A woman who was raped, stabbed and beaten by a stranger who climbed in her bedroom window as she slept warned the man was a âdanger to society.â
Edmund OâSullivan (32) was jailed on Tuesday for 15 years with a post release supervision order of eight years after Mr Justice Paul McDermott said âthe overall supervision of this man must be closely monitored.â
OâSullivan had been released just ten days prior to this incident from a three-year sentence with the final six months suspended for the stabbing of another woman in her apartment in 2022. He has 108 previous convictions, four of which are for assaults on women.
Mr Justice McDermott noted that partly suspended sentences previously failed to ensure any change in OâSullivanâs behaviour and said it was of vital importance that he is not left at large and unsupervised in society which could lead to exposing âsome future victim to a similar occurrenceâ.
He said it was hugely important that âthese matters are addressed by those who have his custody to offer some measure of protection against further violence, particularly against women.â
OâSullivan (32) of no fixed abode, and originally from Cork pleaded guilty at the Central Criminal Court to rape, anal rape and making threats to kill or cause serious harm to the woman at her apartment in Tralee, County Kerry on March 14th, 2024.
He was sleeping rough in Tralee having been released from prison ten days earlier.
In her victim impact statement the young woman, who was described in court as exceptionally traumatised, outlined how she continues to fight to rebuild her life but part of her has been irrevocably changed.
âI did nothing to deserve this, but I was left bloodied, broken and violated,â she told the court.
She said she does not believe for one minute that OâSullivan regrets his actions and is only sorry he was caught. She said she cannot stress enough that OâSullivan is âa danger to societyâ.
The woman said she prays that justice is served not just for herself but for the safety of other women he might seek to harm.
In her victim impact statement, the young woman outlined how she had fought for her life after awaking to find a scissors at her neck and a man shouting at her to have sex. She said the image was burned into her mind and plays over in her head.
The court heard that OâSullivan stabbed her repeatedly to her face, head and arm and the woman also sustained puncture wounds to her hands.
She said the scars she has been left with are a constant reminder of how close she came to dying.
Mr Justice McDermott said OâSullivanâs history of violence towards women was worrying.
The judge noted from the womanâs victim impact statement that she âbelieved with every fibre in her being that if she had not fought back she would not be here today but she said the cost of surviving has been immenseâ.
He noted that she said that everything she had worked so hard to achieve was âstolen from her in an instantâ
âShe was sleeping and he attacked her in the most savage and degrading way and attacked her in order to secure her submission. She feared for her life,â Mr Justice McDermott said.
He acknowledged that OâSullivan had pleaded guilty and acknowledged that he had saved the woman the trauma of sitting through a trial but added that there had been âa very strong caseâ against him.
Mr Justice McDermott accepted that OâSullivan had written a letter of remorse.
He set a headline sentence of 23 years before he imposed a sentence of 16 years.
He suspended the final year on strict conditions including that OâSullivan address both his drug and alcohol addiction while in custody and continue with any treatment deemed appropriate by the Probation Service on his release from prison.