Â
Ms Brennan said:
She reminded the jury that the man is not on trial for anything that happened after the woman turned 17. Ms Brennan said the only explanation of their interactions after the woman's 17th birthday was that an intimate relationship had already formed between the man and the complainant.
She said the man decided to âdeny everythingâ and âsought to craft an explanation for how she knows all these thing about his house and where he worksâ. She said his account âdoes not hold waterâ.
Ms Brennan told the jury that consent is not a defence under the legislation, but there is a potential defence if the defendant honestly believed the woman was 17.
âIn this case, the defence is that these acts didnât take place. But I understand there is a secondary line of defence even if you donât believe the man on that, and if you believe acts took place, you should accept his evidence that he didnât know she was 17 until January 2011.âÂ
She suggested this was a âpretty inconsistent position to adoptâ and the defence was âtrying to have it both waysâ.
She suggested to the jury if it believes the man is lying when he says âthese acts never took placeâ, before they consider honest belief, âyou will already have decided he told you untruths about events in 2010â.
In his closing speech, Morgan Shelley BL said the defence has backed their case with âobjective, independent evidenceâ that is ânot capable of lying or being wrongâ.
He said it is an âextraordinary propositionâ that the man's presentation in the witness box would be âless credible because he prefers to touch back to independent evidence that shows he is telling the truthâ.
He told the jury it must consider the evidence through the lens of his client's presumption of innocence and that it must be convinced by the prosecution's case beyond a reasonable doubt.
The defence closing speech continues on Wednesday before Judge Pauline Codd and the jury.