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Kevin McGeever in 2013 Niall Carson

Fake kidnapping case: Kevin McGeever's sentence suspended to not waste more taxpayer money

The property developer was guilty of wasting garda time by giving false information about his own alleged kidnapping.

FORMER PROPERTY DEVELOPER Kevin McGeever has been given a suspended two-year sentence for wasting garda time by making false reports about being kidnapped at gunpoint three years ago in a bid to dodge his creditors.

Mr McGeever (71), with a former address at Nirvana Ballywinna, Craughwell, county Galway and more recently in Clontarf, Dublin 3, entered the guilty plea moments before his trial was due to begin at Galway Circuit Criminal Court earlier today. 

In a barely audible voice in front of a large jury panel, McGeever replied, “Guilty”, when a single charge of giving false information to gardaí.

He stood accused of knowingly making false reports and statements to gardaí about allegations of false imprisonment and threats to harm on dates between 29 January and 28 February 2013 at diverse places within the State, and thereby causing garda time to be wasted, contrary to Section 12(a) of the Criminal Law Act 1976.

The facts in a second charge of giving false information, where he told gardaí he had been falsely imprisoned, assaulted and threatened with harm during the same six-week period, were also admitted.

The sentence hearing was told McGeever fabricated the entire story in a bid to shake off both Irish and international creditors who lost vast sums of money in failed investments he had undertaken on their behalf in Dubai, following the economic crash in 2008.

Detective John Keating gave evidence McGeever was found lying on the side of the road by a local couple near Ballinamore, Co. Leitrim at 9.40pm on 29 January 2013.

“They noticed a man on the side of the road, seven kilometres from Ballinamore. He appeared to be ‘down and out’. He appeared to be in very poor condition. They gave him a lift to Ballinamore,” he testified.

He said he had been dumped on the side of the road from the back of a van.

“The couple told him they would bring him to Ballinamore garda station, but he declined and asked to be taken to Carrick-on-Shannon and not to a garda station.

“They insisted on bringing him to Ballinamore Garda Station,” Keating said.

McGeever told gardaí in Ballinamore he had been abducted at gunpoint from his property in Craughwell on 27 May 2012.

Gardaí were concerned about his medical condition as he was in bad physical shape and he was transferred briefly to Mullingar hospital.

Continuous lies

He subsequently gave eight statements to gardaí alleging he had been kidnapped, assaulted and ill-treated.

Keating said McGeever was consistent in all his statements that he had been abducted at gunpoint from his home in Craughwell and held 20 feet underground in a steel container for eight months, with no lighting, heating or sanitary facilities.

The detective said a six-week investigation got underway, involving 19 gardaí most of whom worked exclusively on the probe.

A total of 3,038 man hours, costing the taxpayer €86,851, in garda travel expenses and subsistence allowances, was spent on the investigation, he said.

“A large number of enquiries were carried out around the country and a number of anomalies appeared. I was of the opinion he had fabricated his version of his abduction,” Keating said.

Arrest and questioning

McGeever was arrested in Craughwell on 14 March 2013.

He was brought to Gort garda station and interviewed on four occasions.

“He maintained his stance and continued with the pretence during the first three interviews but during the fourth interview he made full admissions that he had fabricated his story to the gardai and he gave his reasons for doing so,” Keating recalled.

Prosecuting barrister, Conor Fahy said that when McGeever was found on the side of the road, he had first given a false name to the couple and to the gardaí in Ballinamore, stating he was John McGeever from Clontarf.

Mr Fahy said the accused came originally from Swinford, in Co. Mayo and still had family there.

Detective Keating confirmed McGeever currently lives in Clontarf, at the address of his late partner.

“He’s not working.  I do not believe he had any business interests at this stage,” he added.

When McGeever finally “came clean” in 2013, he had said:

I’m very relieved to get this off my chest and I wish to thank the gardaí. I’m very sorry for wasting the very valuable man-hours of the gardaí.

Defence 

Mr John Jordan SC, defending, told the sentence hearing his client would be 72 years of age next September.

“He did something incredibly stupid because of certain stress factors in his life at the time.

“His long-term partner died of terminal cancer in November 2013 and he was under significant pressure too because of the financial crisis in this country and internationally at the time, which caused him to lose virtually all that he had,” Mr Jordan said.

He explained that McGeever got involved in property development in Dubai.

However, after the world-wide recession in 2008, considerable money was owed to investors, particularly here in Ireland, and he was under pressure from those creditors to make good on those investments.

Det. Keating agreed with counsel that McGeever had hoped that by creating the account of his kidnapping a number of his creditors would back off and would have nothing more to do with him.

He confirmed McGeever had spent 16 days on remand in Castlerea prison in July/August 2013, before taking up bail.

In his submissions to the court, Mr Jordan said it wasn’t often he defended a man who was going on 72 years of age, who had no previous convictions.

He said McGeever had been involved in the construction industry and had lived in the US and Australia, coming back to Ireland on a few occasions.

“He went to Dubai and invested his money there and lost almost everything he had there.

“He was under huge financial pressures and further personal pressure due to his partner’s terminal illness.

“He did what he did because at that stage of his life, coping with those stresses, he thought it a good idea,” Mr Jordan said.

“It was a wrong way of approaching his problems, which led to him wasting garda time. This all occurred in the context of a man struggling with very serious issues in his life,” he added.

This appears to be a significant aberration on the part of an elderly man who was at a very low point in his life.

He said that by pleading guilty, McGeever had saved the State the further expense of running a trial in front of a jury.

“He did something incredibly stupid which resulted in garda time being wasted, wasted to a point where the mystery was solved and the accused was found out. I’m asking the court to be lenient,” Mr Jordan concluded.

Ruling

Judge Rory McCabe said gardaí have enough to do rather than chase false trails.

He said the accused had contrived to waste garda time, and the cost of having 19 gardaí carry out the investigation had to be “picked up and paid for” by the taxpayer.

He noted McGeever had only pleaded guilty at the last moment in a trial which had been flagged would take two weeks.

In mitigation, he said the plea of guilty was of considerable value in not wasting the court’s time and brought some justice for the taxpayers, whom he said, were ultimately “footing the bill”.

The charge, he said, would ordinarily merit a custodial sentence to act as a practical punishment and as a warning to others that such offences would not be taken lightly.

Taking McGeever’s age and previous good record into account, the judge said the appropriate sentence was two years in prison.

He then posed the rhetorical question, “Would it be in the interests of justice to impose an immediate custodial sentence, before concluding the taxpayer had spent enough money on the accused already?”

“If I send him to prison, the taxpayer will have to pay for his upkeep; to house, clothe and feed him, so I will suspend the sentence for five years,” Judge McCabe said.

He added that his sympathies did not lie with the accused as he had no good reason to do what he did.

“My sympathy goes entirely to the gardaí and the taxpayers who have had to ‘foot the bill’,” he concluded.

More: 68-year-old man due in court over alleged false imprisonment

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    Mute Christy McCarthy
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    Apr 30th 2018, 11:10 AM

    I fully support compulsory retirement. It provides employment opportunities for young people, getting new ideas etc. into companies. Older people in jobs for 40 to 50 years are so set in their ways and most are unwilling to change.

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    Mute Bat Daly
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    Apr 30th 2018, 12:06 PM

    @Christy McCarthy:
    Obviously, you’re in the “I’m alright Jack ” camp, probably with a nice pension and can afford to retire.
    Many can’t, especially if you were caught in your late forties in the last recession. Many people never recovered and are now in early sixties.

    87
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    Mute Honeybee
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    Apr 30th 2018, 12:49 PM

    @Christy McCarthy: I take it Christy, life is good for you, and I sincerely hope it is, but this is not everyone’s position, why should age prevent the prospect of meeting the ability to provide for need, so many struggle with hidden poverty, forced unemployment will only add to this and you are wrong in putting older people in a collective ‘set in their ways and unwilling to change’, a recent study showed the reason most people resist change in an organisation is that change is badly managed at management level, so before you make assumptions, know the facts ,perhaps there is a new reality to ‘old’ age

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    Mute Sam Alexander
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    Apr 30th 2018, 1:40 PM

    @Christy McCarthy:
    The more people, irrespective of age, in productive employment the better it is for the economy. Young people might have new ideas but not always sencible or workable.

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    Mute Terry Tibbs
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    Apr 30th 2018, 2:02 PM

    @Christy McCarthy:
    unwilling to change?… stupid talk. Older people are the ones that look for change in work. I work in a large multinational were some of the workforce are retiring this year, and they don’t want to. Those “older” people at least wont be ringing in sick on a Monday or messing about in work acting the fools causing accidents. I’ve have a bunch of older people in before a lot of the younger ones with their FB profiles..

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    Mute Anthony newey
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    Apr 30th 2018, 8:36 PM

    @Christy McCarthy: 60 is the new 40 or haven’t you heard ?

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    Mute Alan Currie
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    May 4th 2018, 6:37 AM

    @Christy McCarthy: the human race is on a quest for immortality and when that happens there will be no retirement age. However jobs are unlikely anyway as they are already being replaced by AI at an alarming rate. What will humans do then?

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    Mute smudge
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    Apr 30th 2018, 10:52 AM

    A work ethic is hopefully what we are all proud of. Living longer and healthier allows us all to work for as long as we wish to. We will all know when it’s time to rest up but shouldn’t be pushed in to retiring from any job you have that your still capable of. Reducing hours by choice could be feasible. Age should not be a barrier to anything. Don’t disarm our older older generations their experiences is an asset !

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    Mute Jointheclubtoo
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    Apr 30th 2018, 11:41 AM

    @smudge: ‘Age should not be a barrier to anything’ Tell that to Mother Nature. I’m sure sites will be now be clogged with 70yr old plus bocklayers and labourers, or maybe not.

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    Mute P.J. Nolan
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    Apr 30th 2018, 2:25 PM

    @smudge:
    I agree with the sentiment, my own father worked until 77 but then I also know of a situation where someone who is 70 and doing his original job part time but doesn’t realise he is having difficulties. I difficult conversation with management is coming.

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    Mute Martello Mulligan
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    Apr 30th 2018, 10:19 AM

    Going on family history, my estimated expiry date is early to mid sixties, and it is an assault on my human rights that anyone should be allowed to be employed up to age 70.

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    Mute RJ.Fallon
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    Apr 30th 2018, 10:36 AM

    @Martello Mulligan: Maybe I’m not reading you correctly but that sounds a bit selfish.??

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    Mute William Grogan
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    Apr 30th 2018, 10:44 AM

    @Martello Mulligan: If a lot of your family died that young they must have smoked. So don’t smoke.

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    Mute Kal Ipers
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    Apr 30th 2018, 11:00 AM

    @William Grogan: That is a wild assumption. Lots of illnesses are genetic

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    Mute Honeybee
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    Apr 30th 2018, 11:51 AM

    @RJ.Fallon: It sounds ridiculous to be honest, how does a particular families life/death expectation impact all other individuals in a stated age range in employment, I take it Martello thinks they have no human rights.

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    Mute Brian Deane
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    Apr 30th 2018, 11:35 AM

    Think the ‘work longer if they wish’ part of this is largely misleading. People who ‘retire’ usually continue to work in some capacity paid or otherwise – housework, cooking, gardening, childcare etc so getting into a flap about the right to work beyond a certain age is missing the point. The real issue facing people in the future will the scenario where people will have no choice but to work beyond retirement age. Does anyone seriously think that Ireland’s generation rent will be able to afford to pay spiralling rents on a pension? Given our demographics, there’s a big question mark over whether there will be enough funds to pay pensions in 30-40 years time so this ‘right to work’ should really be about the ‘need to work’ beyond retirement.

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    Mute Kerrie Roche
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    Apr 30th 2018, 9:53 AM

    My Mum was still working up to last year at age 74 only reason stopped was because boutique closed down. She even got another Job in new one but her pay and hours where a disgrace so she did not take the Job

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    Mute Bat Daly
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    Apr 30th 2018, 12:03 PM

    @Kerrie Roche:
    Good for her. Great to see but older people are treated poorly by society in general so I’m not surprised at the derisory pay and conditions
    Some people need and want to work for the sake of sanity alone and both the young AND old are exploited in that regard by some employers.

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    Mute Kerrie Roche
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    Apr 30th 2018, 1:57 PM

    @Bat Daly: she is an amazing woman, even went to slane last year to guns and roses

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    Mute Dorothy Giselsson
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    Apr 30th 2018, 12:28 PM

    It’s great that we oldies should have the chance to stay working longer but it’s also a bit selfish. It isn’t giving younger people a chance to move up. Young people need decent jobs to support their young families, us oldies have been there and done that and honestly I think they should be thinking of giving younger employees a chance and opt for part time work so they can ease themselves into retirement.

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    Mute Lydia McLoughlin
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    Apr 30th 2018, 3:42 PM

    @Dorothy Giselsson: agreed. I also think that its wrong to force people to have to work until they are 67/68 – by the time I can claim my pension I’ll be 70!! Not all jobs are suitable for the elderly to continue to work but now people are being forced to work until these ages as they won’t get their pension! I agree as you say that perhaps there should be the option to work part time and ease into retirement but part pension should be paid in this instance. A disgrace our politicians can claim their multiple pensions so early when the multitude cannot.

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    Mute Angela Harty
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    Apr 30th 2018, 6:55 PM

    I will be forced onto the dole later this year at 65, some cheek to call it retirement, people who retire get pension, I have to sign to job seekers the day after I stop work because of my birthday. Won’t pay my pension till I 66, 50 euros a week less is alot to lose and why???

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    Mute kizzy
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    May 1st 2018, 12:53 AM

    If you are retirement age and feel like working or maybe you have to then do there is plenty of healthy 60 and 70 year olds and it should be their choice

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    Mute Hugh Mc Donnell
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    May 2nd 2018, 3:30 AM

    Seen discrimination in a work place for staff that stay on after 65.Some are made move to a different shift and do a different job plus there now on a fixed term contract and don’t have any sick pay.

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