Medics found burns and bruising all over girl’s body, cruelty trial told

Accused parents say girl suffered injuries when she fell off bicycle and slipped in shower

The trial of a Dublin couple accused of causing serious harm to their child has heard that medical staff observed burns and bruising all over the girl’s body. Photograph:  Matt Kavanagh
The trial of a Dublin couple accused of causing serious harm to their child has heard that medical staff observed burns and bruising all over the girl’s body. Photograph: Matt Kavanagh

The trial of a Dublin couple accused of causing serious harm to their child has heard that medical staff observed burns and bruising all over the girl’s body.

The 39-year-old man and 36-year-old woman, who are from north Africa, told paramedics that their nine-year-old daughter had slipped in the shower a few hours before they phoned 999.

Witnesses told the trial on Wednesday that after the child was hospitalised both parents stated that they had not previously seen the injuries on her body.

The couple, who cannot be named to protect the identity of the child, have pleaded not guilty to intentionally or recklessly causing serious harm to the child at the family home in Dublin on July 2nd, 2019.

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They have also pleaded not guilty to child cruelty, contrary to the Children Act, by failing to provide adequate medical aid on the same occasion.

They have further pleaded not guilty to intentionally or recklessly causing serious disfigurement to the child and to two further counts of child cruelty on occasions between June 28th and July 2nd, 2019.

On day two of the trial, a number of witnesses from Dublin Fire Brigade gave evidence of what they saw when they responded to a 999 call made at around 10pm by the girl’s father.

Unresponsive

They described finding a young girl laid out on a mattress in an untidy room. The girl was staring blankly with open eyes but her vision was unresponsive and her face looked bruised.

One fireman said he found a flap of flesh on her foot, later described as a burst blister. He also found her thigh inflamed and hot to touch. When paramedics subsequently arrived, they noticed what were described as “nail marks or bite marks” on the child’s back.

The jury heard evidence that the man said his daughter was unhappy since moving to Ireland three months earlier and that she was quite withdrawn and had self-harmed. He said she was unable to walk properly and could not straighten one of her arms.

A garda witness told the court that the man later told him the girl had not seen a doctor since arriving in Ireland.

The girl was brought to Temple St. children’s hospital in Dublin city where emergency consultant Dr Ike Okafor assessed her. He told the jury that he concluded there was a high probability that the child would die from her injuries and he noted significant disfigurement.

Fell from bicycle

He said the child’s father told him that the girl had fallen from her bicycle onto rocks two days earlier. He said the man told him that he was in work the previous evening when his wife called and told him the girl had slipped in the shower.

The witness said the man told him he had never seen the injuries found on the girl and said that he never really talks much with the girl and that she dressed herself.

Dr Okafor said the girl’s mother told him that she heard another daughter screaming and then found the injured party on the floor of the shower.

He said that when he asked about the marks the woman said she had never seen them before. She said her daughter was not normal and did not let her mother touch her, but that she was of good intelligence.

The trial continues before Judge Martin Nolan and a jury.