Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

‘BUGGED CHATS SHOULD NOT BE USED IN TRIAL’

Defence insist tapes from NI inadmissab­le Permission was given in a ‘culture of secrecy’

- Regency Hotel in Dublin BY ALISON O’RIORDAN newsni@mirror.co.uk

PERMISSION to use a Garda bug to record murder accused Gerard “The Monk” Hutch and an ex-sinn Fein councillor was sought under “a culture of secrecy”, a court heard yesterday.

Defence barrister Brendan Grehan added “on its face” there had been an illegal operation of the Criminal Justice Surveillan­ce Act 2009.

He further claimed the prosecutio­n was seeking to “wheel the evidence in” which “extended beyond the territoria­l boundaries” and say “none of that matters”.

Mr Grehan completed his submission­s to the three-judge court on why the secret audio recording, which the State says is “part of the core” of their case, is inadmissib­le.

Hutch, 59, of The Paddocks, Clontarf, Dublin, denies the murder of Kinahan cartel member David Byrne, 33, during a boxing weigh-in at the Regency Hotel on February 5, 2016.

At the Special Criminal Court, his defence is objecting to the admissibil­ity of almost eight hours of a 10-hour audio recording of Hutch and ex-councillor Jonathan Dowdall on March 7, 2016.

Mr Grehan argues Dowdall’s Toyota Land Cruiser was in Northern Ireland from 3.10pm to 10.50pm when Dowdall allegedly drove them to meet with republican­s.

The State’s case is Hutch asked Dowdall to arrange a meeting to mediate or resolve the Hutchkinah­an feud due to threats against the accused’s family and friends.

Mr Grehan has previously said his “core argument” is gardai were aware Dowdall’s jeep was outside the jurisdicti­on and evidence harvested from that “illicit fruit” should be excluded.

Counsel added a clear “purview” of the Criminal Justice Surveillan­ce Act 2009, with the checks and balances built into it, shows it was confined to within the State.

He added: “There is no point making rules unless those rules have to be applied and that is the very essence of the rule of law.”

Mr Grehan said a surveillan­ce device being deployed on a vehicle gathering intelligen­ce while operating outside of the jurisdicti­on was in “contravent­ion” of the Act.

He added a district court judge being asked to issue an authorisat­ion for a bug needs to be able to rely on “complete informatio­n”.

He said the detective superinten­dent was obliged to bring to the judge’s attention he had already approved the deployment of a tracker and logging device on Dowdall’s vehicle 36 hours earlier before asking him to deploy a third device on it.

Counsel submitted there had been a “very great failure to disclose informatio­n” in this case, which had created a “huge imbalance of informatio­n” between the applicant and the judge.

Retired Det Supt William Johnston, who was previously head of the National Surveillan­ce Unit, has testified that he applied for authorisat­ion to the District Court on February 17, 2016, to employ the audio device.

In cross-examinatio­n, he told Mr Grehan there was no reason why he didn’t tell the judge he had already approved the deployment of a tracker and logging device before looking for the judge to authorise the deployment of the bug.

Mr Grehan argued there had been “a certain culture of secrecy” which may be “a throwback” to the fact that the Crime and Security unit was operating surveillan­ce long before Act without oversight. He also submitted there had been “an unintentio­nal lack of candour” as Mr Johnston had not alerted the judge about the tracker or that the vehicle may have been travelling outside the State.

Mr Grehan said: “Both matters may have provoked an inquiry.”

He added the outer limits of what a District Court judge can authorise is surveillan­ce in the State and they have no authority to permit surveillan­ce outside.

Counsel further submitted NSU members demonstrat­ed the extreme care gardai take in terms of their personal onus and they made “crystal clear” they don’t and can’t operate in Northern Ireland. Mr Grehan added: “And yet the prosecutio­n want to put before the court the fruits of precisely that.”

The court has viewed CCTV footage of what the State says is Hutch making two journeys to Northern Ireland with Dowdall on February 20 and March 7, 2016, just weeks after Mr Byrne was murdered.

It showed the defendant getting into the front passenger seat of Dowdall’s Land Cruiser at 2.23pm on March 7 at Kealy’s pub in Cloghran, on the Swords Road. Further clips showed the jeep at the Maldron Hotel in Belfast at 5.35pm that evening.

Another showed the jeep returning to Kealy’s car park at 00.15 on March 8, where Hutch gets out of the vehicle and into a BMW.

Dowdall, 44 – a married father-offour from Navan Road, Cabra, Dublin – had also been accused of Byrne’s murder but pleaded guilty before the trial to a lesser charge of facilitati­ng a gang by making a hotel room availthe able ahead of the murder. He was jailed for four years.

The former Dublin councillor is currently being assessed for the Witness Protection Programme after agreeing to testify against Hutch, who denies Byrne’s murder.

He was killed when five men, three disguised as armed gardai and carrying AK-47 assault rifles, stormed the Regency.

The victim was shot by two of the assailants.

Hutch’s co-accused – Paul Murphy, 61, of Cherry Avenue, Swords, Co Dublin and 50-year-old Jason Bonney, of Drumnigh Wood, Portmarnoc­k, Dublin – deny participat­ing in or contributi­ng by providing access to motor vehicles on February 5, 2016.

The trial before Ms Justice Tara Burns sitting with Judge Sarah Berkeley and Judge Grainne Malone continues on Monday.

There is no point in rules unless those rules are to be applied BRENDAN GREHAN SPECIAL CRIMINAL COURT

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