Jailed for raping woman while she slept on sofa bed

A Cavanman who raped an acquaintance while she slept after the woman got into the bed beside him fully clothed has been jailed for six years.

Paul Clarke (40) had denied a charge of rape but was convicted by a jury following a trial at the Central Criminal Court. He claimed the woman was making up the allegation because she was looking for money having learned that he had received an inheritance.

Clarke of Muff, Kingscourt, Cavan, was found guilty by a jury of raping the woman after a night out in Meath on February 11, 2007, following a trial last October. It was the second trial to take place after a jury was unable to agree on a verdict in the first trial.

The woman, then aged 22 years, was asleep in her friend's house after a night out with Clarke when she woke up to find him raping her. She told the court she spent years trying to suppress what had happened before receiving counselling. She went to gardaí in 2017.

Edward Doocey BL, prosecuting, told the court on Monday that the woman was happy for Clarke to be named in reporting the case so long as it does not lead to her identification as she wants to retain her anonymity.

Sentencing him this week, Ms Justice Karen O’Connor noted that the woman believed Clarke was clothed when she decided to get into the bed beside him.

She said the woman herself was fully clothed but awoke later to find Clarke raping her. Her shorts, underwear and tights were wrapped together and had been discarded by the bed. She told Clarke to stop and he did.

Ms Justice O’Connor said the woman should have felt safe and secure in her friend’s home on a sofa bed that she had slept in many times before but “instead she was violated”.

She noted from the victim impact statement that the woman later developed patterns of emotional eating and suffered from anxiety. She was prescribed medication and attended counselling.

Ms Justice O’Connor said the woman stated that she was looking for three things from Clarke - acknowledgement, an explanation and a sincere apology.

The judge said the woman had shown great dignity during the trial and sentence hearing and acknowledged that the woman had previously outlined that she was horrified to note that a member of Clarke’s legal team had been following her social media account.

She said the claim that the woman’s motivation behind the allegation was money was “unpleasant, hurtful and ugly”.

Ms Justice O’Connor said she had read all the defence material, including 15 character references and a psychologist's report, which outlined issues he has with his memory following a serious car accident in 2002.

The judge acknowledged that there had been consensual kissing earlier in the night but said it was her recollection from the trial that the woman indicated at that stage that she was not interested in anything further and the kissing ended at that point.

The judge also said she was “very conscious” of Clarke’s personal circumstances and his commitment to his young child and parents.

She set a headline sentence of seven and half years, which she reduced to six years, having taken into account the mitigating factors in the case. She also applied 18 months post release supervision and backdated the sentence to when Clarke first went into custody last December.

At the sentence hearing last December, the woman read from her victim impact statement.

She told the court she struggled with anxiety and depression for years in the wake of the rape. “It reached a point in 2017 when I wanted to drive my car into a ditch,” she said. When she eventually disclosed what had happened to her in counselling, she said it was a weight off her shoulders.

“I'm going to move forward with my life as a much happier person,” she said.

Ms Justice O'Connor thanked the woman in the case for her dignified manner throughout the court process, telling her: “You absolutely should have been safe in your friend's house.”