Murder accused feared rival biker group would ‘burn down’ house

Prosecution alleges Alan McNamara shot Andrew O’Donoghue in head with shotgun

Alan ‘Cookie’ McNamara (51), from Mountfune, Murroe, Co Limerick has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Andrew O’Donoghue. Photograph: Collins Courts
Alan ‘Cookie’ McNamara (51), from Mountfune, Murroe, Co Limerick has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Andrew O’Donoghue. Photograph: Collins Courts

A man accused of shooting dead a biker told gardaí that “tensions were running high” after members of a rival motorcycle club threatened to burn his house down with his family inside.

Alan ‘Cookie’ McNamara (51), from Mountfune, Murroe, Co Limerick has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Andrew O’Donoghue on June 20th, 2015 at Mountfune.

Also on trial is Mr McNamara's stepson Robert Cusack (28), of Abington, Murroe who has pleaded not guilty to impeding Mr McNamara's apprehension knowing or believing him to have committed a serious offence.

Sgt Brian O’Connor and Det Garda Niall Fitzgerald told prosecuting counsel John O’Sullivan BL that they interviewed Mr McNamara at Roxboro Garda station in Limerick on June 21st, 2015.

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Sgt O’Connor agreed that Mr McNamara told them that members of the Road Tramps motorcycle group had “tried to beat the shit out of me” on the Friday night.

When asked about the shooting, he said he felt sorry for Mr O’Donoghue’s child and added: “I didn’t look for no trouble. I just want to live my life and get on with it.”

Describing events that weekend he said the bikers attacked him outside Kelly’s Pub in Doon, Co Limerick, struck him on the head, beat him to the ground and took his waistcoat, which had a “patch” of the rival Caballeros biker group sewn into it. He said his wife was also attacked.

Mr McNamara told gardaí he did not know how the men knew he was in Doon and thought they might be watching him.

Followed

On his way home, after the attack, he said he passed the Road Tramps clubhouse and was followed by men in a maroon car, one of whom was carrying a gun.

He told interviewing gardaí that CCTV outside the club would show his car going past, followed by the maroon car. The men stopped outside Mr McNamara’s home and, in front of his wife and young child, he said they threatened to burn down his house with his family in it.

“They would kill us,” he said.

Mr McNamara got his children out of the house and spent that Friday night in fear of what was going to happen next.

“Were they going to burn down my house?” he said, adding that he feared for his life and those of his family. At one point he considered contacting the Road Tramps club but feared that might make things worse.

The following day, the day of the shooting, Mr McNamara said “tensions were running high” and his wife gave him four Valium that morning to calm him down.

Sorry

In a later interview he said he was sorry that Mr O’Donoghue was dead and added: “I know AOD [Mr O’Donoghue] is dead. I’m dead. My family is going to suffer.”

In an interview on June 22nd, he described the situation as “a disaster”, and said he would not be in this mess if they had not called to his house.

The jury also heard from Det Garda Ursula Cummins of the ballistics section at Garda headquarters who said she examined shotgun cartridges found at the scene of Mr O’Donoghue’s shooting. She compared them with cartridges fired from a gun found in a wooded area behind Mr McNamara’s home.

She said she looked at marks left on the cartridges by the firing pin under a microscope and was satisfied that one of the cartridges, a 12-gauge shotgun cartridge, was fired by that gun. The other was inconclusive.

Analysing the gun, she said it was sawn to a barrel length of 37cm and therefore could not be a legally held firearm in Ireland. The minimum legal length for a shotgun barrel in Ireland is 60cm.

The trial continues.