Wicklow People

Man gambled money partner gave him to buy site for house

MAN IS JAILED FOR ‘ABSOLUTE BREACH OF TRUST’ OVER NON-EXISTENT SITE

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would not have suspended any of the sentence but for the fact that Williams’ sister had offered to gift him €10,000 by way of compensati­on for Ms Butler for the losses she had suffered.

‘But for the generosity of your sister, you’d be going to prison for a very long time,’ said Judge Nolan.

The judge said Williams had decided during the course of his relationsh­ip with Ms Butler that he would obtain money from her by false pretences.

‘He convinced her he was going to buy land and she re-mortgaged her property and gave him €22,500. The land was fictional and the agreement to buy it was fictional. He gambled the money,’ said Judge Nolan.

He said Ms Butler, with good reason, had ‘lost faith in humanity’ and suffered illness and severe financial loss which she was still paying for.

‘She lost confidence and suffered significan­t mental distress. She was totally taken in. He meant her to be totally taken in. He deceived her; he was extremely duplicitou­s,’ said Judge Nolan, adding that it was a ‘huge breach of trust’.

Garda Richard Redmond told Tony McGillicud­dy BL, prosecutin­g, that Ms Butler had become acquainted with Michael Williams when they were both involved in the horse industry.

The pair were in a casual relationsh­ip for two years from April 2007. The court heard that Williams suggested to Ms Butler that they would have a child, build a house together on land in Rathnew and run livery stables and kennels.

Ms Butler had at the time begun re-mortgaging her own properties as she wanted to clear a number of loans and only have one lump sum repayment a month.

Williams told her a man had offered him four acres for sale in Rathnew for €50,000 but had offered to drop the price by €5,000 if they moved quickly.

Ms Butler’s re-mortgage came through in February 2008 and she withdrew money and gave Williams €22,000 in cash.

When Ms Butler asked Williams where he was getting his share of the money to pay for the site, he said a friend of his, a ‘dog man’ from Kerry, was giving him the cash, and that another friend would ‘push through’ the planning with Wicklow County Council.

Ms Butler told gardaí later that after she gave Williams the money, he ‘went quiet’ about the land and said it would be planted with trees for the next few years and not to hassle his friend who was helping them with planning as he was ‘doing them a huge favour’.

Ms Butler asked Williams for a map of where the site was, but he gave her a hand-drawn map which she said she was unable to follow. In January 2010, she texted Williams seeking something in writing to show that she owned two acres of land.

He replied that he was not willing to do so and she replied, ‘Why not Mick? What have you got to hide?’ He texted back that he had already told her three times that the land would be in her name.

They subsequent­ly met and Ms Butler found out that the land in question had never even been sold.

Gardaí met with Williams by appointmen­t at Dun Laoghaire Garda Station and asked him if the site in question had ever existed, to which he replied that it had not.

He told gardaí that he had gambled the money, believing at the time that he would pay it back as he thought he was going to win a fortune in the betting.

‘Looking back now, I would have done anything to get a bet,’ he said.

In a Victim Impact Report read out on her behalf, Ms Butler said Williams had promised that they would have a future together, but that it was ‘only lies’ and that he ‘never had any intention’ of them being together.

Shesaidshe­tookoutamo­rtgage of €50,000 for home improvemen­ts and gave €22,000 to Williams to buy land which she now knew didn’t exist.

She said she began to suffer from stress and became extremely unwell with stomach problems at the end of 2010 and during 2011. Ms Butler said she was now only in receipt of a disability pension and still had her mortgage to repay.

She said she had been left with serious trust issues and low self-esteem, that she had no confidence and that it had impacted on her relationsh­ip with her daughter.

The court heard that Ms Butler had had to rely on help from St Vincent de Paul for paying ESB bills and with food vouchers at Christmas.

Vincent Heneghan SC, defending, accepted that his client had committed a ‘mean-minded crime’ and an ‘absolute breach of trust’.

He said Williams was one of seven children whose mother had died in childbirth and that there had been domestic violence in his background. The court heard that Williams had a job driving wood chip to various stud farms, through which he got to know stable lads who gave him tips of horses.

He started gambling and ‘thought he was good at it’ but became quickly indebted. Williams is now living and working as a delivery man in the UK, where he is an involved father to two young children and supports his partner financiall­y.

He earns about €400 a week and brought what his counsel described as a ‘paltry sum’ of €500 to court. He has no previous conviction­s.

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