Wicklow People

Ex-Anglo executive seeking legal costs

TIARNAN O’MAHONEY SUCCESSFUL­LY APPEALED OUTCOME OF 2015 TRIAL

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EX-ANGLO Irish Bank executive, Tiarnan O’Mahoney, is seeking legal costs of his original trial for conspiring to conceal bank accounts from the Revenue Commission­ers, on top of costs for his successful appeal against conviction and subsequent acquittal.

Mr O’Mahoney (58) of Glen Pines, Enniskerry, was originally found guilty by a jury in 2015 of knowingly furnishing false informatio­n and conspiring to defraud the Revenue as well as conspiring to have accounts deleted from the bank’s internal system. The accounts were alleged to have been connected to the bank’s former CEO Seán Fitzpatric­k.

Mr O’Mahoney successful­ly appealed his conviction in March 2016 with the Court of Appeal holding that a substantia­l number of documents were wrongfully admitted into evidence and that the false informatio­n charge was brought outside of a ten year time limit.

A retrial was ordered in respect of Mr O’Mahoney, Anglo’s former Chief Operations Officer, which resulted in his acquittal on all charges by direction of the trial judge last year. Mr O’Mahoney has no conviction­s arising out of the so-called Anglo trials.

The Court of Appeal had awarded costs to Mr O’Mahoney, who has not been on legal aid, for his successful appeal. However, an issue has arisen over precisely ‘what was said’ in relation to costs for the original trial and retrial.

President of the Court of Appeal Mr Justice George Birmingham directed that the digital audio recording of the order for a retrial be made available to both sides, on foot of an applicatio­n by Mr O’Mahoney’s lawyers.

Counsel for Mr O’Mahoney, Brendan Grehan SC, said his client was seeking costs for the original trial and the matter came before Judge Martin Nolan on Monday. Judge Nolan was the judge for Mr O’Mahoney’s retrial.

Mr O’Mahoney, who was not in court for the brief matter, originally stood trial alongside Anglo’s former company secretary, Bernard Daly (68) of Collins Avenue West, Whitehall, in Dublin and an assistant manager in the bank Aoife Maguire (64) of Rothe Abbey, South Circular Road, in Kilmainham.

Mr Daly and Mr O’Mahoney successful­ly appealed their conviction­s and a retrial was ordered in respect of Mr O’Mahoney only. Ms Maguire successful­ly appealed against the severity of her sentence only and her conviction still stands.

Quashing Mr Daly’s and Mr O’Mahoney’s conviction­s in March 2016, Mr Justice George Birmingham said they ‘should not have had to stand trial’ on the charge of furnishing false informatio­n because the proceeding­s were not commenced within the ten year time limit.

They also successful­ly contended that a substantia­l number of documents were wrongly admitted in evidence.

Mr Justice Birmingham said the documents, which the trial judge ruled admissible, were ‘vital to the prosecutio­n case’. These documents allowed the witnesses – a fraud investigat­or within Anglo, Patrick Peake – to trace for the jury and to explain and illustrate the means by which Anglo accounts were opened, kept, how ownership was designated, how funds were sourced, moved between different accounts and how the names of different accounts were changed or re-designated at various times.

In circumstan­ces where crucial documentar­y evidence was admitted in breach of the hearsay rule, Mr Justice Birmingham said the court must uphold this ground of appeal.

The question of a re-trial did not arise for Mr Daly because, the court concluded, there was insufficie­nt evidence to go before the jury.

Mr O’Mahoney’s position was different. His ‘omnibus’ ground of appeal concerning multiple complaints related to the trial in the summer of 2015 did not preclude the ordering of a re-trial, Mr Justice Birmingham said.

At O’Mahoney’s subsequent retrial, Judge Martin Nolan directed the jury to acquit him on all charges.

Judge Nolan said that after considerin­g arguments from both sides he had reluctantl­y come to the conclusion that the case was ‘too tenuous’ to go to the jury and a conviction would be ‘perverse’.

‘The evidence of conspiracy to do the acts with which Mr O’Mahoney is charged is too tenuous, too remote in both substance and in time,’

He said he was not satisfied that any properly directed jury could convict in these circumstan­ces, as they would be asked to speculate and to fill in gaps in the evidence adduced during the trial.

Judge Nolan said there was every reason to be suspicious of Mr O’Mahoney’s activities in October and November 2003, and his subsequent dealings with gardaí. But, he said, in the absence of formal evidence of conspiracy with Aoife Maguire this was not enough.

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 ??  ?? Tiarnan O’Mahoney.
Tiarnan O’Mahoney.

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