The court heard the defendant denied the allegations when interviewed by police, saying he suffered from erectile dysfunction.
A Belfast man went on trial on Monday accused of multiple sex offences and physical assaults on three siblings.
The 44-year-old, who cannot be named to protect the identity of the complainants, has been charged with 12 counts of rape and 19 offences of common assault. He is also charged with five counts of child cruelty and nine further sex offences.
The charges, which the defendant denies, are alleged by the complainants to have taken place on dates between January 14, 2017 and May 10, 2021.
Opening the Crown case, senior prosecution counsel Richard Weir KC told the Belfast Crown Court jury of six men and six women that the defendant started a relationship with the mother of the complainants in 2016.
He said that over time the relationship developed and the defendant moved in with his partner and her two daughters and a son.
“The relationship was not without problems. In the early part of 2021, a crisis occurred and the children were put in the care of their maternal grandmother,” Mr Weir told the jury.
“In April 2023, police received a report from social services indicating one of the complainants wanted to speak about sexual abuse she was alleging this had been perpetrated on her by the accused in this case.”
Mr Weir outlined how the following month, police carried out a series of ‘achieving best evidence’ (ABE) interviews with the teenage girl. She disclosed a number of physical and sexual assaults on her by the accused over a four year period.
The complainant alleged that around the age of 11 the defendant alleged raped her after she got a new pair of shoes.
Mr Weir said she described a further incident of alleged rape when she was under 13 and wearing a thick knit jumper.
“You will hear that this was a common thing done to her by the accused. In effect, she says this happened every other day and after these alleged rapes she says he told her he loved her.”
As well as the alleged sexual assaults, she told police she also suffered physical assault too at the hands of the defendant.
She claimed she was hit with a belt at the age of 12, she was punched in the face when she was 13, grabbed and trailed her by the hair, choked her on a bed and also threatened her with a knife.
Mr Weir told the jury: “We say there was ill-treatment throughout a significant period. She says he made her hit her two other siblings as a punishment.”
A second female complainant also made a series of ABEs in which she alleged she suffered a number of common assaults.
This included the defendant stamping on her head, beating her after she woke him up “by knocking over wallpaper”, being kicked which resulted in her urinating when was aged between five and eight, and being dragged downstairs by the hair.
The young female also disclosed to police that at around the age of six she was hit with a shoe as well as being struck several times with a belt after her trousers were taken down.
She said the accused had put her in fear by stabbing a wooden table as well as being shut up in her room where her older sister was “forced to hit her”.
Their younger brother also told police about assaults on him by the defendant. He claimed that at the age of eight he was “pinned to a wall”, he was hit on one occasion with a hoover attachment, he had his head stamped on, thrown onto a bed and punched, punched in the face in the kitchen and was grounded and kept in his room for days.
He also claimed he was hit by his older sister under the direction of the accused.
The court heard the defendant denied the allegations when interviewed by police, saying he suffered from erectile dysfunction.
Addressing the jury, Mr Weir said: “We say that when your have heard all of the evidence in this case, you will be convinced to the necessary standard of beyond reasonable doubt of the guilt of the accused on each and every one of the counts on the bill of indictment.”
At hearing.
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