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IrelandCrime3 days ago

Former Donegal teacher who sexually abused 19 boys over 25-year period is jailed

Patrick Sharkey, an 83-year-old former teacher from Donegal, was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison for sexually abusing 19 boys over a 25-year period while working at St Joseph’s High School in Coleraine. The abuse occurred between 1970 and 1995, with some victims as young as seven years old. Judge John Aylmer described the offenses as 'very invasive,' noting the prolonged duration, the age of the victims, and the predatory nature of the crimes. Sharkey pleaded guilty to all 132 charges, including indecent assault and sexual assault.

Patrick Sharkey. North West Newspix

Courts

Patrick Sharkey (83) was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison for a total of 132 charges.

A FORMER TEACHER who sexually abused 19 young boys in Donegal over a 25-year period has been jailed for six-and-a-half years.

Patrick Sharkey (83), originally from the Clonmany area in Donegal and most recently with an address in Belfast, abused his victims in Co Donegal over a period from 1970 to 1995, during which time he was a teacher at St Joseph’s High School in Coleraine.

Many of the victims were students at the school when Sharkey preyed on them, with one victim just seven years of age when the abuse began.

In sentencing Sharkey at Donegal Circuit Court, Judge John Aylmer said the offending, which he described as “very invasive”, represented “a gross breach of trust on all occasions”.

Judge Aylmer said that a further aggravating feature was the length, extended period of time and the age of his victims, who were between seven and 16 years old.

“The offences can only be described as very calculated, premeditated and predatory in nature,” Judge Aylmer said.

“It involved a significant amount of grooming of the victims.”

Sharkey was before the court on signed guilty pleas for all 132 charges, which were a mix of indecent assault and sexual assault. One of the complainants was the subject of 59 of the charges.

Some offending occurred when children travelled from school to take part in extracurricular activities and they stayed in Sharkey’s parents’ house in Clonmany, Co Donegal while other offences took place when they were on trips to Dublin.

Judge Aylmer told Sharkey: “You took advantage of the modest social circumstances of a significant number of victims and took advantage of their families in luring the children away from their families to your family home in Donegal, where they were delighted to go at the opportunity of a holiday.”

Judge Aylmer said that the “sheer number of complainants and large number of offences took it into the upper end for sentencing.

Sharkey was previously handed a two-year sentence in Northern Ireland and served one year in prison. Three of the victims in that case overlapped into the matter before the Circuit Court in Donegal.

Judge Aylmer said that a total appropriate headline sentence was one of 14 years in prison “to capture the totality of the offending”.

The signed guilty plea offered significant mitigation, while Judge Aylmer noted that Sharkey did cooperate with the investigation by travelling to this jurisdiction and making “albeit limited” admissions.

Judge Aylmer reduced the sentence to one of nine years and three months in prison with the final six months suspended. That term was further reduced on account of Sharkey’s poor state of health and advanced years.

“There is a significant risk that by imposing a prison sentence that you might die in prison,” Judge Aylmer said.

In all, Judge Aylmer sentenced Sharkey to seven years in prison with the last six months suspended.

Sharkey’s barrister, Eugene Grant SC, with Maddie Grant BL, instructed by solicitor Patsy Gallagher, advised the court that Sharkey recently spent 10 days in hospital due to heart and lung conditions. At an earlier court hearing, Mr Grant said that “the prospect of dying in prison is real” for Sharkey.

At a sentencing hearing in May, Detective Garda Johnny Gallagher outlined the evidence in the case to Barrister for the State, Fiona Crawford BL.

One victim, who was the subject of 59 counts, told detectives: “Pretty much every night I was in Clonmany with Patrick Sharkey, he sexually abused me”. He said he was “so shocked” and said that he “didn’t know what to do.”

Another person was just seven years old when Sharkey began to sexually abuse him while another told how Sharkey was “all over me” when they were in the shower. The victim also remembered Sharkey placing his hand inside his underwear and sexually assaulting him.

One man recalled how he was just 13 when Sharkey gave him cider before he started to kiss him on the back and then sexually assaulted him. He told how he closed his eyes and “just waited for it to stop”.

“I was in shock or fear,” he told detectives. “I was petrified and didn’t sleep.”

Another man said he saw media reports regarding Sharkey in Northern Ireland when he decided to make a complaint.

A man told investigators that Sharkey attempted to abuse him, but he picked up a shoe and hit Sharkey before fleeing from the room. He also remembered how he tried to push Sharkey away but said “he was too big and he was too strong”.

“Patrick Sharkey took something out of me that never returned,” a further victim had said.

Another of Sharkey’s victims said he has been trying to block out the incidents for 40 years, while another of his victims told gardaí: “I was just terrified and I pretended to be asleep.”

A couple of the injured parties remembered how Sharkey would sometimes drive a car and allow them to sit on his lap…

Read the full article at TheJournal.ie
Source document: St Joseph’s High School in Coleraine

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TheJournal.ieIndependentCenter3 days ago
Former Donegal teacher who sexually abused 19 boys over 25-year period is jailed

Patrick Sharkey, an 83-year-old former teacher from Donegal, was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison for sexually abusing 19 boys over a 25-year period while working at St Joseph’s High School in Coleraine. The abuse occurred between 1970 and 1995, with some victims as young as seven years old. Judge John Aylmer described the offenses as 'very invasive,' noting the prolonged duration, the age of the victims, and the predatory nature of the crimes. Sharkey pleaded guilty to all 132 charges, including indecent assault and sexual assault.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about a criminal conviction without apparent ideological framing. It focuses on legal proceedings, judicial statements, and the details of the crime without showing bias toward any political perspective. The language used is neutral and descriptive, focusing

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  • organisation St Joseph’s High School in Coleraine
  • organisation Donegal Circuit Court

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  • organisationSt Joseph’s High School in Coleraine
  • organisationDonegal Circuit Court