Irish Independent

Ex-FG man has corruption conviction quashed by court

Former councillor had received longest-ever prison sentence for the offence

- Tim Healy

A FORMER Fine Gael town councillor who received the longest prison sentence for corruption ever handed down by the courts here has won a Supreme Court order quashing his conviction.

By a four-to-one majority, the court overturned the conviction of Fred Forsey Jr who was jailed in 2012 for an effective four years over receiving payments totalling €80,000 from a developer when he was a member of Dungarvan Town Council in 2006. He has served his sentence. The matter was adjourned for two weeks to allow the DPP to decide whether to seek a retrial.

The conviction was overturned over a legal error in the approach at Mr Forsey’s trial to the onus of proof on a corruption charge as set out in Section 4 of the Prevention of Corruption Acts (POCA). The error arose from the jury being told if it accepted a gift was given corruptly to Mr Forsey, the onus was on him to show, on the balance of probabilit­ies, the money was not given corruptly. Mr Forsey had denied corruption and said the money was a loan.

Giving the majority judgment, Ms Justice Iseult O’Malley said if an accused had to prove innocent receipt of payment on the balance of probabilit­ies, they would have to persuade the jury it was more likely than not they did not receive the money corruptly.

Because corrupt receipt is an “essential element” of the offence, that meant the accused would have to disprove that element and affirmativ­ely prove innocence. That was “a clear inroad on the presumptio­n of innocence”.

Mr Forsey was subjected to a trial process that breached his right to be presumed innocent, she ruled.

In his judgment, Mr Justice John MacMenamin agreed with the majority’s statement of the applicable law but disagreed the conviction should be quashed because he did not consider any “fundamenta­l injustice” occurred at trial.

The existence of a planning regime allowing for “potentiall­y huge windfall” profits by land rezoning creates a risk that financiall­y vulnerable persons with a role in the decision-making process will engage in corrupt activities. The constituti­onal right to private property is “not absolute” and is subject to the requiremen­ts of the common good.

Whether that right requires the law to permit such huge profits was not an issue in this appeal but formed part of the backdrop of what occurred.

The “one simple unavoidabl­e fact” was Mr Forsey did receive €80,000 from Michael Ryan to use his influence as a town councillor to advance a “rezoning” project concerning Mr Ryan’s land close to Dungarvan, he said. Mr Forsey had said the payments were a loan but there was no evidence Mr Ryan made any demands for its return or received any repayment and the evidence was the monies were spent on a holiday in Rome, two cars, new furniture, carpets and windows for a house.

Mr Forsey, of Coolagh Road, Abbeyside, Dungarvan, was convicted under the POCA in connection with receiving a total €80,000 in 2006 in three payments from Michael Ryan, a developer with an interest in a planning permission for developmen­t of land at Ballygagin, Co Waterford.

He denied the charges and claimed the monies were loans. He was convicted at Waterford Circuit Criminal Court and sentenced to six years imprisonme­nt, with the final two suspended. Having obtained newly instructed lawyers, an appeal was lodged in 2014 but was dismissed in 2016 by the Court of Appeal.

The Supreme Court agreed to hear a further appeal.

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 ?? PHOTO: PATRICK BROWNE ?? Jenny Forsey, the former wife of Fred Forsey.
PHOTO: PATRICK BROWNE Jenny Forsey, the former wife of Fred Forsey.

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