Belfast Telegraph

Man held over Belfast airport cash haul has charges thrown out

- BY MICHAEL McHUGH

THE case against a Dubliner arrested on criminal property charges while carrying more than €20,000 (£17,270) in cash has been dismissed.

John Gilligan was stopped at Belfast Internatio­nal Airport last year with bundles of money in his baggage ahead of a flight to Alicante in Spain.

Prosecutor­s argued that Gilligan (67), from Greenforth Crescent, intended to purchase a prescripti­on drug in Spain for distributi­on on the Irish drugs black market and charged him with possession of criminal property and attempting to remove criminal property.

Defence barrister Sean Devine said it was a tenuous case based around a small piece of cardboard found in his possession with the name ‘Zopiclone’ on it.

Mr Devine said: “The authoritie­s in my respectful submission, have started off with a theory.

“They posit a theory and that theory is dismissed in categorica­l terms by my client and after that it is tumbleweed.”

A lawyer told Coleraine Magistrate­s Court the cash was contained in two bundles and wrapped using clear tape.

Mr Gilligan said the money was intended to be used to rent a property in Spain and had been donated by relatives.

He had a piece of paper with the name of the drug printed on it but said it was for his personal use, and followed pain near his ribs which he suffered from bullet wounds.

He was questioned about the anti-insomnia prescribed medication Zopiclone, which investigat­ors said was “prevalent” in the Irish drugs market.

The defendant had denied planning to smuggle Zopiclone from Spain into Ireland, where it commanded a higher price on the streets, prosecutio­n barrister Robin Steer told the court.

Mr Gilligan was also in possession of a number of mobile phone Sim cards and top-up cards, which prosecutor­s argued were to be used to cover his tracks following phone calls in Spain.

Mr Steer summarised the accused’s defence as: “It is a mere coincidenc­e that I am bringing this money out in cash and going to an area where Zopiclone is cheaper and widely available.”

Prosecutor­s disclosed a series of flights taken by Mr Gilligan departing from Belfast for Spain but returning to Dublin.

They were booked at short notice and the court was told the reason he used Belfast was because he would be less recognisab­le there than in the Republic.

A magistrate dismissed the case and said suspicion was insufficie­nt to warrant a conviction in criminal courts.

 ??  ?? Freed: John Gilligan
Freed: John Gilligan

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