Armed raiders threatened to ‘blow heads off’ woman and baby

Jonathan Gill (35) on trial for his role in false imprisonment of An Post worker and family

Jonathan Gill (35), of Malahide Road, Swords, Dublin, arrives at  Dublin Circuit Criminal Court where he has pleaded not guilty to falsely imprisoning a post office worker, his partner and their baby  in August 2011. Photograph: Collins Courts.
Jonathan Gill (35), of Malahide Road, Swords, Dublin, arrives at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court where he has pleaded not guilty to falsely imprisoning a post office worker, his partner and their baby in August 2011. Photograph: Collins Courts.

A woman has said that armed raiders told her and her 10 week old baby they would “blow their heads off” unless her partner followed orders to take more than €600,000 from his workplace.

Jean Maire Nawn said one of the men also told her she would have to try for another baby.

Ms Nawn was giving evidence in the trial of Jonathan Gill (35), of Malahide Road, Swords. It is the State's case that he was one of a group of five who were involved in holding the family hostage in their own Co Louth home before moving them to a shed on a farmyard in Swords.

Mr Gill of Dublin has pleaded not guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to falsely imprisoning Ms Nawn, her husband Warren Nawn and their baby in Drogheda between August 1st and 2nd, 2011.

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Ms Nawn told the court she was repeatedly threatened at gunpoint during the 15 hour ordeal and that at one stage she was hit with a gun. Afterwards the raiders left her tied to a bedpost in an abandoned house with her baby.

She told Vincent Heneghan SC, prosecuting, that she was in her living room with the baby late on a Monday evening when Mr Nawn opened the door to an armed man who had his face covered.

Two men entered the house and tied the couple up. One of them asked Ms Nawn what she was watching on television. When she replied that it was a Liverpool match he shouted “don’t fucking lie to me”.

‘I’ll shoot you’

He also told her “I’ll blow your fucking head off, I’ll shoot you”. He said she would also be shot if anyone called at the door.

Ms Nawn said she heard one of the raiders try to make a phone call and say “There’s no signal, maybe they’re coming over the border”.

She heard one of them tell Mr Nawn: “You better comply or we’ll blow your girlfriend’s and your baby’s head off.”

Ms Nawn said other raiders arrived and that one of them seemed older and had a husky voice. She said he was nicer than the others. The men put her and the baby in a car with a blanket over her head. She saw them wipe down the handles in the house and use furniture polish before they left.

They drove for about 90 minutes. During this time the baby started crying and a raider said “shut that fucking baby up”. They cut the ties on Ms Nawn’s hands so she could comfort the child. She said that during the journey she could hear Mr Nawn in the boot struggling to breathe.

The family were held overnight before Mr Nawn was sent to his job with An Post to retrieve money. Ms Nawn told him to do whatever they asked as he was taken away. He replied that he only cared about their safety.

She and the baby were left with two of the raiders. At one stage she was told to ring Mr Nawn’s manager and tell him to comply with the directions and that they were being held at gunpoint. It was then that she was beaten with the gun.

In the early afternoon she was tied loosely to a cast iron bed frame in a derelict house with the baby beside her. She waited for 15 minutes before freeing herself and learning the raiders had fled.

Ms Nawn then ran up the road to the IBM factory in Swords where she was picked up by gardaí.

The trial continues before Judge Elma Sheahan.

Conor Gallagher

Conor Gallagher

Conor Gallagher is Crime and Security Correspondent of The Irish Times