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Regency Hotel murder trial concludes with verdict due in April

Thursday, 26 Jan 2023

Updated / Thursday, 26 Jan 2023 22:40

By Laura Hogan

The Regency Hotel murder trial has concluded before the Special

Criminal Court.

A verdict in the case is due to be delivered on 17 April.

Judge Tara Burns remanded Gerard Hutch in custody until that date.

His two co-accused, Paul Murphy, 61, of Cherry Avenue, Swords, Co

Dublin and Jason Bonney, 52, of Drumnigh Wood, Portmarnock, Co Dublin,

have been remanded on continuing bail.

Earlier today, the three judge court heard closing statements on behalf

of Mr Murphy and Mr Bonney.

Both men have pleaded not guilty to helping a criminal gang commit the

murder of a member of the Kinahan organised crime group by providing

access to motor vehicles.

59-year-old Gerard Hutch of the Paddocks in Clontarf has pleaded not

guilty to murder.

In court this morning, Mr Bonney's senior counsel John Fitzgerald said

the case against his client was a "thin case" and that he would suggest

to the court there were holes in the case.

The trial previously heard that Mr Bonney identified himself as the

driver of a jeep on two occasions on the day in question.

Mr Fitzgerald told the court it was the State’s case that the driver

did not change during a six-hour period, however he said that this was

not the "only reasonable inference".

He said that the State had adopted a "mixed bag approach" to Mr

Bonney's truthfulness, relying on it as some stages and not at others.

The court previously heard evidence from two defence witnesses, who

testified it was Mr Bonney's deceased father Willie who was driving the

jeep around the time of the murder.

The court heard Mr Bonney did not tell gardaí this in his interview.

Today, Mr Bonney's defence team said that the only reasonable inference

was that he did not tell them this to protect his father.

'Assertions are not evidence'

This afternoon, the court heard the closing speech from defence counsel

for Paul Murphy.

Bernard Condon SC told court the prosecution had made "broad brush

assertions" in the case and that "assertions are not evidence".

He told the court that the "proper verdict" in relation to his client

was one of not guilty.

Mr Condon said when it came to his client Paul Murphy, the evidence was

circumstantial.

The defence said that every link in the chain of evidence had to be

proved beyond a reasonable doubt.

He said when you put the links together, there are other reasonable

conclusions other than guilt for this particular offence.

He said that the court was being invited by the prosecution to convict

based on "guilt by association and guilt by suspicion", rather than

guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Bernard Condon SC raised concerns about the quality of the CCTV footage

in the case and that the evidence on CCTV did not meet the necessary

standard.

He said a version of events given to gardaí by Mr Murphy had not been

contradicted.

Mr Condon said that cell site analysis "does not go anywhere" and was

consistent with what Mr Murphy told gardaí.

Mr Condon told the court that Paul Murphy knew Eddie Hutch, and seemed

to be a taxi driver for Patsy Hutch.

Bernard Condon said that if Paul Murphy lied about a key card found in

his car, the motivation for this was "available to the court", and it

was "the fear that existed in this city for people associated with the

Hutch family".

Mr Condon said the evidence that his car was travelling in convoy was

weak and not beyond a reasonable doubt.

He told the three judge court that the proper verdict in this case in

relation to his client, Paul Murphy, was one of not guilty.