Bray People

JUDGEMENT IS RESERVED IN HERDA APPEAL

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A 30-YEAR-OLD woman who drove a man who loved her into a deep harbour, where he drowned, must wait to hear the outcome of an appeal against her conviction for murder.

Marta Herda, of Pairc Na Saile, Emoclew Road, Arklow, knew her passenger could not swim when she drove her Volkswagen Passat through the crash barriers at South Quay, Arklow, shortly before 6 a.m. on March 26, 2013.

Herda had pleaded not guilty to the murder of 31-year-old Hungarian man Csaba Orsos but a jury at the Central Criminal Court found her guilty and she was given the mandatory life sentence by Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy on July 28, 2016.

The Central Criminal Court heard that the Polish waitress escaped through the driver’s window at the harbour but her colleague’s body was found on a nearby beach later that day. A post-mortem exam found that 31-year-old Csaba Orsos died from drowning and not from injuries related to the crash.

The trial heard that the handbrake had been applied before the car entered the water and that the only open window was the driver’s.

Herda has moved to appeal her conviction on a number of grounds broadly including the issue of recklessne­ss; Whether or not the driving into the river was accidental or deliberate; If it was deliberate, whether ‘assault manslaught­er’ was still open to the jury; ‘Alleged confession­s’ and the judge’s charge to the jury with regard to circumstan­tial evidence.

After a two-day of hearing in the Court of Appeal, Mr Justice George Birmingham, who sat with Mr Justice Alan Mahon and Ms Justice Máire Whelan, said on Wednesday last (July 19) that the three-judge court would reserve its judgment. It is the former attorney general’s first criminal appeal hearing since her appointmen­t to the

court last month.

 ??  ?? LEFT: Marta Herda at a previous court sitting.
LEFT: Marta Herda at a previous court sitting.

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