Irish Daily Star

Case of ex TD on coke driving rap is adjourned

- ■■Isabel HAYES

A FORMER TD accused of driving under the influence of cocaine has had his court case adjourned until June.

Colm Keaveney, with an address at Kilcrevant­y, Tuam, Co Galway, faces one count of driving with cocaine in his system. The offence is alleged to have happened on June 12 last year at Cummer in Tuam.

The case of the 53-yearold, who is currently a councillor on Galway County Council, came briefly before Tuam District Court yesterday.

He was not in court for the short hearing.

Blood

A BUNGLING robber who stole an empty cash-in-transit box at knife-point left a trail of green dye leading to his mother’s flat across the road after he tampered with it, a court has heard.

Leon Byrne (27) engaged in an “unsophisti­cated” operation when he robbed the tamper-proof box from a Brinks security guard at a Dublin petrol station in February 2022 before bursting it open, leaving identifyin­g green dye in the wake of his escape, Dublin Circuit Criminal Court heard.

The box had no cash inside as the security guard was about to empty an ATM at the garage, Detective Garda Jason Weir told Kate Egan BL, prosecutin­g.

A number of weeks later, Byrne, of Reuben Walk, Dublin 8, hijacked a taxi with a sawn-off shotgun and was jailed for seven and a half years. He has 76 previous conviction­s including assault, aggravated burglary, drugs and theft.

Jailing him for the cash-in-transit robbery offence yesterday, Judge Pauline Codd said she would impose a sentence on Byrne that was consecutiv­e to the one he is currently serving.

She handed down a four-year sentence, but suspended the final two and a half years.

It means Byrne will serve a further 18 months on top of his current sentence. He has been in custody since March 2022.

He pleaded guilty to one count of robbing a cash-in-transit box with a value of €3,000 at the Maxol garage on Crumlin Road on February 17, 2022.

Det Gda Weir told the court the Brinks security guards arrived at the garage around 6.20am on the day in question. One of the guards was exiting the van with an empty cash box in his hand when he saw Byrne leaning on a wall nearby.

Risk

The guard decided Byrne was not a risk and was just stepping out of the van when Byrne ran towards him brandishin­g a kitchen knife and screaming: “Robbery.”

The guard jumped back in the van and a brief struggle ensued as he tried to close the door on Byrne. However, Byrne pointed the knife towards his stomach and the guard gave him the box.

Byrne fled the scene to his mother’s apartment across the road.

Gardaí saw a splash of green dye in a stairwell of the block of flats across the road and followed a trail of ink to just outside Byrne’s mother’s apartment, where a knife was found outside.

A search warrant was obtained and green dye was found within the apartment and on clothing inside. The box was secured with a green dye tamper-proof device, the court heard. A neighbour told gardaí he saw a man throwing the box away. It was never recovered.

Defence counsel submitted this was “not a sophistica­ted offence”. “There was literally a trail from the incident itself over to the location of his mother’s flat,” she said.

 ?? ?? ACCUSED: Colm Keaveney
ACCUSED: Colm Keaveney

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