2002 inquiry found 200 with secret Ansbacher accounts

Even more secret Ansbacher accounts existed, official Gerry Ryan claimed

Ansbacher House in the Caymen Islands. Ansbacher was a bank in the Cayman Islands, but the nominally offshore money in the deposits was in fact held in Guinness & Mahon Bank on Dublin’s College Green
Ansbacher House in the Caymen Islands. Ansbacher was a bank in the Cayman Islands, but the nominally offshore money in the deposits was in fact held in Guinness & Mahon Bank on Dublin’s College Green

An official investigation in 2002 identified about 200 individuals who held secret Ansbacher accounts, including former taoiseach Charles Haughey.

Subsequent inquiries by the Revenue Commissioners yielded about €113 million in back taxes and penalties from account holders.

However, Gerry Ryan, who was the authorised officer charged originally with investigating the issue, has claimed there existed an even more secret set of Ansbacher accounts dating back to the 1970s which were held for the benefit of other very senior former politicians.

He told the Dáil Public Accounts Committee in a dossier sent to it last month that details of these accounts were held in a “black briefcase” and had never been made known publicly.

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Ansbacher was a bank in the Cayman Islands, but the nominally offshore money in the deposits was in fact held in Guinness & Mahon Bank on Dublin's College Green.

Official investigations found the Cayman trusts were under the control of the Irish people who placed money in them. The supposedly offshore money could be withdrawn by the wealthy depositors at Guinness & Mahon’s premises in Dublin.

Ryan maintained his investigations were terminated in July 2004 by the then minister for enterprise and employment, Mary Harney.

He said he told Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin, who succeeded Harney as minister in that department, that "a huge effort was made by certain persons to ensure that evidence of senior Fianna Fáil TDs' Cayman Islands accounts never came to light".

Moriarty and Mahon tribunals

Harney told the Dáil in 2005 she had shut down Ryan’s investigations as they had been under way for seven years.

She directed that material which Ryan had gathered should be handed over to the Moriarty and Mahon tribunals.

Ryan said he was unable to examine documents due to be delivered to him by Allied Irish Banks relating to very substantial offshore accounts in the name of Credit Suisse (Guernsey) Ltd.

He said most of this money was beneficially owned by Irish residents.

He said that in late 2003 and early 2004, as a result of detailed examination of records and interviews with former Guinness & Mahon employees, he obtained evidence confirming the existence of the “black briefcase”.

This contained details of Cayman Islands accounts held mainly for the benefit of senior Fianna Fáil TDs at the time.

Sellotape

He told the committee a transcript of an interview with one member of the bank’s staff indicated she had kept a list of the names of the Fianna Fáil politicians and a separate list of “their substantial Cayman account balances”.

The staff member, he said, would match up these lists with sellotape when Des Traynor, who was on the board of Guinness & Mahon, would ask for a list of the balances.

“The listing of names of the beneficial owners of these Cayman accounts was always kept in a separate safe to the list of the balances so that, if one fell into the wrong hands, no one would be able to match the senior politicians with their account balances,” he wrote.

In his dossier, Ryan named nine senior Fianna Fáil politicians of the time as being Cayman account holders.

According to him, a bank official had recognised the name of a prominent Fine Gael politician as being the beneficial owner of one of the accounts.

He contended there had been Fine Gael connections to Traynor which had not been examined by various investigations over the years.

Martin Wall

Martin Wall

Martin Wall is the Public Policy Correspondent of The Irish Times.