Jury sent home in Nicky Kehoe defamation case

Jury to consider whether RTÉ has a defence of fair and reasonable publication

Nicky Kehoe: claims the reputation he built up over the 26 years since he came out of prison was destroyed in “one swipe”. Photograph: Collins Courts
Nicky Kehoe: claims the reputation he built up over the 26 years since he came out of prison was destroyed in “one swipe”. Photograph: Collins Courts

The jury has been sent home until Monday in the defamation case taken by Sinn Féin political manager Nicky Kehoe (62), a former IRA activist, against RTÉ.

It has been asked to consider a series of questions and is to consider next week whether RTÉ has a defence of fair and reasonable publication.

The jury began deliberations on Thursday at 5.30pm and adjourned half an hour later. It resumed deliberations on Friday morning and was sent home at 8pm.

The jury foreman told Mr Justice Bernard Barton that he did not think the jury would reach a decision on the fair and reasonable publication issue on Monday.

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Earlier Mr Justice Barton told the jury they could reach a decision on the basis of nine jury members or more.

The trial has heard evidence over six days.

Mr Kehoe told the trial that since his arrest during a shoot-out with gardaí in a foiled kidnap attempt of Malta-millionaire Galen Weston in 1983 he had been building up his reputation again.

In his closing speech on behalf of RTÉ on Thursday, Cian Ferreter SC said Mr Kehoe had sued over a charge by former Labour TD Joe Costello on the Saturday with Clare Byrne radio show that the Sinn Féin member "is" a senior IRA member.

‘Ripped to shreds’

Mr Costello alleged that a former chief of staff of the IRA was at meetings of Dublin City Council telling Sinn Féin councillors how to vote.

In the exchange between Mr Costello and Sinn Féin representative Eoin Ó Broin in October 2015, Mr Ó Broin “ripped to shreds” the allegation made by Mr Costello, counsel said.

Mr Kehoe’s name was first used by Mr Ó Broin, then a councillor and now a TD, who went on to defend Mr Kehoe. By the end of that exchange, Mr Costello withdrew the allegation and said Mr Kehoe “was” a senior IRA member.

Mr Kehoe claimed in the case that the reputation he built up over the 26 years since he last came out of prison had been destroyed in “one swipe” and that RTÉ should have shut down the debate as soon as his name was mentioned. RTÉ denied defamation and said it was not liable.

Mr Kehoe’s counsel, Declan Doyle SC, said any reasonable and rational analysis of the allegation was that Mr Kehoe was a member of the army council and was subverting democracy by giving instructions to Sinn Féin members of Dublin City Council.

Mr Kehoe had been upfront and was ashamed about his IRA past but this case was about someone being accused of subverting democracy in 2015, counsel said. At the end of the exchanges on the radio show, the allegation against Mr Kehoe was still hanging there. It had not been put to bed as claimed by RTÉ, he said.

Colm Keena

Colm Keena

Colm Keena is an Irish Times journalist. He was previously legal-affairs correspondent and public-affairs correspondent