Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Murder of Elaine O'Hara

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Start date
  
2012

Murder of Elaine O'Hara cdn01independentieincomingarticle31118505ece

The Murder of Elaine O'Hara occurred in August 2012 in Dublin, Ireland. Elaine O'Hara (17 March 1976–c.22 August 2012), an Irish childcare worker, was last seen alive at a public park in Shankill, Dublin on August 22, 2012. The remains of her body were discovered on Killakee Mountain, south of Dublin, in September 2013.

Contents

The investigation of her disappearance, and later of her death, was widely reported. The 2015 trial and conviction of her murderer, architect Graham Dwyer, led to the circulation of evidence concerning O'Hara's and Dwyer's involvement in BDSM sexual subculture. The evidence of Dwyer's sadistic sexual practices led to the murder being called one of the most shocking crimes in Irish history.

Elaine O'Hara

Elaine O'Hara was born in Dublin on 17 March 1976 and was educated in St. Joseph of Cluny secondary school. She had been bullied at school. She had suffered many mental health issues from her teens, and regularly was hospitalised for psychiatric care. She had been treated by Professor Anthony Clare, who diagnosed depression and borderline personality disorder. She also suffered from asthma, diabetes and was dyslexic. Her mother's death in 2002 was a major setback for her, as was the sudden death of Professor Clare in 2007.

In 2005 she moved out of her family home in Killiney to a flat in Blackrock. In 2008 she moved to another flat in Blackrock, before taking advantage of the affordable housing scheme to acquire an apartment in Belarmine Plaza, Stepaside. Elaine worked as a childcare assistant in Ballybrack and part-time in a newsagents in Blackrock. She was taking night classes in the town of Dún Laoghaire with the hopes of becoming a Montessori teacher.

Disappearance

O'Hara went missing on August 22, 2012. She was last seen by a jogger in Shanaganagh Park in the county of Dún Laoghaire–Rathdown just to the south of Shankill. It was later determined that she had gone to Shanganagh Cemetery, where her mother was buried. A woman was heard crying loudly in the graveyard by a witness. The witness saw the woman, fitting Elaine's general description, crying beside an old grave, but could not positively identify her as Elaine. Her car was later found nearby.

Discovery of body

Dog trainer Magali Vergnet regularly walked dogs on wooded land near Kilakee in the foothills of the Dublin Mountains. On August 21, 2013, one of her dogs discovered some bones, which Vergnet first believed were from an animal. On 13 September 2013 one of her dogs discovered more bones, this time accompanied by clothing. Concerned that these may be human, she contacted the landowner, Mr. Frank Doyle. They returned to the land with another man and found a jawbone. Realising the remains were human, they contacted the Gardai.

O'Hara's body was identified through dental records. Only 65 percent of her remains were recovered.

Discovery of evidence at reservoir

On 10 September 2013, three days before the discovery of O'Hara's body, anglers William Fegan, his brother, and another man found handcuffs, clothing, a ball gag, restraints and leg restraints in Vartry Reservoir, near Roundwood, Co. Wicklow. Normally, the depth of water at the bridge where evidence was found was 15 feet (4.6 m) to 20 feet (6.1 m), but in 2013, following a long hot period, it was as shallow as 12 inches (30 cm) to 18 inches (46 cm), exposing the items which would have otherwise been underwater.

The following day, William Fegan handed the items he had found in to Roundwood Garda station. Garda James O'Donoghue went to where the items were found on several occasions and on 16 September found handcuffs, keys, a leather mask, a knife, an inhaler and a chain with a ring on it. A Dunnes Stores loyalty card found attached to the keyring was identified as belonging to Elaine O'Hara.

The Garda Water Unit searched the lake on 17 September and 7 October 2013, finding two Nokia mobile phones, two mobile phone batteries, a pair of glasses and sunglasses, as well as a rucksack. A number on the frame of the glasses and the prescription matched the records for Elaine O'Hara in a branch of Specsavers in Dún Laoghaire.

Investigation

Police discovered that in late 2007, O’Hara had visited fetish adult sex website Alt.com under the profile name helpmelearn36/F and viewed the profile of architect72, which was linked to a gmail address named fetishboy. Police linked these to Graham Dwyer, an architect.

Evidence emerged that Dwyer and O'Hara had embarked on a sexual relationship that involved bondage, violence and knives. The relationship was very intense throughout 2008. Violent homemade sex videos and fragments of emails were retrieved from their laptops. Their relationship dwindled for some time, but was rekindled in March 2011 when Dwyer contacted O'Hara through a prepaid mobile phone. Dwyer had a mobile phone number which began with 083, and both he and Elaine had mobile phones with numbers that began 086. Recovered texts sent by Dwyer during this period included:

I want to stick my knife in flesh while I am sexually aroused… I would like to stab a girl to death some time.

My urge to rape, stab or kill is huge. You have to help me control or satisfy it.

Dwyer did not have a history of criminality. His background suggested "nothing of note". Born on September 13, 1972 in Bandon, Co. Cork to Sean and Susan Dwyer, he has three siblings, Mandy, Brendan and James. After completing secondary school, he moved to Dublin in the early 1990s. He studied architecture at DIT Bolton Street, where he began a relationship with Donegal woman Emer McShea. McShea soon became pregnant with a son. However, McShea later testified in court that he once confided to her that he fantasised about stabbing a woman during sex, and he started to bring a kitchen knife in to their bedroom, pretending to stab her. McShea and Dwyer finished their relationship in 1996 and a year later he began dating fellow architecture student Gemma Healy. They wed in Sligo Cathedral in 2002 and five years later they moved to Kerrymount Close, Foxrock. Dwyer’s architecture career took off and he started work for A&D Wejchert & Partners Architects on Lower Baggot Street on July 2, 2001.

He was named a director in June 2006 and was involved in a range of major developments at home, including Carlow Institute of Technology, Leopardstown racecourse, and in Poland. His hobbies included flying radio-controlled aircraft and driving luxury cars, while his wife Gemma enjoyed sailing. However, according to information disclosed during Garda interviews, Dwyer's finances were in difficulty at the time of the murder: "I was deeply in debt. We had good prospects in 2007. We had a cottage in Rathmines, bought the house in Foxrock to renovate. Then the crash happened. Gemma lost her job and I had huge pay cuts", he had said. His trial had heard directors at the firm had suffered a 50% pay cut since 2009, including a 21% cut in the first six months of 2011, cutting his wages to €70,000.

Arrest and trial

Evidence from O'Hara's phone and laptop led to warrants to search Dwyer's house, where further evidence was discovered. He was arrested, but denied murdering O'Hara.

The trial opened on 22 January 2015. At the trial, the violent homemade sex videos and retrieved fragments of emails provided evidence of the sexual use of bondage, violence and knives. Numerous messages from O'Hara referred to Dwyer's repeated threats to stab and kill her.

Dwyer's defence council Remy Farrell argued that there was no evidence tying Dwyer to O'Hara's death. O'Hara had a history of depression and her cause of death had never been determined by pathologists. She had recently been released from a psychiatric hospital which she had entered after having suicidal thoughts. There was “not a screed of evidence in respect of the cause of death”, or even evidence that it was murder. According to Farrell, both the police and her own family had first believed that she most probably committed suicide. O'Hara's interest in the BDSM lifestyle had been known to the police since before the discovery of her body, and there were many circumstances that could have led to her death. Farrell said that the violent language used by Dwyer in his texts was proof of nothing more than his sexual fantasies.

Seán Guerin SC, prosecuting, said that the accumulated evidence pointed to a detailed plan by Dwyer to commit and get away with murder. Dwyer had used O'Hara's low self-esteem to manipulate her. His desire to kill a woman was well-documented in his texts. O'Hara was not a willing participant in sexual violence; she repeatedly expressed her wish “not to be stabbed” and “not to be beaten” by him. She only wanted "companionship, love and ultimately a child". Knowing she had recently been released from psychiatric hospital, Dwyer had lured her to the cemetery intending to take her to the mountains and kill her, expecting that if her body was discovered, her death would be deemed to have been suicide. But the attempt to conceal his relationship to her by hiding the mobile phones and O'Hara's personal effects was clear evidence of intent.

On 27 March 2015 Dwyer was convicted in a unanimous verdict. Sentencing him to life imprisonment, the judge stated that he "110% agreed" with jury's decision. The jury was exempted from jury duty for 30 years.

References

Murder of Elaine O'Hara Wikipedia