Murphy seeks acquittal on Omagh conspiracy charge

COUNSEL FOR Colm Murphy, who is accused of conspiracy in relation to the 1998 Omagh bomb which killed 29 people and injured more…

COUNSEL FOR Colm Murphy, who is accused of conspiracy in relation to the 1998 Omagh bomb which killed 29 people and injured more than 300 yesterday, applied for a direction that his client should be acquitted.

Michael O’Higgins SC, submitted to the Special Criminal Court in Dublin that his client should be acquitted because of the lack of evidence against him.

The application came on the 19th day of Murphy’s trial after the State case concluded. Murphy , a 57-year-old native of Co Armagh, with an address at Jordan’s Corner, Ravensdale, Co Louth, has pleaded not guilty to conspiring with another person to cause an explosion likely to endanger life or cause serious injury to property in the State or elsewhere between August 13th and 16th, 1998.

Yesterday, Mr O’Higgins submitted that alleged admissions made by Murphy while in Garda custody in February 1999 were not admissible and that without these alleged admissions there was no evidence against him.

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He also submitted that evidence relating to the Omagh bombing was not admissible because Murphy is facing a conspiracy charge and is not charged with the actual bomb attack.

Mr O’Higgins told the court that the defence in the trial is “seriously impaired” because of the absence from the case of Det Garda Liam Donnelly who has died. The court has heard that scientific procedures had established that interview notes taken by the late Det Garda Donnelly and Det Garda John Fahy with Murphy were rewritten.

Both detectives were later charged with perjury and forgery but were acquitted.

Prosecution counsel, Tom O’Connell SC, submitted that the explosion which Murphy conspired to cause was the bomb that exploded in Omagh.

He said it was the prosecution case that Murphy lent two mobile phones to a man, knowing that they were going to be used in “a bombing run” to Northern Ireland. Mr O’Connell said that evidence of mobile phone traffic showed that Murphy’s phone was used in “the scout car” and the other phone was used in “the bomb car”. The prosecution is claiming that Murphy lent two mobile phones to a man who was involved in transporting the car bomb from Castleblayney, Co Monaghan, to Omagh, where it exploded on August 15th, 1998, killing 29 people, including a woman pregnant with twins, and injuring more than 300.

The trial will continue on Tuesday.