Wicklow People

Teen stole from employer to pay €6,000 drug debt

MAN (19) GIVEN 18-MONTH SUSPENDED SENTENCE

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A WICKLOW teenager who stole two bags of cash while he was working with security company G4S has been given an 18-month suspended sentence.

Stephen O’Connor (19) stole a total of €12,480 in order to pay off a €6,000 drug debt. He stayed off from work sick after he took the second bag of cash because he said he knew he was going to be caught.

O’Connor, of Castle Manor, Newcastle, Co Wicklow, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to theft of €4,890 and €7,590 from G4S Cash Services Ltd on October 31 and November 2, 2017. He has no previous conviction­s.

Judge Karen O’Connor said there were certain ‘terms’ used in evidence such as ‘on-tick’ and ‘taxed’ referring to the fact that the teenager’s original cocaine debt had been €4,000, but had been ‘taxed’ and increased to €6,000.

She said these terms were indicative of ‘the despicable and reprehensi­ble behaviour of those involved in drugs’, giving young people cocaine ‘on-tick’ to get them addicted to drugs and then increasing the drug debt.

Judge O’Connor said O’Connor’s drug debt was ‘no defence and no excuse for his criminalit­y’ and described him as ‘a hard working person who had made a huge mistake’.

She acknowledg­ed that his family was helping him take responsibi­lity for his crime. She noted that G4S had been paid back with the help of his mother taking out a bank loan, which O’Connor has to pay back.

Judge O’Connor sentenced O’Connor to 18 months in prison which she suspended in full on strict conditions.

‘It is clear to me that you are making every effort to put this behind you with the help of a very loving and very supportive family. If you take their support you will never return to those days again,’ the judge said before she wished O’Connor well and advised him ‘to put this behind you’.

Garda Ian Ward told Diana Stuart BL, prosecutin­g, that G4S noticed the cash was missing and through analysis of the CCTV footage noticed that O’Connor had been processing the cash on the relevant days.

An internal investigat­ion was launched and O’Connor was asked to come in as he had been on sick leave. He made immediate admissions and fully co-operated with the subsequent garda investigat­ion.

Gda Ward said O’Connor revealed he was under pressure to get money to pay back a cocaine debt that he had run up and admitted he had hidden the bags of cash under his jumper. He said he didn’t initially know how much money was in the bags.

O’Connor said he had been paying the debt back through his wages but told gardaí that it seemed he was ‘not paying them off quickly enough’. A €4,000 debt was ‘taxed’ and increased to €6,000.

Gda Ward agreed with Pieter Le Vert BL, defending, that as the theft itself was not covered on the CCTV cameras, O’Connor’s plea was ‘helpful’ to their investigat­ion.

Mr Le Vert said his client had since got a new job and was working to pay back his mother, who took out a bank loan to pay back G4S.

Counsel said that when his client’s parents found out about the thefts, they effectivel­y put him ‘under quarantine’, by taking his phone away and ensuring that he was with one of them at all times.

‘This is a hard working young man who is trying to rebuild his life after this terrible mistake,’ Mr Le Vert said.

‘It was a very serious breach of faith with his employers, his family and indeed his own self image,’ counsel added before he asked Judge O’Connor to take into account his client’s lack of previous conviction­s and the fact that he had not come to garda attention since.

 ??  ?? LEFT: Emma Lawless, Dr Marie Louise Butler, Lynsey Jones, Catriona Faye, Natasha Hatton, Managing Director Caroline Byrne, Dr Sam Hamilton, Dave Sheehan, Niamh Freaney, Jean Forkin, Rosie Byrne, Ann Fogarty, Teresa Kirwan, Michele Whelan, George Kirya and Carol O’Brien.
LEFT: Emma Lawless, Dr Marie Louise Butler, Lynsey Jones, Catriona Faye, Natasha Hatton, Managing Director Caroline Byrne, Dr Sam Hamilton, Dave Sheehan, Niamh Freaney, Jean Forkin, Rosie Byrne, Ann Fogarty, Teresa Kirwan, Michele Whelan, George Kirya and Carol O’Brien.
 ??  ?? Niamh Ownes at the Bray Seafront art and photograph­y exhbition.
Niamh Ownes at the Bray Seafront art and photograph­y exhbition.

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