Man who stored body in freezer to be sentenced

A GALWAY man who beat a Dublin criminal to death and stored his body in a freezer for five years will be sentenced on Friday …

A GALWAY man who beat a Dublin criminal to death and stored his body in a freezer for five years will be sentenced on Friday at the Central Criminal Court.

Edward Griffin (45), Cimin Mor, Cappagh Road, Knocknacarra, Galway, pleaded guilty to the manslaughter of 52-year-old Patrick McCormack in June 2002 at a fish shop on Henry Street in Galway.

Michael O’Higgins SC, prosecuting, told Mr Justice Paul Carney that the defendant was in the drugs business, mainly cannabis, with McCormack. They had a falling out over money and had a fight.

Griffin had initially been charged with murder, but the DPP accepted his plea to manslaughter on the grounds of self-defence with excessive and unreasonable force used.

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According to Griffin, the only eyewitness, the Dubliner went to the fish shop where Griffin worked. Griffin gave him €13,000 in the preparation area at the back of the shop. When McCormack became angry and demanded more, Griffin turned to get more cash from the freezer.

The accused said McCormack then hit him over the back of the head with a wheel brace he had brought with him and both men began to fight. Griffin managed to take McCormack’s wheel brace and use it against him.

He said McCormack slipped on the ice as he was not wearing anti-slip shoes. He hit him again before going into the shop to get some rope with which to tie him and prevent him fighting. Griffin told gardaí he didn’t know that at that stage McCormack had “no fight left in him”.

When he came back with the rope, he realised McCormack was dead. He tied him up, put the body in a bin and into a walk-in freezer behind the shop. The dead man’s daughters said they spent five years wondering what happened to their father.

Through a victim-impact statements read to the court, Jeanine and Jade Brogan said that as his car had been found in Shannon, they believed he had left the country. They expected him to make contact every Christmas and were extremely disappointed when he did not send a card for Jeanine’s 21st birthday. When they found out he had died, they felt guilty about their doubt and anger. Jeanine returned to work for only a week after her father’s funeral before beginning a year-long battle with depression.

Griffin told gardaí he feared for his life and the safety of his family, who McCormack threatened to kill. He said McCormack also threatened to dismember a third party and to cut off Griffin’s fingers, one by one, until just one remained so he could call a mutual acquaintance for more money.

Griffin said the fight was a “life and death, blow for blow” struggle, which lasted what seemed like a lifetime.

He thought McCormack wouldn’t let it stop.

Det Sgt William Beirne said McCormack hadn’t notified his friends and family of his movements and they thought he had disappeared off the face of the earth. Two friends checked hotels in Galway and drew a blank, until his car was found abandoned.

He said Griffin had previous convictions for motor and public order offences, handling stolen property and drugs.

He described McCormack as a career criminal with 15 convictions dating back to his juvenile years. He was identified by his fingerprints using the Garda database.

He was jailed for five years in 1988 for robbery with a firearm and also had convictions for robbery with violence and larceny. He was previously Patrick Wynne, but changed his name by deed poll.

Defence barrister Feargal Kavanagh SC added that McCormack had once been shot by gardaí while attempting to commit armed robbery.

Det Sgt Beirne accepted that “it was going to be last man standing” in the fish shop that day and that Griffin was a cocaine addict at the time.