Michael Scott jailed for six years for killing aunt

Ms Justice Caroline Biggs said that had Scott "thought about it at all" he would have realised the risk caused by him reversing the machine across the yard while his view was obstructed
Michael Scott jailed for six years for killing aunt

Eoin Reynolds

Michael Scott has been jailed for six years for killing his aunt Chrissie Treacy when he drove over her having failed to keep a proper look out while reversing an agricultural teleporter outside her home.

Ms Justice Caroline Biggs said that had Scott "thought about it at all" he would have realised the risk caused by him reversing the machine across the yard while his view was obstructed.

"He didn't think of her at all," the judge said, "an elderly lady, his aunt, living alone." She said that Ms Treacy was entitled to feel safe outside her home and she put Scott's culpability higher than in a case of dangerous driving causing death.

Ms Justice Biggs also pointed to a number of lies told by Scott to gardaí after the killing when he said that his relationship with his aunt had been "the finest" and they only ever argued over small things.

She said he also lied when he said that following the collision his aunt was still alive, he heard her breathing, saw her moving, didn't notice any injuries on her and didn't think she would die.

Ms Justice Biggs said these were lies told for "self preservation" and that he showed little care for his aunt at that time and showed "no remorse" in the immediate aftermath of the killing

However, the judge also accepted that Scott has more recently expressed genuine remorse and reports from the probation services suggest he has insight into the impact the killing has had.

He had no previous convictions and the judge described him as a hard-working family man who was responsible in his business affairs.

The judge also noted that Scott has indicated that he accepts the jury's verdict.

Chrissie Treacy, the judge said, was "by all accounts a terrific lady, ahead of her time on farming knowledge and expertise and a boss in a house of me". She recalled witnesses who had described Ms Treacy's "wonderful Irish sense of humour" and her love of animals, in particular her dog Bradley who went missing two months before Ms Treacy's death.

Ms Treacy loved people and loved engaging with her neighbours and friends and "lived life to the fullest", the judge said. She also commended Ms Treacy's community for the care and support they gave to her during her final years.

The judge set Scott's headline sentence at eight years but reduced that to six years having taken into account the mitigating factors. Members of Scott's family cried and comforted one another when the sentence was revealed.

Michael Scott (59) of Gortanumera, Portumna, Co Galway had pleaded not guilty to murdering his aunt Christina 'Chrissie' Treacy (76) outside her home in Derryhiney, Portumna, Co Galway on April 27th 2018.

Following a trial earlier this year, a jury found Scott not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter on the basis of gross negligence.

The prosecution case was that Scott deliberately reversed over Ms Treacy following a long-running dispute over land. The trial heard that the Health Service Executive and gardaí had been informed of concerns regarding Ms Treacy's welfare due to her relationship with Scott.

The jury were told that Ms Treacy and her brothers farmed about 140 acres at Derryhiney and that she owned another farm at nearby Kiltormer.

Following the deaths of Ms Treacy's brothers, Michael Scott came to own half the land at Derryhiney and Ms Treacy owned the other half. She leased her land at Kiltormer and Derryhiney to Michael Scott.

In early 2017, Mr Scott did not bid to continue leasing the land from Ms Treacy in Kiltormer when it went up for auction. Ms Donohue told the trial that by Christmas 2017, the deceased had made an application through her solicitor to split the land at Derryhiney and put a new lease on the half that she owned.

On the day of Ms Treacy's death Scott received a letter from an agricultural consultant telling him not to claim payments for parcels of land on the farm he jointly owned with his aunt.

Scott told gardaí that he was not concerned about the letter and drove to the yard outside his aunt's home to do some work on the farm.

He said he got into the teleporter and was reversing across the yard when he felt a "thump", thought he might have hit a trailer and moved the teleporter forward to level ground.

He said that when he got down from the cabin he saw his aunt lying on the ground. He described her death as a tragic accident.

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