The trial of Aaron Brady, who was convicted in 2020 of the murder of Det Garda Adrian Donohoe, was the only case being heard as the pandemic took hold in Ireland and it was inappropriate for a jury to determine his guilt or innocence as people were dying from Covid-19, his lawyers have told the Court of Appeal.
Brady, who was jailed in 2020 for a minimum of 40 years for the murder of the detective, has launched a bid to overturn his conviction in a six-day hearing in what the appellate court heard today was “one of the longest cases ever” before it.
At Wednesday’s hearing before the three-judge appeals court Michael O’Higgins SC, representing Brady, said it was plausible that the jurors were worried about dying or about others close to them dying, which had deteriorated the quality of their deliberations.
Brendan Grehan SC, for the Director of Public Prosecutions, told the three-judge panel that there wasn’t “an iota of a suggestion, never mind evidence” that the jurors felt coerced to come to court and that no “unbearable burden” had been placed on them.
Buying a new car in 2025? These are the best ways to finance it
The best crime fiction of 2024: Robert Harris, Jane Casey, Joe Thomas, Kellye Garrett, Stuart Neville and many more
We’re heading for the second biggest fiscal disaster in the history of the State
Housing in Ireland is among the most expensive and most affordable in the EU. How does that happen?
Aaron Brady (32) previously of New Road, Crossmaglen, Co Armagh, is serving a life sentence with a 40-year minimum having been found guilty in 2020 of murdering Det Gda Donohoe (41) at Lordship Credit Union in Bellurgen, Co Louth on January 25th, 2013.
Brady was also sentenced to 14 years for the robbery, a sentence that will run concurrently with the life sentence. Det Gda Donohoe was on a cash escort when he was ambushed by a five-man gang and shot dead. The raiders stole just €7,000 in cash during the robbery, which lasted 58 seconds.
Brady was led into court today by prison officers and wore a navy suit and pink tie. The appeal is expected to mainly focus on defence complaints regarding two witnesses who gave testimony via video link from New York during the Covid-19 crisis.
Brady’s trial was also the longest murder case in Irish legal history, lasting 122 court days. He was found guilty of the murder of Det Gda Donohoe by an 11 to one majority jury verdict at the Central Criminal Court in August 2020.
Opening his appeal, Mr O’Higgins submitted that the trial court had erred in directing that the case should proceed during the Covid-19 lockdown and gave a breakdown of Covid-19 statistics to contextualise the circumstances.
Whilst the barrister accepted that all criminal trials at hearing in March 2020 continued to finalisation, he said most of those cases had finished within two to three days. “It was a ghost town in here and we were the only case working, driving in and out of here was something like a movie set, you have to ask yourself why was this case different from all other cases,” he said.
Counsel for the appellant said his client’s case continuing for several months after March 2020 had been “an unbearable burden for everyone and for the jury”. “This was an unprecedented set of circumstances, I don’t understand why this one case was being singled out over every other case to go on,” he argued.
It was not normal, Mr O’Higgins said, for jurors to come and work in a courtroom of 31 people when there was a “deadly disease out there”, where people were dying in significant numbers and everybody “was very, very frightened”. He added: “It is not appropriate to come in and work in that environment and to determine the guilt or innocence of a person in terms of that gravity”.
Mr O’Higgins said the now retired trial judge Mr Justice Michael White had heard defence arguments to abandon the trial but that the judge had exercised his discretion that the case should go on. “It was an extremely complicated case on many levels and the judge was wrong in those circumstances not to discharge the jury,” he said.
Commenting on Mr O’Higgins submission, Mr Justice John Edwards, presiding, asked the lawyer whether there was any evidence that the jury felt under “improper pressure” to which counsel said there was “none”.
Brendan Grehan SC, who represented the Director of Public Prosecutions at Brady’s trial, said while he accepted the “bona fides” of Mr O’Higgins’s argument in which he expressed public health and personal concerns, it was a subjective view and highly speculative to suggest that everybody was afraid they were going to die.
Further grounds of appeal include that the court erred in refusing to discharge the jury as a consequence of the cross examination of the appellant’s former solicitor, Danny McNamee.
The appeal continues tomorrow before Mr Justice Edwards, sitting with Ms Justice Isobel Kennedy and Ms Justice Tara Burns.