Man found not guilty of murder by reason of insanity

A jury has found a Dublin man who killed a stranger with garden shears not guilty of murder by reason of insanity at the Central…

A jury has found a Dublin man who killed a stranger with garden shears not guilty of murder by reason of insanity at the Central Criminal Court.

Thomas Connors (25) thought Michael Hughes (30), from Banagher, Co Offaly, was the embodiment of the devil when he found him sleeping in the stairwell of an apartment block.

Mr Justice George Birmingham told the jury that it had reached "absolutely the right verdict in accordance with the expert evidence". He thanked it for its careful attention to the case and exempted its members from jury service for seven years.

Mr Connors, of Manor Court, Mount Argos, Harold's Cross, killed Mr Hughes in the stairwell of an adjacent apartment block, Manor Villa, on the morning of December 15th, 2007.

Mr Justice Birmingham said this was a case of "mind-boggling sadness" and, were it not for the issue of insanity, would have been a perfectly clear and appalling case of murder.

He said, "consequent on the special verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity I direct that Mr Connors be committed to a specially designated centre, the Central Mental Hospital, until further order".

Prosecuting counsel, Paul O'Higgins SC, said Mr Hughes' family were aware that victim impact evidence would not be heard because the case did not involve the imposition of a sentence.

Mr Justice Birmingham said to the family, "you truly have been through the most appalling experience. Words can't and don't describe it and all I can do is express my sympathy".

The jury had deliberated for under one hour and had returned during that hour to ask if the fact that Mr Connors had smoked cannabis before the killing was relevant to his culpability.

Mr Justice Birmingham told the jury that consultant psychiatrist, Dr Damien Mohan, had considered whether Mr Connors' behaviour was attributable to drugs or mental illness and was of the "firm and clear" view that the accused's mental disorder was the causative factor.

Yesterday the jury heard that Mr Hughes had gone out for a night in Dublin with his cousin and friends. He was to stay at his cousin's flat in Harold's Cross but the cousin had gone home early and Mr Hughes was unable to get into the flat when he returned after 4am.

Mr Hughes decided to sleep in the stairwell and sometime after 6am Mr Connors came crashing through the glass doors of the apartment block with garden shears and savagely attacked him, inflicting 143 injuries.

Residents heard screaming and rang gardaí who found Mr Connors walking away from the scene with the shears. He told gardai that he had fought with the devil and the devil was gone now.

In the days leading up to the killing Mr Connors, a married man with one child, had gone to hospital three times seeking help. He was hearing voices and suffering delusions that his wife was the daughter of the devil. On the second visit he was given tablets. His wife was so frightened by his behaviour that she took their child to a women's shelter.

On the third occasion, the day before the killing, doctors at St Vincent's Hospital decided Mr Connors should be admitted to St James's but he absconded during the four hour wait for an ambulance.

In the hours before he killed Mr Hughes, Mr Connors thought the devil was in his apartment and had taken a duvet outside and stabbed it, believing the devil had been hiding in it.

Dr Mohan told the jury that Mr Connors suffered from schizophrenia, as did his father. He had been hospitalised with psychosis in 2004 and 2005 and believed that his father in law was the devil.

The victim's father, Liam Hughes, made a statement outside the Four Courts on behalf of the Hughes family. He said that the family's thoughts, as always but especially today, were on the 30 years of, "love, kindness and generosity of spirit they enjoyed with the deceased".

Mr Hughes said his son would be remembered by his friends as "a respectful and decent person". He said it had been 13 months since the killing but the pain and horror of it had "scarcely lessened". He said the natural "role reversal" in the cycle of life could not now happen as he had lost his son.