Former Fianna Fáil finance minister Ray MacSharry’s lawyers have written to the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) seeking the so-called Ansbacher dossier in which he is named.
Mr MacSharry is one of five former politicians named in the Dáil by Sinn Féin TD Mary Lou McDonald as having been in a dossier of alleged offshore account holders. All five have rejected the claims.
Contacted by The Irish Times this morning, Mr MacSharry said: “My lawyers are dealing with matters”.
The law firm Arthur Cox, acting for Mr MacSharry, has written to the PAC requesting access to papers given to individual members of the committee.
However, it is understood that the Ansbacher dossier is not considered to be a committee document and therefore the committee is expected to respond that it is not in a position to hand over the dossier.
Mr MacSharry previously described the allegations as “absolutely outrageous” and last week said: “I have never had an Ansbacher account, I never was the beneficiary of one.”
He said he would be consulting his legal representatives to see what recourse he has, both against Gerry Ryan, the whistleblower who submitted the dossier about tax evasion to the Dáil Committee on Public Accounts, and Ms McDonald.
Ms McDonald last Wednesday also named under privilege on the Dáil record former PD leader Des O'Malley, former Fianna Fáil politicians Máire Geoghegan-Quinn and Gerard Collins, an 'S Barrett', assumed to be former Fianna Fáil TD Sylvie Barrett, and former Fine Gael minister Richie Ryan.
Mr MacSharry’s tough persona while overseeing public spending cuts while Charles Haughey’s minister for finance in the late 1980s earned Ray MacSharry the title “Mack the Knife”.
He became an MEP in 1984, before returning as a TD and minister for finance in 1987 in another Haughey-led government.
He was appointed Ireland’s European commissioner in 1988.