Nadine Lott trial Beautician left unrecognisable to family after assault by man vicious with rage
In the early hours of a December morning two years ago, Claire Lott looked down on the face of a daughter she did not recognise.
Nadine Lott, a 30-year-old beautician, lay on the floor of her bloodied and trashed home in Arklow, Co Wicklow, struggling to breathe. She had sustained âextreme and grotesqueâ facial injuries that had separated flesh from bone.
âI got down on the floor,â Claire Lott told a Central Criminal Court jury, âand said: âYouâre okay, we can do thisâ.â
She added: âIt was absolutely excruciating, but I was doing what I could to try and save my daughterâs life.â
Nadine Lottâs friend and neighbour, Amela Kulenovic, witnessed part of the attack. Readying for bed in the early hours of December 14th, 2019, she heard âbanging and noisesâ, but thought it was no more than early festive cheer.
Lying in bed with her partner, Ms Kulenovic later realised, however, that it was the sound of someone crying and that the sound was coming from Ms Lottâs apartment. Looking out, she saw her door was ajar and the hall light on.
Ms Kulenovic entered and found her friend lying face down on the sittingroom floor. There, crouched on top of her, was Daniel Murtagh. He was, she said, like a âwild animalâ.
Stunned, Ms Kulenovic exclaimed: âOh my God, what the f**k is going on?â
Murtagh âwas going apeâ and was âvicious with rageâ, she later told gardaÃ. Murtagh did not respond âin any shape or formâ, adding that he âalmost looked straight throughâ her.
He was making animalistic sounds, âalmost growling, frustrated noisesâ, she said, adding: âYou could see he was vicious with rage. You could see it in his eyes. You could see he was trying to inflict as much pain as he could.â
The only noise coming from Ms Lott was a weeping or gurgling sound. Panicked and shaken, Ms Kulenovic fled to ring Ms Lottâs younger sister, Phoebe. Ms Kulenovicâs partner kept watch to make sure Murtagh did not follow.
Back in her apartment, Ms Kulenovic saw Murtagh drive off. She got through to Phoebe Lott, who had been asleep, on the third attempt at about 4.30am, and told her that âDan had stabbed Nadineâ.
Startled, Phoebe âburstâ into her motherâs room in a panic saying: âWeâve to go, Mammy, Dan has stabbed Nadine; we need to go now.â
They left immediately.
âI didnât even have shoes on me,â Claire Lott told the jury.

Once at St Maryâs Court, Phoebe entered first. Pieces of broken mirror glass âcrunchedâ under her feet. Her sister lay on the kitchen floor on her back, dressed in pyjama bottoms and a tank-top with her head up against the skirting board.
âHer lip was completely split, her eyes were really black and swollen. She was not conscious and was gurgling and gasping for air,â her sister recalled.
A âbulldozerâ had gone through the apartment, said Ian Clarke, one of the four paramedics who had tried to save Ms Lott. The night, he told the court, would âhauntâ him for the rest of his life.Garda Linda Butler and Garda Ben Silverlock arrived at 4.30am. Noticing the âreally intense smell of bloodâ as she entered, Garda Butler said a large pool of blood surrounded Ms Lottâs âextremely and grotesquely swollenâ head.
Speaking to ambulance control, Garda Butler said Ms Lott had been âbeaten to a pulpâ. In court, the 14-year Garda veteran said she had never seen such a beating.
Garda Butler began chest compressions as Ms Lottâs mother gave mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. Blood was âcoming from everywhereâ. Trying to clear Ms Lottâs airways, Garda Butler found some of Ms Lottâs teeth were missing.
Claire Lott said the efforts to save her daughterâs life were âabsolutely excruciatingâ, but resuscitation was useless as her daughter was just âgurglingâ.
âI donât think anything I was doing helped, really,â she said.

Remembering the scene like âit was yesterdayâ, paramedic Stefano Copola said they lost Ms Lottâs âvery faint pulseâ three times before they left for the hospital.
A âbulldozerâ had gone through the apartment, said Ian Clarke, one of the four paramedics who had tried to save Ms Lott. The night, he told the court, would âhauntâ him for the rest of his life.
Broken furniture lay everywhere. Kneeling on shattered glass, his uniform was quickly âdestroyed and coveredâ in blood.
âIt was difficult so see where all of the injuries were,â he said.
A garda drove the ambulance, leaving the three ambulance crew free to aid the injured woman. At St Vincentâs hospital in Dublin, emergency nurse Pamela OâBrien noticed bits of wood and a dinner plate were âmattedâ in Nadineâs bloodied hair.
Remembering Ms Lottâs âlittle and tiny bodyâ, the nurse tried to make her presentable for her family despite the âhugeâ head swelling. âIt didnât make a massive difference what I did to her, as they had already seen her at the scene.â
Intensive care nurse Leah Grant broke down, too, when giving evidence. âShe was completely unrecognisable. Her mum brought in a photo of her. Everyone kept saying âWho is that?â and I said, âThatâs herâ.â
In her first 24 hours in hospital, Ms Lott received 42 pints of blood. Nurses could not brush or wash her hair, because it could have increased the bleeding. Efforts to stop a continuous nose bleed failed, too, despite every effort.
RelatedGiving evidence, Chief State Pathologist Dr Linda Mulligan said injuries were found all over Ms Lottâs body, including an incised wound from the left earlobe to the left side of the neck and a stab wound to the right of the neck.
After three days in intensive care, Nadine Lott died on December 17th, 2019, at 3.16pm.
John Begley spotted a car in a ditch at Bookeyâs Bridge, near Laragh, Co Wicklow, early on December 14th, 2019, as he was heading to do Christmas shopping with his wife.
Initially, he thought someone had crashed coming home from a Christmas party. There was no one inside, but soon he saw a man staggering and falling to the ground 100m away, past Laragh GAA pitch.
Stopping to help, he said the man smelled of alcohol and was lying on his stomach with his trousers and pants around his knees. The man said his name was Daniel and that he was from Clondalkin.
When gardaà arrived, âDanielâ got agitated, telling Mr Begley: âYou donât know what Iâve doneâ, adding that he had killed his âwifeâ and he hoped she was not dead.
Faced with paramedic Patrick Naughton, Murtagh immediately said he had post-traumatic stress disorder, quickly telling him âout of the blueâ that he had killed his girlfriend.
AustraliaMs Lott was her motherâs second oldest child. She had gone to Australia in June 2012, where she âdid really wellâ working in a beauty salon, said her mother.
In the words of prosecution counsel John OâKelly SC, she then had the âdreadful misfortuneâ to meet Murtagh in Darwin, the capital of Australiaâs vast Northern Territory.
All her daughter said about Murtagh then was that he was âfunnyâ, her mother recalled. She returned in mid-2013. Murtagh returned a few months later.
Nadine and Phoebe were âvery closeâ even though they were six years apart.
âIt felt like I lost my left arm the day she left for Australia, but we spoke most days on Skype,â her sister told the jury.
By August 2016, Murtagh and Ms Lott were due to move into a house together in Arklow. Murtagh, however, did not turn up. âShe decided she had tried hard enough at that stage and the relationship ended,â Phoebe Lott said.
In their last conversation, her sister asked if she would âstick a pair of eyelashesâ on her as she was going out that night.

Claire Lott and her two daughters, Phoebe and Tanith, gave evidence on the first day of the trial, where they were not questioned by Murtaghâs defence team led by Brendan Grehan SC.
However, they were recalled the following morning, so that Mr Grehan could put questions to them on the instruction of Murtagh.
Mr Grehan began by telling Claire Lott that he was sorry to have to ask about her daughterâs relationship with Murtagh, putting it to her that Murtagh and Ms Lott had got back together five times since returning from Australia.
âThatâs not true,â replied Claire Lott.
When asked by the barrister if Murtagh had stayed with Ms Lott previously, her mother said he had stayed once, on December 13th. The same questions led to the same replies from Ms Lottâs sisters.
Finally, Mr Grehan asked Claire Lott if it would be fair to say that she did not like Murtagh.
âI never said that. You are asking me that question where my daughter has been murdered. Before this, at times I did like Daniel, he was Nadineâs choice at the time. He stayed in my house for days, came for Christmas, at no time was he asked to leave,â she replied.
From this point on, the defence solicitor checked with Murtagh after Mr Grehan cross-examined each witness to ensure that Murtagh did not have other questions.
In his closing speech, Mr Grehan said his job was to represent Murtagh, and that is what he had to do. Reminding the jury, he said Murtagh had not been happy that he had put âall of his instructionsâ to them.
âThat is his entitlement and why we are here,â Mr Grehan pointed out.

During the trial, the jury saw WhatsApp messages between Ms Lott and Murtagh in the weeks before her death.
On December 5th, Ms Lott messaged him: âNothing is ever going to happen between us again, I want to make that clear.â
Murtagh replied: âWhat are you being thick for?â
She said: âIâm not being thick, Iâm just saying it as it isâ.
Murtagh asked âAre you seeing someone from Dublin?â
Nadine replied âWhat?â and Murtagh said: âClose to meâ.
Nadine then said: âHere we goâ.
Murtagh continued: âWould you tell me before I tell youâ and Nadine replied: âIâm not seeing anyoneâ.
The defendant said: âOk, was there a Dublin lad in your place?â
Nadine said: âAh leave it out Dan, will youâ.
The defendant said: âNadine I worry about ye, not in love, just donât slipâ.
Nadine said: âDonât threaten me either.â
Murtagh asked his former girlfriend how he had threatened her and she replied: âJust donât slip; sounds a bit like a threatâ.
He asked Nadine âWhy are you pissed with me?â and she replied: âYou rot me with this âDo you have Dublin lads in the houseâ.â
The conversation ended with Murtagh telling the beauty therapist that he would be âdown next Friday, try to be a bit nicer than you are now. I shouldnât be worrying as much, my faultâ.
On December 6th, Ms Lott told Murtagh that they were having Christmas dinner âin mineâ if he wanted to âcome downâ.
Three days later on December 9th, Ms Lott told the accused that it was her auntâs birthday and she planned drinks on December 13th.
That night, just hours before the attack, Murtagh messaged Ms Lott as he sat in her apartment, saying âPlease come home soonâ. There are two WhatsApp missed calls from Murtaghâs phone at 12.57am and 1.26am that night.
While doctors and nurses were struggling to save Ms Lottâs life in St Vincentâs hospital, Det Garda Darren Mulhall arrested Murtagh in Tallaght hospital for causing serious harm to Ms Lott.
Murtagh asked if she was still alive, saying it had been âa domesticâ. Later, he said: âSheâs f**king one of my mates. Tell me, is she in a bad way? All Iâm doing is praying that she will make it.â He then claimed he had tried to kill himself.
During Garda interviews, Murtagh said he had fallen in love with her âat first sightâ in Darwin. They had been back seeing each other but âbehind closed doorsâ because Ms Lottâs mother âhates meâ, he claimed.
Waiting for her in the apartment on December 13th, Murtagh said he had smoked a joint, took two pills and drank a âdaddy nagginâ (or shoulder) of rum âstraightâ before passing out on her couch.
During four Garda interviews, Murtagh first said he did not remember the assault. Then, he said Ms Lott had had âa goâ at him for drinking and smoking when she arrived home.
Saying she had slapped him, he claimed that he had given her a âsoft slapâ back, before she fell on the ground.
Then he said he had given her âa couple of slapsâ, which later became âsix or seven hard digsâ. However, he insisted he had not intended to kill her and that he had never âhit a woman in his lifeâ, having seen a relative âgetting killedâ [beaten].
Murtagh later admitted that he had not only used his hands, but also a tyre-pump chargerAt one point, he told gardaà he thought Ms Lott would have woken up with just a few marks and âbrushed it offâ as he had not âgone to townâ on her. Later, he admitted that he had hit her âtoo hardâ.
âI didnât even think I was hitting her that hard. Iâve been in loads of fights and Iâve hit lads way harder,â he said. Later, Murtagh admitted âpoundingâ Ms Lott and âpunching like madâ.
When asked why he had inflicted âso much painâ on a âslip of a girlâ like Ms Lott, he said he was in a rage. His hands were not badly damaged, he said, because he had âboxed for years and my knuckles are conditionedâ.

Recalling the night, Murtagh sat forward in his chair in the Garda interview room and punched the air downward, illustrating his point by punching his fist into the palm of his other hand. A video recording of this interview was played for the jury.
Finally, Murtagh admitted that he had not only used his hands, but also a tyre-pump charger.
âThe wire was long and getting in the way when I was hitting her; I stood on it and broke it and wrapped the rest of it around my hand,â he said.
He also accepted that he might have used the cigarette-type charger âin a hammer actionâ.
This was an account âunvarnished, at times crude and unfiltered through any prism of political correctnessâ, said Murtaghâs defence counsel, who reminded the jury that his client insisted he had not meant to kill Ms Lott.
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