A former minor Limerick footballer and national athletics champion who was lured to a savage beating by two brothers of All-Star hurler Kyle Hayes, told a sentencing court today: “They beat me like they wanted me dead”.
Ciaran Ryan, Pallaskenry, Co Limerick, fought back tears as he told how Cian Hayes and Daragh Hayes, who he had grown up with and played GAA with at the Kildimo Pallaskenry club, left him afraid for his life.
Daragh Hayes (37) and Cian Hayes (34), of Ballyashea, Kildimo, Co Limerick, beat Mr Ryan with a hurley and a wrench, and later threatened to attack his car sales business and his girlfriend’s home if he told anyone about the unprovoked attack.
Limerick Circuit Criminal Court heard that both accused “lured” Mr Ryan to Daragh Hayes’ house on the guise that they would discuss arrangements for Cian Hayes’ impending wedding in which Mr Ryan was his best man.
However, once inside the house, the two brothers set upon Mr Ryan, wrongly believing he had been involved in a romantic relationship with Daragh Hayes’ ex-partner Claire McNamara, who he had been separated from at the time.
Daragh Hayes broke a hurley off Mr Ryan while Cian Hayes delivered blows with the wrench, their sentencing hearing heard.
Mr Ryan sustained multiple broken bones including to a leg, arm, fingers, as well as extensive bruising all over his body, and he said he continues to suffer traumatic stress from the attack.
Lily Buckley, prosecuting barrister, said Mr Ryan “pleaded” with the two accused men to stop hitting him, but they carried on.
They eventually stopped when they realised he was “telling the truth”, that he did not know anything about what the brothers had erroneously accused him off.
The attack happened in the front sitting room of Daragh Hayes’ house, around 7.15pm, on September 29, 2021.
Mr Ryan delivered a harrowing victim impact statement in court in which he said:
“I had happily attended at Daragh’s home to discuss Cian’s upcoming wedding, I now know they deliberately lured me there to viciously beat me and interrogate me,” Mr Ryan said.
He still finds himself paralysed in fear by the “psychological carnage” of the attack.
The attack had been “oppressive” on him and his family in the Kildimo parish, he said.
“It is like a veil of darkness descended on me that day, for no reason, a darkness that still lingers in my parish until now, but Cian and Daragh have yet to apologise to me,” Mr Ryan said.
Mr Ryan said he and his family had been “semi-shunned” by some within their parish because “for speaking up against the Hayes brothers”.
“Since this assault my life has been hell in my local parish, the Hayes brothers made up plenty of false rumours and accusations about me.
"I live in Pallaskenry and work in Limerick City.”
“I was a high-level sports star and now I am afraid to set foot in any local pitch in my parish,” Mr Ryan said.
“I played minor Gaelic Football for Limerick, I have many All-Ireland medals for athletics, I played soccer at a high level against international teams, and now I am going to counseling and I still suffer from extreme post traumatic stress, which affects my relationships.”
Mr Ryan said he continues to suffer with “horrendous nightmares and suicidal thoughts” and said:
“I fear for my safety on a daily basis... Sometimes I don't even want to wake up.
“I also feel vulnerable in my own workplace as they know where I am six days a week — I am in constant fear that my business and property will be targeted,” Mr Ryan told the court.
Brian McInerney and Lorcan Connolly, senior defence counsel for the two accused, said the two defendants wanted to “apologise” to Mr Ryan and that he had nothing to fear from them.
Mr Ryan said the attack was “brutal, vicious and inhumane, and I thought I was going to die.”
Mr Ryan said he was “welcomed” into the house on the evening in question, but then without warning, “Cian picked up the big spider wrench and Daragh picked up a hurley, and without explanation, they beat me like they wanted me dead”.
“I tried to protect my face from the strikes by Cian, the venom in his eyes terrified me.”
“Cian shattered a number of my ribs and punctured my lung, all the while Daragh was beating me on the other side of my body with a hurley.”
“Daragh beat me so hard with the hurley that the hurley snapped, I couldn’t catch my breath, I didn’t know what was going on or how I was going to escape.
“They broke several of my fingers, and when Daragh grabbed the wrench from Cian they pinned me down and I was sure they were going to finish me off.”
“I was battered on both sides of my body, between my arms, lungs, ribcage, legs, and fingers.”
Mr Ryan said that after conceding that he had told them the truth, Daragh Hayes cried and told Cian Hayes ‘we went too far’, but Mr Ryan said “Cian showed absolutely zero remorse”.
“They then called out conditions to me as Daragh was beating me with the broken hurley. I thought he was going to stab me with the spike of the broken hurley.”.
“Cian told me ‘you won’t be telling anyone that we did this to you, or else’. Daragh told me some of the conditions included that my father could not pull into the petrol station for diesel and I could not be seen anywhere in Kildimo.”
Mr Ryan said the brothers threatened him that ‘the consequences’ of telling ‘will be that we will blow in your girlfriends windows or we will get you’”.
“I was lying in a pool of my own blood, I thought I was going to bleed out,” Mr Ryan continued.
He said the two accused “dragged” him out of the house and into his car and they had to use tools to straighten his car keys in order to start the vehicle after the keys were “bent” during the assault.
Mr Ryan told the court: “I had “purchased [the car] off their brother Kyle Hayes, as I had given Kyle a free courtesy car as a sponsorship deal. I don’t remember much of the drive as I was unconscious in some parts, I remember hitting the ditch on some occasions.”
Mr Ryan said he phoned his girlfriend to collect him on the road, and she ferried him to University Hospital Limerick for emergency treatment.
Testimonials on behalf of the two defendants were handed into court, including from Kildimo Pallaskenry GAA Club where Cian Hayes is captain of the current County Limerick Junior B hurling champions who are to go on to contest the Munster club hurling championship series in the new year.
John Egan, the retired principal of the brothers' secondary school provided a testimony on behalf of each of them, the court heard.
The two accused were originally charged with assault causing “serious harm” to Mr Ryan, however the State accepted their guilty pleas to assault causing “harm”, which carries a lesser sentence.
They also pleaded guilty to possessing the hurley and the wrench and using them as weapons during the attack.
Judge Colin Daly adjourned sentencing to January 30 next year and remanded both accused on continuing bail to that date.