A deputy headteacher who killed his family targeted his wife and son first because he feared they would stop him from slitting his two youngest sons’ necks before he hanged himself, an inquest heard.

Alan Hawe, his schoolteacher wife Clodagh and their three children Liam, 13, Niall, 11, and Ryan, six, were found dead in their home near Ballyjamesduff, Co Cavan, Ireland on the morning of August 29, 2016.

He may have targeted Clodagh and Liam first for fear they would fight back, leading pathologist Michael Curtis told the inquest.

During the hearing, Garda Aisling Walsh broke down and wiped away tears as she recalled the harrowing scene at Oakdene, Barconey.

Mrs Hawe was found lying face down in her pyjamas and dressing gown on the sitting room sofa. She had suffered severe head and neck injuries and there was a large pool of blood under the chair, the inquest was told.

A small axe and a knife with Alan Hawe’s hand print was found beside the sofa, gardai told the hearing. Mr Hawe was found hanged in the hall.

The inquest was told two of the boys, Liam and Niall, were found in their beds in the upstairs room they shared. A knife was found in the bedroom.

Ms Walsh wept as she told the inquest: ‘They had no signs of life. They had their duvets on them.’

Six-year-old Ryan was found alone in his bedroom and also had a duvet over him. Another knife was found on his pillow, the inquest heard.

The coroner spoke directly to Ms Walsh as she tried to compose herself: ‘Nobody can imagine what it was like that morning.’

During the inquest today, one of the country’s leading pathologists said the school principal may have targeted his wife and eldest son first for fear they may try to stop him.

Amid audible shock in Cavan courthouse, Michael Curtis explained how Alan Hawe killed his family.

The deputy state pathologist was asked by coroner Mary Flanagan if his examinations offered any insight into who died first.

‘It’s impossible to say with certainty,’ he said.walsh

‘The impression I get is that, essentially, working on the basis that dispatching Clodagh and the older boy first, he would have rendered the possibility of a physical challenge less likely.’

The deaths would have been rapid, Dr Curtis said.

As he outlined in graphic detail how Mrs Hawe and her three sons died, her mother Mary Coll and sister Jacqueline Connolly sobbed and shook as they were comforted by relatives in the front row of the public gallery.

As well axe and stab wounds, Mrs Hawe had a wound and two fractured bones on her right hand, which Dr Curtis suggested could have been defensive injuries

The boys, who were found in their beds, suffered stab wounds.

Liam also had injuries to his left arm and hands while Niall had an injury to a finger on his right hand, the inquest was told.

Dr Curtis suggested these may also have been defensive.

The pathologist said there were similarities in how the three boys died, and it was difficult to conclude this was coincidental.

(DailyMAIL)