Witness claims he saw knife in murdered man’s hand

One of seven people charged with murdering Dale Creighton admits violent disorder

Carl O’Leary pictured leaving the Central Criminal Court in Dublin after he gave evidence the Dale Creighton murder trial. Photograph:  Collins Courts
Carl O’Leary pictured leaving the Central Criminal Court in Dublin after he gave evidence the Dale Creighton murder trial. Photograph: Collins Courts

One of the seven Dubliners on trial charged with murdering 20-year-old Dale Creighton has pleaded guilty to violent disorder on the footbridge, where the deceased was assaulted.

A witness also told the jury that he saw a knife in Mr Creighton’s hand that morning.

Dale Creighton died in hospital on January 2nd, 2014, about two days after an incident at the footbridge over the Tallaght bypass between St Dominic's Road and Greenhills Road.

Jason Beresford (23) with an address at Coill Diarmuida, Ard a Laoi, Castledermot, Co Kildare went on trial with six others on Tuesday.

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The woman and six men, who are in their 20s and from Tallaght, all pleaded not guilty to murder when arraigned before the Central Criminal Court last week. Each accused also pleaded not guilty to violent disorder at the footbridge that New Year's Day.

However, when the jury arrived to court on Wednesday morning, Mr Beresford’s barrister, Mícheál O’Higgins SC, asked that his client be re-arraigned on the second count against him.

Dressed in a grey suit and shirt and a navy tie, Mr Beresford stood up and pleaded guilty to violent disorder on January 1st, 2014.

Ms Justice Deirdre Murphy told the jury that one of the counts had been disposed of and that the trial would proceed as normal.

Also charged with both offences are 23-year-old Aisling Burke and 28-year-old David Burke, both with a current address at Beechpark, Collinstown, Co Westmeath; Graham Palmer (26) with a current address at Park Avenue, Portarlington, Co Laois; Ross Callery (23) currently of Gortlum Cottages, Brittas, Co Dublin; James Reid (26) currently of Glen Aoibhinn, Gorey, Co Wexford; and Gerard Stevens (27) currently of Grosvenor Square, Rathmines in Dublin.

The jury also heard from a witness, who said he saw Mr Creighton with a knife on the footbridge that morning.

Carl O’Leary said he was on his way to get a taxi in Tallaght village some time after 3am, when he heard a commotion.

“I vaguely remember someone running past me,” he recalled.

“I just remember someone saying: ‘Grab him. He robbed our phone’,” he testified. “I recall seeing James Reid and Ross Callery.”

He said there were others, but did not know who they were.

Mr O’Leary said he began running down the Tallaght bypass and towards the footbridge.

“I remember seeing Mr Creighton on the bridge. I didn’t know him at the time,” he said.

Under cross-examination by Brendan Grehan SC, defending Ms Burke, he agreed that he had put two and two together when he saw the person running and heard the shout about the phone.

“I ran down after him. I just assumed he’d robbed the phone,” he explained. “I thought I was doing the right thing.”

He did not recall stopping and backing away from the man he was chasing, but identified himself doing so in CCTV footage.

Mr Grehan then read from his statement to gardaí.

“I seen he had a big kitchen knife, probably in his right hand. I said to myself: F**k, I’m not risking getting stabbed for nobody’s phone,” he had said. “I stopped.”

He said that somebody in a hoodie ran past him and he returned to his girlfriend.

He said in court that he hadn’t seen the knife when he backed away from the man, but had done so because he had run at him.

He confirmed to Ciaran O’Loughlin SC, defending James Reid, that he had later seen Dale Creighton with a knife, but said he had not seen his client take the knife from him.

His girlfriend, Shannon Downes, also testified. She said she had initially seen two males running by her while in the village that morning.

“A girl came running after them around the corner, saying they’d robbed her phone,” she recalled, explaining that Mr O’Leary had run off to get her phone. “She had a white, fluffy jacket. She had muck on her forehead and her jacket.”

She was cross-examined by Mr Grehan, who read from the statement she had made to gardaí about what she’d heard: “He’s after bashing me and robbing my phone.”

She agreed that this account was correct.

She then identified the white jacket, which was held up in court. Mr Grehan noted that there was mud on both sides of it and she agreed that this was the condition it was in when she saw the girl.

“She looked shaken and shook up,” she said of the girl, who stayed with her for a few minutes. She said the girl then left, saying she was going home.

Sophie Percy testified that she was in her boyfriend’s car with two other men that morning, when they passed two males at the bottom of a bridge. She said her boyfriend stopped and the two men got out.

She said she didn’t see what happened, but the court has seen footage of one of the passengers, James O’Brien, repeatedly punching a man at the bottom of the bridge. Mr O’Brien is not before the court.

Under cross-examination by Mr Grehan, she said she ‘heard something about Froggy’s bird’s phone being robbed’ and someone say ‘he tried to stab me’.

She said she did not know who Froggy was.

The trial continues before six men and six women.