A Nigerian healthcare assistant based in Ireland, who raped a 73-year-old woman with Alzheimer’s in her nursing home bed during the COVID-19 lockdown three months ago, has been jailed for 11 years at the Central Criminal Court.
Emmanuel Adeniji, aged 52, with an address at Royal Canal Court, Kilcock, Co Kildare, initially denied the offence to the police, but pleaded guilty in court.
Justice Paul McDermott yesterday described his crime as “an egregious breach of trust by a qualified and experienced healthcare worker.”
Adeniji is a trained professional who has worked in healthcare for 15 years. At 3:00a.m. on April 3, he went into the woman’s room and raped her.
Adeniji was recorded on CCTV going in and coming out of the woman’s room at the nursing home. She was found later that morning in a distressed state by a staff member doing her rounds.
The woman was upset but coherent; the police were called and she made a statement. The victim said she was in her room all the time as they were “locked in because of the virus.”
Adeniji was arrested 11 days later and denied raping the woman. However, a DNA sample from him matched one taken from the victim. He was charged and pleaded guilty. He had no previous conviction.
The woman’s family said they would “never forget how that man had single-handedly destroyed our mom’s life.” They described how they have been unable to comfort their mother by hugging her as they normally would since the rape in April.
The elderly woman remains terrified the man will return to her room. Her daughter told the Central Criminal Court: “We always said we will dread the day she loses her memory but now one day we hope she wakes up and doesn’t remember.”
Justice Paul McDermott described it as “an egregious breach of trust by a qualified and experienced health care worker and a most serious crime against a very vulnerable, elderly lady who was confined, helpless and totally alone.”
The nursing home was the victim’s home, he said, and had been carefully chosen for her with her family. The effects on her were “devastating,” he said.
She had feelings of “depression, suicidal thoughts, nightmares and a lack of safety.” Justice McDermott added that the family had built up trust with the staff, which had been shattered by the development.
He said Adeniji is a married father of four children, trained and employed in healthcare for 15 years. The judge said Adeniji showed little or no insight of the effect on the victim and his expressed remorse lacks depth beyond verbalised regret.
“His lack of real remorse is, to ordinary decent people, simply grossly wrong.”
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