The jury in the trial of the former DUP leader Jeffrey Donaldson for child sex offences has been sent out to consider its verdict. In his direction to the jury of seven men and five women on Thursday morning, Judge Paul Ramsey said in regard to several of the incidents in dispute – including the alleged rape of one of the complainants when she was a primary school child – there was a “head-on collision” between the Donaldsons and the complainants. It was a matter for the jury, he said, to decide whether they believed the evidence given by the complainants who claimed they were abused by Jeffrey Donaldson, or Donaldson’s evidence that it “did not happen”. He said if the men and women of the jury believed the complainants, and found their evidence “reliable”, then they must convict, and find Donaldson guilty, but if they were “not sure or not satisfied”, then they must find him not guilty. Donaldson, wearing a dark grey suit and a pink tie, sat in the dock at the back of the court with his arms folded while the judge delivered his remarks.The former DUP leader’s trial began at Newry Crown Court four weeks ago. Donaldson (63), with an address in Dromore, Co Down, faces 18 charges – rape, four counts of gross indecency with or towards a child and 13 counts of indecent assault on a female on dates between 1985 and 2008. The charges relate to two women who claim Jeffrey Donaldson abused them when they were children from the ages of around seven or eight to 12 to 13. His wife Eleanor (60), of the same address, was charged with four counts of aiding and abetting and one count of cruelty to children. Jeffrey Donaldson. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA Wire She did not face a criminal trial as she was ruled medically unfit and the jury must instead decide whether she committed the acts alleged on the basis of trial of the facts. Jeffrey Donaldson was one of Northern Ireland’s most high-profile and longest-standing politicians at the time of his arrest in March 2024. Two months before, he had negotiated the DUP back into Stormont after a two-year boycott over Brexit had led to the collapse of the North’s political institutions. He was suspended from the party and stood down as party leader and was replaced by the then deputy leader Gavin Robinson. He did not stand in the UK general election that July, and lost his seat as MP for Lagan Valley, which he had held since 1997.
Jeffrey Donaldson trial: Jury begins deliberations after judge’s final directions
Judge tells jurors case turns on whether they accept complainants’ or defendant’s account











