Aaron Brady jailed for minimum of 40 years for ‘evil and pointless’ killing of Adrian Donohoe

Mr Justice Michael White says Brady had ‘terrorised’ his victims

Aaron Brady: found guilty of capital murder. File photograph: Collins Courts
Aaron Brady: found guilty of capital murder. File photograph: Collins Courts

“We had a loving, happy family, but in just 58 senseless seconds everything changed forever,” the wife of murdered Detective Garda Adrian Donohoe told the Central Criminal Court today.

Speaking at a sentence hearing for her husband’s murderer, Caroline Donohoe said no words can express the impact on her life, the lives of her children and their family, colleagues and friends who all loved Adrian.

Aaron Brady (29) of New Road, Crossmaglen, Co Armagh was convicted in August of capital murder for shooting Detective Garda Donohoe dead during a robbery at Lordship Credit Union in Co Louth on January 25th, 2013. For the capital murder offence Mr Justice Michael White on Wednesday sentenced Brady to life imprisonment. The Criminal Justice Act 1990 states that the minimum time that Brady will serve in prison for capital murder is 40 years.

Mr Justice White also sentenced Brady to 14 years for the robbery, a sentence that will run concurrently with the life sentence. The raiders stole just e7,000 during the robbery, which lasted 58 seconds.

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The judge said that anyone who saw the CCTV footage or heard the audio recording of what happened at Lordship would be “shocked to the core”. He said Brady had loaded and discharged a pump action shotgun at close range into Adrian Donohoe and then proceeded to terrorise his colleague Det Gda Joe Ryan who was still in the garda patrol car. The other raiders, the judge said, did the same to the credit union employees who suffered an “awful ordeal”.

He commended the meticulous Garda investigation and said he is not surprised at the life changing effect the crime had on former detective garda Joe Ryan, who despite having undergone “a minute of terror” immediately went to check on others to see how they were. “His behaviour was exemplary,” the judge said.

He described Adrian Donohoe as a dedicated officer, rooted in his community and held in high esteem. “I’m sure he was the type of officer who guided many young wayward men onto a different path.” He further described as “shocking” the young age of Brady who was 21 at the time of the crime. He said it is difficult to comprehend the “everyday” activities of Brady in the lead up to and aftermath of the shooting. He went for lunch at a diner, had dinner at a friend’s house and following the shooting went for a “nonchalant” visit to his girlfriend, the judge said.

Previous convictions

Brady’s previous convictions include criminal damage and dangerous driving from an incident when he drove a stolen car around Dundalk and crashed into a number of taxis and a garda patrol car. He was awaiting sentence on that charge when he murdered Det Gda Donohoe and the prosecution said a motive for the robbery was his need for money to pay compensation so he would avoid a prison term. He has further convictions at the District Court for public order offences.

Inside the quiet and sombre courtroom, the parents of Det Gda Donohoe sat closely together, each wearing face masks, as they listened intently to the recap of the evidence. The detective’s mother Peggy Donohoe hung her head for most of the hearing as she cast an odd glance out of the corner of her eye at her son’s killer. This was the first time Hugh and Peggy Donohoe have attended the trial together since it commenced last January and they seemed to be a source of comfort to one other. As their daughter Mary Donohoe read the victim impact statement on behalf of herself and her siblings, the elderly couple became visibly upset and their bodies began to shake. Peggy Donohoe wept silently as she used a tissue to wipe away her tears.

The wife of Det Gda Donohoe, Caroline Donohoe, sat to the right of the courtroom supported by a friend. As Mr Grehan read her victim impact statement on her behalf to the court, Ms Donohue just stared straight ahead into the distance. Det Gda Donohoe’s sister and his three brothers sat in the body of the court.

Brady, who was wearing a grey suit and red tie, sat in the dock staring straight ahead. His father and mother, Tony and Caroline Brady, were the only members of his family in the courtroom and they sat together directly behind him. The pair spent much of the hearing scrolling on their mobile phones.

Brady was instructed by Mr Justice White that he was not required to stand as the lengthy sentence was handed down. The killer showed no reaction when the sentence was passed and darted out into the cell area before prison officers had a chance to lead him from the court one final time, only briefly looking in the direction of his parents. Brady’s legal team then followed him into the holding area.

It was heard during the trial that Caroline Donohoe visited the scene of her husband’s murder less than an hour after the shooting and identified his body. In her statement today she said: “I will never recover fully from what I had to see. My heart breaks every time I pass there and sometimes I can’t get the images out of my mind for hours.” She added: “Nothing and nobody will ever replace Adrian in our home.”

Alan Donohoe read out an emotional statement on behalf of the late detective’s parents Hugh and Peggy. They said Adrian was the eldest of six and always looked out for the rest of the family. A talented footballer, he represented Cavan at minor and U21 levels and scored the winning goal in the final minutes of an U12 county championship game playing for Crosserlough. “He was always so well met,” they said. “And he was a great help on the farm from a young age, always ready to help out, even after moving away from home he was always willing to come home and help on the farm. He never forgot his mother’s birthday or mother’s day - always came with the best cards and flowers and the best presents.”

He was, they said, “as good a son as anyone could have asked for. We miss him so much every day. The regular phone call and chats telling us about the kids and everything going on in his life.”

Good man

They added: “It’s hard to accept that such a good man could come across such evil on that cold, wet night.” He loved being a garda and was proud when he graduated at Templemore where he met his wife Caroline, who is also a garda.

Hugh and Peggy said they will never forget the gardai coming to their door to deliver the news that no parent should ever receive. “It was such a waste of a good man by that evil, pointless act,” they said. They find life a struggle and some days feel it is not worth living, they said, adding: “We visit his grave every week, which is some comfort, but it’s no place for him, he should be here with us living his life.”

Det Gda Donohoe’s friend and colleague Joe Ryan was in the patrol car on the night of the shooting. Having shot Det Gda Donohoe dead, Brady and another raider holding a handgun pointed their weapons at the then Detective Garda Ryan and threatened to shoot him. In a written statement Mr Ryan said he had “no doubt they were going to shoot and kill me”.

He said: “That fear is something that haunts me every day. The images are so real and I fear it will always be that way.”

Mr Ryan continued to work as a garda for a time but was diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder and following the shooting dead of another colleague, Garda Tony Golden, he retired from the force having been deemed unfit for duty in 2018. He would have had ten years left as a garda. He added: “I always feel guilty that it was him and not me.”

Larger than life

Adrian’s sister Mary Donohoe read a statement on behalf of all five surviving siblings, Alan, Colm, Martin, Anne and Mary. They described their big brother as “larger than life, large in stature but more so, large in personality. He was rarely in bad form and his enthusiasm and zest for life were infectious.”

He looked after all his siblings and was idolized by them. “The void he has left in our family is immeasurable. Every family celebration is tinged with sadness and his absence is still so obvious and upsetting.”

They described their parents as strong and admirable but said they haven’t been the same since Adrian’s death. They said they are grateful that their parents keep going, but seeing their mother lighting a candle in front of a photo of Adrian every day is “sometimes too much to bear”. Finally, they turned their attention to their brother’s murderer, saying: “Aaron Brady will never comprehend what he has done to our family.”

Brady had denied capital murder and said he had no involvement in the robbery at Lordship Credit Union on January 25th, 2013. Brady has maintained his innocence despite the guilty verdict following a trial which lasted more than six months during which Brady's legal team tested the evidence at length both in the jury's presence and during legal argument in front of the judge. Supporters of a "Justice 4 Aaron Brady" campaign turned out in court today and held a protest outside the Courts ofCriminal Justice.

Circumstantial evidence

The prosecution used various strands of circumstantial evidence to prove Brady’s guilt. They showed that he was involved in stealing a Volkswagen Passat that was used to block the entrance to the credit union and was then used as the getaway car. Mobile phone evidence showed that Brady and other suspects for the robbery stopped using their phones for about one hour before and after the robbery. The raiders were known to have used walkie talkies.

The prosecution also pointed to lies Brady told to gardai when he was questioned one day after the shooting and ten days later when he visited Dundalk Garda Station to give a voluntary statement. In his closing speech to the jury Lorcan Staines SC described Brady as a “practised liar”. He said the prosecution case was a circumstantial one and that each piece of evidence on its own could be considered no more than coincidence. He added: “It’s your personal tolerance when coincidence is put on top of coincidence until there comes a point that it is an affront to common sense that all these little things are coincidence.”

To prove that Brady was the shooter the prosecution introduced the evidence of Molly Staunton and Daniel Cahill who said they heard Brady confess that he “shot a cop” or “murdered a garda” on multiple occasions after Brady moved to New York following the shooting.

Brady took the stand in his defence and told the jury that he was loading cubes of laundered diesel waste onto the back of a trailer when the robbery happened. The first time he made this claim was in October 2019, six years after he first spoke to gardai and months after his deadline to submit an alibi. He said he didn’t want to submit an alibi until he had seen all the prosecution evidence. He insisted he had nothing to do with the robbery and said that he lied to gardai to cover up his involvement in diesel laundering.

The jury did not accept his testimony and found that he was one of four raiders who jumped over the wall of the credit union just as the Passat blocked the car park entrance just as the credit union employees prepared to drive off followed by the garda escort. Det Gda Donohoe got out of the patrol car when he saw the raiders but Brady pointed an automatic or pump action shotgun at him and fired a single shot to the head from about six feet away, killing him instantly. Det Gda Donohoe’s gun remained in its holster on his hip. The jury’s verdict shows that they were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that when Brady pulled the trigger he not only intended to kill or cause serious injury but he also knew he was shooting a member of An Garda Siochana acting in accordance with his duty.

Brady’s defence team argued that there was a campaign to induce witnesses in the US to give statements against Brady and insisted that gardai had not fully investigated Brady’s claim that he was at a diesel laundering yard on Concession Road in Armagh on the night of the robbery.

The jury rejected their claims.

Conor Lally

Conor Lally

Conor Lally is Security and Crime Editor of The Irish Times