Stephen Maguire
A woman who claimed she forgot she had divorced her husband has been given a suspended prison sentence after falsely trying to claim his estate.
Carer, Bernadette O'Loughlin appeared at Letterkenny Circuit Court where she pleaded guilty to using a form to get letters of administration to Keith O'Loughlin's estate.
Mr O'Loughlin died in 2006 and had left a house in Findrum, Convoy, Co Donegal.
The 56-year-old accused had divorced Mr O'Loughlin in Northern Ireland in 2002. However, when interviewed by Gardaí in September 2019, she claimed she had no memory of getting a divorce.
She added that she did not think any such divorce would have any impact on any matters in the Republic.
Remarried
Detective Garda Peter Cullen gave evidence in the case and told how the couple had two children together. However, after they divorced Mr O'Loughlin met another woman, remarried and had a son, Conor O'Loughlin.
Det Cullen said "Bernadette O'Loughlin made an application in Letterkenny for letters of administration by submitting documents holding herself out to be the legal wife, although she was actually divorced at the time.
"We got a statement from the probate office that if they had been made aware of the divorce outside Ireland, the matter would have had to be referred to the court for all parties. His three lawful children would have been entitled to his estate."
The house left in Mr O'Loughlin's estate was valued at €179,000 in 2009, but had depreciated greatly and sold for just €20,000 in 2017.
Bernadette O'Loughlin, of Greeve Park, Strabane, Co Tyrone, received two thirds of the estate and his three children got one ninth each.
Conor O'Loughlin's mother Karen, who married Mr O'Loughlin, told the court the issue had impacted her son greatly. She said it was used in an "opportunistic and devious way."
Angry
Student, Conor O'Loughlin, who was just four when his father had died, said he was angry at the manner in which his father's first wife was allowed to carry out what she did.
He told the court: "What was rightly mine was taken away from me so cruelly. I'm angry this was allowed to happen to me by professional people."
The court heard the house was in a dilapidated state when sold. A cheque for Conor O'Loughlin, in the sum of €3,150, was in court for him as part of what he was entitled to from the sale of the house.
Barrister for Bernadette O'Loughlin, Mr Shane Cosetllo, said his client was very sorry for the hurt she had caused Conor, adding that his client was suffering from psychological and alcohol issues.
Judge John Aylmer said there was a "significant level of premeditation" in what Bernadette O'Loughlin had done, which helped her benefit.
He said he placed it in the mid-range of such offences and merited a sentence of four years in prison before mitigation.
The judge added she had entered an early plea, had no previous convictions, claims she could not recall getting a divorce and that he was told there were psychological and alcohol issues.
He reduced the sentence to one of three years and said he was going to suspend the sentence on condition that she enter a bond to keep the peace and be of good behaviour for three years.