Former Dublin private school teacher to be sentenced for sexual abuse of eight boys

Peter Kelly (73) of Booterstown Park had pleaded not guilty to 28 counts of indecently assaulting boys at Willow Park School, Blackrock, Dublin, on dates in the 70s and 80s
Former Dublin private school teacher to be sentenced for sexual abuse of eight boys

Sonya McLean

A former school teacher will be sentenced next week for the indecent assault of eight boys over 30 years ago at a private Dublin school.

Peter Kelly (73) of Booterstown Park, Booterstown, was convicted by a Dublin Circuit Criminal Court jury following a two-week trial in November.

He pleaded not guilty to 28 counts of indecently assaulting the boys at Willow Park School, Rock Road, Blackrock, Dublin, on dates in the 70s and 80s. The school is run by the Spiritan order of priests

Kelly was convicted on all charges. The eight victims are now all aged in their early 50s.

Judge Elma Sheahan heard the victim impact statements of each of the men that had been abused by Kelly. Some of the men took the stand to read their own statements while Inspector Rachael Kilpatrick read others into the record.

The men spoke of the various ways Kelly’s actions impacted their life, speaking of addictions, inabilities to deal with relationships, inabilities to express their emotions and inabilities to reach their full potential in adult life.

Some of the men have spent time in psychiatric hospitals, others have been diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), many of them are on medication for anxiety and depression.

The men spoke of times in their lives when they have struggled with thoughts of suicide. They spoke of the loss of their education and suffering from insomnia, night terrors and panic attacks.

One victim spoke of an occasion as a child when he deliberately crashed his bike on the way to school. He was later treated in hospital because he had pretended he had injured his leg.

He said in his victim impact statement that he did this so he could get out of school for some time and be away from Kelly.

Many of the victims spoke of how their life could have been so different had they not been abused by Kelly and how as young children they never stood a chance against him.

One of the victims spoke about how Kelly was “one cog in a machine of systematic abuse”.

He said the school “tolerated widespread sexual abuse” and how “37 sexual abusers had been identified in both schools” between both Willow Park and its feeder school Blackrock College. He said as children they had “no chance”.

One of the victims told Kelly that he hopes he is made “confront the harm you have done”.

This man also stated in his victim impact statement that he hopes “the court understands how you have not only violated the law but the life of a child and everything that he might have become”.

Another victim said he was “already vulnerable, already broken” when Kelly abused him as he had been the victim of “multiple sexual crimes committed by Kelly’s colleagues”.

He said he was not abused “because I was chosen or groomed but because I was there in his classroom completely unable to protect myself”.

“He used his position, he took advantage of my vulnerability and added to my pain,” the man continued.

Insp Kilpatrick outlined the incidences of abuse committed on each of the boys, who were mostly aged between 11 and 13 years old at the time.

She said most of the abuse occurred in the classroom when Kelly would hold the child on his lap and molest them under the guise of tickling them. The victims said he would restrain them on his lap and bounce them up and down.

He also played a game called 'The Muppet Show' during which he would take the child under the cloak he wore as a school teacher and again tickle them and then molest them.

One of the victims was abused in the school’s rugby changing room. He described being laid across Kelly’s lap before he was abused. Others were abused in the school gym.

Andrew Sexton SC, defending, told Judge Sheahan that “there is not an acceptance of the verdict” before he added that Kelly never owned a passport. He said Kelly’s “entire life centred around the school and his home”, with his home being right beside the school.

Counsel said the school implemented its own disciplinary regime following an initial complaint in the early 2000s, which was followed by a series of suspensions and which ultimately led to the end of Kelly’s career at the school with Kelly resigning his post in 2004.

The Director of Public Prosecutions decided not to prosecute the allegations that had been made in the early 2000s.

“He suffered the cessation of his life as a teacher and it was not replaced by anything else,” Mr Sexton told the court.

Judge Sheahan said it was “very important to acknowledge that it had been a very difficult morning” for the six victims who were present in court.

She pointed out that due to the law that existed at the time of Kelly’s offending the maximum penalty available to the court in most of the charges was ten years, while two of the offences allowed a penalty of up to two years in prison.

Judge Sheahan revoked Kelly’s bail and remanded him in custody pending sentence next Monday, December 8th.

She said he was to be given the medical attention he required having been informed that he has a number of medical conditions.

If you have been affected by any of the issues raised in this article, you can call the national 24-hour Rape Crisis Helpline at 1800-77 8888, access text service and webchat options at drcc.ie/services/helpline/ or visit Rape Crisis Help.

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