The Irish Mail on Sunday

Ewe better believe it – 12 miracle lambs born!

Developer who f led Ireland is back to ‘face the music’

- By Gerry Hand

IN what’s been described as ‘actually quite incredible’, two Meath farmers saw their sheep deliver sextuplets on the same day – and amazingly all 12 lambs survived.

A local vet has even described the births as ‘a million times a million to one shot’. The lambs were born on the farms of Bernard Fox in Kildalkey, and Jerry Teahan, just 15 minutes’ drive away in Longwood, on February 24.

Jerry’s son, Timmy, told the Irish Mail On Sunday: ‘It’s mad – it is extremely unusual for it to happen at all, never mind to two farmers close together.

‘I only heard a few days later that someone in Kildalkey had the same thing happen on the same day and I couldn’t believe it.

‘We have put ours down to having a top-class ram; he has sired a few sets of triplets and even a set of quadruplet­s, but we never expected this.

‘I was actually being homeschool­ed at the time but my brother was there when she had the first one around 9am, and at around 11am I nipped out in between French and Maths and she had delivered five. When I went back up at 1pm she had six around her, which kind of shocked me.’

Meanwhile further up the road, identical twin brothers Shane and Pauric Monaghan – who were off school due to lockdown restrictio­ns – were setting to work helping birth a sheep in Bernard Fox’s yard.

Bernard’s wife, Grace, said: ‘We were shocked when six popped out as she had been scanned for four. I am a vet myself and I know scanning is not an exact science, but, still, we never expected that many.

‘The two lads birthed her and I have to say without them assisting her there is no way the six would have survived. When we heard what had happened just up the road we thought it was unbelievab­le altogether. In all my time in the farming game, I never heard of it happening.’

John Drumm, who runs the Blackwater Veterinary clinic in Ballivor, added: ‘For two farms so close to each other to both have sextuplets delivered on the same day is actually quite incredible.’

ON-THE-RUN developer John Shee declared himself bankrupt this week after returning from self-imposed exile in France.

But Mr Shee, who was hiding from creditors in a luxury Nice home for years, had previously transferre­d properties and other assets worth millions to his wife, Mary.

Mrs Shee – who remains solvent and has not gone bankrupt – is a prominent Limerick personalit­y and a sister of renowned Limerick actor, director and playwright, Myles Breen.

Prior to the pandemic she had been dividing her time between Limerick and visits to her husband in his Riviera hideout – as she told gardaí she did not know of her husband’s whereabout­s.

This led Judge Peter Kelly to comment at a court hearing on the matter that there appeared to be ‘a kind of conspiracy of silence’ concerning Mr Shee’s whereabout­s.

John Shee first absconded in 2014 after creditors, including a number of banks and Nama, had been seeking unpaid debts worth tens of millions for years.

The debts related to failed boomtime property gambles.

Prior to going on the run, Mr Shee transferre­d the family home – Lishee, South Circular Road, Limerick – and a Ballsbridg­e apartment to his wife in 2009.

Mr Shee’s share of other real estate properties, jointly owned by Mr Shee and his business partners, were also transferre­d to Mary.

Separately from his failing property empire, Mr Shee was also part owner of nursing home group Mowlam Healthcare – a profitable firm that grew to become the largest provider in the country before

being sold last year for €50m.

In 2011, as his creditors sought repayment for his unpaid property debts, Mr Shee transferre­d his stake of Mowlam to his wife. At the time the firm was generating an income of €35m annually.

After Mr Shee absconded in the wake of a €24m judgment against him, the accounts of his nursing home firm were moved offshore as part of a scheme designed to give millions to his wife and children.

The scheme, involving a web of firms controlled from the British Virgin Islands, guaranteed a share of the first €2m paid out in dividends from Mowlam Healthcare each year, would go to Mrs Shee.

A share of the remainder of any dividends was then to be divided among the couple’s children.

The scheme also saw Mowlam re-registered as a private company, meaning its accounts could be kept secret even though it was largely funded by the taxpayer through the Fair Deal nursing homes support scheme.

After Mr Shee left Ireland, the Irish Mail on Sunday tracked him down to Nice where he was living in a first-floor apartment on the sought-after Boulevard Victor Hugo, which overlooks a garden of palm trees adjacent to the renowned five-star Boscolo Exedra Hotel.

Local council records confirmed that the apartment, estimated to be worth in the region of €500,000, is owned by John and Mary Shee.

The home is a short walk from Nice’s famous beach and old town with its many tourist attraction­s.

When approached in France by the Irish Mail on Sunday in 2015 Mr Shee said he had transferre­d his assets to his wife Mary as he was ill with cancer and ‘feared the worst’. ‘Despite the way it looks,’ he said, ‘I’m living a modest lifestyle and will probably have to bankrupt in due course.’

‘I am living a modest lifestyle’

He also said: ‘I do intend to come back when I’m fully recovered.’

One of Mr Shee’s central concerns at the time – apart from the implicatio­ns of the MoS story for his wife – was that the precise number of his apartment not be disclosed as this would lead to people seeking to serve summons on him.

‘This is not my wife’s fault. She was never involved in my business and never borrowed money. She feels she is being treated unfairly because she had no hand, act or part in my affairs.’

Now, six years later and partly due to the pandemic, he has returned to Ireland, declaring bankruptcy on February 22 and listing his address as the family home in Limerick.

‘Mr Shee wishes to correct his error,’ barrister Donnchadh Woulfe told Judge David Barniville

at a brief Commercial Court hearing prior to Mr Shee’s arrival in Ireland.

The court heard that because of Covid-19 and his extreme ill health, Mr Shee wanted to come home ‘to face the music’ and had prepared a draft statement of affairs – something he’d first promised to provide to the court prior to going on the run.

THEY are the images that tell the story of the last year. For its annual celebratio­n of the best photograph­y, the Press Photograph­ers’ Associatio­n of Ireland again this year drew entries from across all the printed media in the country. Of course, many images are informed by the Covid-19 restrictio­ns, but there are more straightfo­rward moments captured in nature, or of religious observance. There are humorous snaps of high-profile visitors to our shores – from Kate Middleton attempting hurling to Santa Claus taking a wellearned tea break.

Also included here is Irish Mail on Sunday photograph­er Michael Chester’s picture of Adam King, the boy who captured our hearts on the Late Late Toy show with his cutout ‘hug’. The selection included the Late Late host Ryan Tubridy posing as Mr Fox in an unusual get-up.

‘Press Photograph­er of the Year’ 2021 went to Tullamore native James Crombie of Inpho Photograph­y.James received two awards – first prize in sports action for his sublime image ‘Foggy Semi-Final’ as fog descended during the All-Ireland senior tie between Mayo and Tipperary, and second prize in sports non-action for his wonderful ‘He is Risen’ taken as a fan watched St Brigid’s play Boyle over a graveyard wall.

To view the exhibition, go to ppai.ie

 ??  ?? happy endinG: May, Brian, Rosie and Paudie Fox with six of the 12 lambs that were born to two ewes in
Co. Meath recently
happy endinG: May, Brian, Rosie and Paudie Fox with six of the 12 lambs that were born to two ewes in Co. Meath recently
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 ??  ?? Front page: Irish Mail on Sunday tracked down John Shee in 2015
Front page: Irish Mail on Sunday tracked down John Shee in 2015
 ??  ?? ‘Modest’: John Shee in Nice in 2015
‘Modest’: John Shee in Nice in 2015
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13 12
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