92 – No Excuse: The murder of Mary Doogue

In October of 1995, Mary Doogue was beaten to death. She lay in her bed in her cold dark home for 12 hours before she got any medical attention, and died shortly after. Her partner 19 year old Stephen Davis was arrested two days later.

He would tell the court that he had been provoked. Would a jury buy his excuse?

Continue reading “92 – No Excuse: The murder of Mary Doogue”

90 – Beyond Reasonable Doubt: The murder of Siobhan McLoughlin

On 28th February 2006, Siobhan McLoughlin was found dead in locked bedroom. At first glance, it looked as if she had tragically taken her own life. But within hours after her death, police and the McLoughlin family felt sure that she had been brutally murdered.

But would the State be able to prove guilt, beyond a reasonable doubt?

Continue reading “90 – Beyond Reasonable Doubt: The murder of Siobhan McLoughlin”

89 – The Ordeal: Jennifer Guinness

In April of 1986, three armed men burst into a lavish home in Howth. When they left, they brought with them Jennifer Guinness, mother of three and wife of the head of a merchant bank. A ransom was demanded for her return.

Despite the quick mobilisation of gardai all over Dublin, Jennifer’s captor would evade capture for over a week.

Continue reading “89 – The Ordeal: Jennifer Guinness”

84 – Dark Saga: The Murder of Philomena Gillane

In May of 1994, Philomena Gillane was 7 months pregnant. On the morning of Wednesday the 11th, she left her home early to head to work. But she never arrived. She was found dead in the boot of her own car 25 miles away, at Athlone Train station.

Her family would spend the next 3 years in and out of courts dealing with the fallout from her brutal murder, and in a search for justice that was never fully achieved.

Continue reading “84 – Dark Saga: The Murder of Philomena Gillane”

81 – A Voyage of Fiction: The murder of Aoife Phelan

In October of 2012, 30 year old Aoife Phelan went missing without a trace. Aoife had simply left a friends house and vanished with no sign of what might become of her. A garda investigation began to find the woman who had told hr family she was 4 months pregnant.

It would be a long two weeks before police discovered what had become of her.

Continue reading “81 – A Voyage of Fiction: The murder of Aoife Phelan”

76 – House of Horrors: Cork’s missing men

Just before Christmas 1994, Patch O’Driscoll went missing from his bedsit in Cork City. When the garda investigation began into his missing persons case, it was discovered two other men had also disappeared from the very same house on Wellington Terrace. Though there was no evidence of a crime scene inside the large dilapidated building, the cause was certainly within.

But there would be few answers and no justice in the case.

Continue reading “76 – House of Horrors: Cork’s missing men”

75 – Pathological: The murders of Lesley Clarke and Trevor Buchanan

In May of 1991, the bodies of Lesley Clarke and Trevor Buchanan were discovered in a fume filled car, parked in Lesley’s deceased father’s garage. The deaths were ruled a tragic double suicide – probably the result of the affair that Lesley and Trevor’s spouses were carrying on together.

But 18 years later, a startling confession would launch a renewed investigation into the deaths, this time as a case of murder. The prime suspects were the victim’s spouses – Colin Howell and Hazel Buchanan.

Continue reading “75 – Pathological: The murders of Lesley Clarke and Trevor Buchanan”

74 – Marilyn Rynn: The Shortcut

In December of 1995, 41 year old Marilyn Rynn disappeared after attending her workplace Christmas party. Two weeks later her body was found hidden in bushes at a park near to her home. She had been attacked as she took a shortcut on her journey home.

A combination of cutting edge forensic techniques and old fashioned police work solved her murder 8 months later.

Continue reading “74 – Marilyn Rynn: The Shortcut”

71 – A Walk in the Dark: The murder of Rachel Moran

In the early hours of New Years Day 2003, Rachel Moran decided leave her parents house and make the 20 minute walk to her own flat. Her worried mother tried to stop her, but Rachel said she would be fine: she’d ring as soon as she got in.

But the phone call never came.

And Rachel was never seen alive again.

Continue reading “71 – A Walk in the Dark: The murder of Rachel Moran”

69 – The Emergency: The IRA, spies & the murder of Micheal Devereux

In 1940, 24 year old Michael Devereux disappeared from his home in Co Wexford. A year later, his body would be discovered buried in an isolated part of Co Tipperary. A number of men who were known members of the IRA found themselves accused of the murder – allegedly motivated by the belief that Devereux had been a spy among their ranks.

A four month legal battle ensued, which saw the use of the Emergency Powers Act passed to deal with “The Emergency” of the ongoing war in Europe used to circumvent due process and normal court procedures in order to hold the men accountable.