Barrister cross-examined by man accused of making 'devastating' death threat

ireland
Barrister Cross-Examined By Man Accused Of Making 'Devastating' Death Threat
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Stephen Bourke

A barrister who was woken in the middle of the night to be given a “devastating” death threat by an anonymous caller has been cross-examined by the convicted rapist on trial accused of making the threat.

Michael Murray (50), formerly of Seafield Road, Killiney, Co Dublin, has pleaded not guilty to making death threats against the lawyers who prosecuted him for rape in 2013 - Dominic McGinn SC and Tony McGillicuddy BL.

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He also denies charges of harassment against Mr McGinn, his own former defence solicitor, and the woman he was convicted of raping, including falsely advertising all three on the internet as prostitutes.

At the Circuit Criminal Court in Dublin on Friday, Judge Karen O'Connor told the jury that they may have noticed Mr Murray is no longer in the presence of his legal representatives and he had chosen to represent himself, as he is entitled to do.

Giving evidence on Friday, Mr McGinn told Seán Gillane SC, prosecuting, that he was woken in the early hours of November 16th, 2014, by a call from a blocked number.

“I answered it without really thinking about it. A male voice said ‘bang bang’. I just hung up.”

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Minutes later, another anonymous call came through.

“My wife answered it and the person on the other end didn’t say anything at all. At that point I called Gardaí.”

Garda interview

On Thursday, the jury watched a recording of a garda interview with Michael Murray, in which he said he was planning to have Mr McGinn shot that night.

There had also been a second anonymous call to the Garda control room in Harcourt Square in Dublin that night, saying Mr McGinn would be “shot dead”, the court heard.

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“I took the decision with the guards not to answer unknown numbers,” Mr McGinn said.

After, he said he started to get text messages “with strange questions”, and calls from phone numbers that were not withheld.

“Hey baby do you want to meet l8r,” read one text message.

The calls and messages continued for around six weeks into January 2015, until on January 24th one of the callers mentioned an online advert.

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“I then Googled my name against my phone number. One result was a series of ads on BackPage.com, some sort of sex website,” Mr McGinn said.

He said he then called the gardaí, and when he went to make a statement mid-way through the following month, he said he was still being contacted.

He said it did not become clear to him the strange calls in the night-time might be connected to the Murray rape case until Mr McGillicuddy called him shortly after he too received a late-night call from a blocked number.

2013 case

Earlier this week, the jury heard that in 2013 Mr McGinn and Mr McGillicuddy prosecuted the accused man for rape, attempted rape, aggravated sexual assault, making threats to kill or cause serious harm, false imprisonment, and the abduction of a child.

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The men concluded the strange calls were linked to the case, Mr McGinn said.

He said the threats and harassment were “devastating”.

“I had to change my routine,” he said. “Obviously I had to take this threat very seriously. I had no idea who was threatening me.”

“It was very difficult for my family, but I was annoyed - what I was doing was doing my job.”

Murray asked in cross-examination why Mr McGinn did not take note of the names of the gardaí he spoke to on the night he got the first anonymous call.

“No, I’m sure I did,” he replied.

“We have no evidence of that,” Murray said.

“I simply have no idea because I have no involvement in this case as a prosecutor,” he said.

Murray asked if there was any connection between the phone seized from him in the Midlands Prison and the calls.

“I have no idea,” Mr McGinn said. “That’s not part of my role as a witness. My role as a witness was simply to relate what happened to the gardaí to the best of my knowledge.”

The trial is to continue on Monday before Judge Karen O’Connor.

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