Man jailed for life for rape and murder of Danielle McLaughlin in India

Vikat Bhagat was found guilty at court in south Goa on Friday over 2017 death of Donegal backpacker

Vikat Bhagat was found guilty of the rape and murder of Irish backpacker Danielle McLaughlin, from Buncrana, Co Donegal in 2017, in Goa, India.

A man has been sentenced to life in prison for the rape and murder of Co Donegal backpacker Danielle McLaughlin in 2017.

Vikat Bhagat (31) was found guilty at the District and Sessions Court in south Goa on Friday. Prosecutors had asked that he face the death penalty.

“Today the court has given the final verdict, life imprisonment to the accused,” investigating officer Filomeno Costa told the ANI news agency.

“Nothing can compensate the loss of a child, but the sentence has diluted the grief of the family,” Vikas Varma, a lawyer for the McLaughlin family, said in a statement. “It was a long battle of nearly eight years but justice has been done.”

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Ms McLaughlin (28), from Buncrana, had travelled to Canacona, an area of Goa popular with holidaymakers, in March 2017 with a female friend from Australia.

They had been out celebrating Holi, a Hindu festival, at a nearby village on the day Ms McLaughlin died. Her body was found the next day by a farmer in a remote field.

A postmortem found cerebral damage and constriction of the neck had caused the death of the former Liverpool John Moores University student.

Bhagat was arrested within hours of the discovery and confessed immediately to the killing, but his trial took eight years to conclude.

Ms McLaughlin’s family travelled to India for the verdict on Friday and expressed relief after the conclusion of what they said was an “eight-year murder trial”.

Her family thanked their legal team and their supporters in helping them achieve justice.

Her mother, Andrea Brannigan, told RTE that the conclusion of the case in court allowed her to “finally start grieving for Danielle”.

“The last eight years have been tough. We’re constantly bombarding MPs, TDs, embassies, looking for answers.

“I’ve constantly been trying to fight to get justice for Danielle, because Danielle deserved justice so she could finally rest in peace and us as her family and friends can finally grieve for Danielle.

“So the last eight years have been tough. I feel like I can finally start grieving now for Danielle and I’m hoping that the rest of her family, her sisters and her friends, can now also start grieving.”

Family solicitor Desmond Doherty said Ms Brannigan was “extremely tired” but “glad it was over”.

Mr Doherty said there was a possibility that Bhagat could appeal against the court’s decision.

Speaking to The Irish Times from Goa following Friday’s court hearing, Ms McLaughlin’s sister, Joleen McLaughlin Brannigan, said she had “no emotions whatsoever” for Bhagat.

She said all the family “care about is that justice was served today” given they had lost so many years awaiting a verdict.

“The whole process was frustrating. We never knew what was going to happen. It was overwhelming, but we are glad we got to this stage,” she said.

When asked if she believed Bhagat should face the death penalty, Ms McLaughlin Brannigan replied: “It’s up to the judge at the end of the day. We are just glad that he was found guilty. We are just glad that he will face the consequences of his actions.”

She praised the British and Irish embassies for their roles in the case. Danielle had travelled to India on a British passport.

“Since we have arrived in Goa, they have been with us every step of the way. They were in court with us, they prepared for us for the media. They have helped us with any questions we had to ask,” she said of the embassies.

Staff from the embassies also accompanied the family to the site in Goa where Danielle was murdered.

India tightened laws on rape and set up fast-track special courts after the brutal 2012 gang-rape of a young woman in a Delhi bus and her murder shocked the country.

However, Reuters investigations last year showed India had slashed its targeted number of such courts to 790 by 2026, from 2,600 projected earlier. – Additional reporting: Reuters

Ronan McGreevy

Ronan McGreevy

Ronan McGreevy is a news reporter with The Irish Times