Moriarty firm subject of illegal dumping inquiries

Taoiseach Bertie Ahern receives his Kerry passport from Dublin businessman and Sneem native Louis Moriarty during his visit …

Taoiseach Bertie Ahern receives his Kerry passport from Dublin businessman and Sneem native Louis Moriarty during his visit yesterday to Mr Moriarty’s €120 million Sneem Hotel, which is under construction in Co Kerry.

The businessman whose new venture in Co Kerry was visited by Taoiseach Bertie Ahern yesterday is the owner of a Dublin-based waste firm that has been convicted of illegal dumping.

The new hotel and wedding venue in Sneem is being financed by Louis Moriarty, who is a native of Sneem but lives in Mr Ahern's constituency in Drumcondra.

Mr Moriarty used to own a waste disposal company that has been the subject of a number of investigations into illegal dumping in the past few years.

Mr Moriarty has pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing in relation to charges arising out of an investigation into the largest illegal dump ever uncovered in the State at Whitestown, Co Wicklow.

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A spokesman for Mr Ahern told ireland.comthe visit was not in the Taoiseach's official diary as it was strictly informal and resulted from a private invitation.

"The Taoiseach has been visiting Sneem for over 20 years. Last Sunday he was asked by a local person, who is known to him, to visit the development and he was glad to do it," he said.

"He did so on Tuesday, the first available opportunity after the bank holiday. The visit was not in his diary. It was not an organised visit in that way. He had no prior knowledge of, or acquaintance with, Mr Louis Moriarty before the visit to the hotel development.

The spokesman said Mr Ahern had no comment to make on the fact Mr Moriarty is facing further charges relating to illegal dumping.

"The Taoiseach has absolutely nothing to say about any case pending that Mr Moriarty may be involved in. And he believes it would be very unhelpful for anybody else to do so."

In November 2001, Mr Moriarty's firm Swalcliffe Ltd, trading as Dublin Waste, was fined a total of £7,500 and ordered to pay £8,000 in costs for illegal dumping and other contraventions of the Waste Management Act.

Dublin District Court was told there were discrepancies of up to 8,500 tonnes per month between the amount of waste that Dublin Waste said it was disposing of and the amount received from it by two dumps approved by the Environmental Protection Authority. The court heard some of the waste went to an unlicensed site in Co Meath, while the rest was unaccounted for.

Mr Moriarty and his wife Eileen, both directors of Swalcliffe Ltd were fined £1,500 between them. The company was fined a further £6,000 and ordered to pay £8,000 in costs.

Swalcliffe Ltd also had a High Court order secured against it by Wicklow County Council in 2004 over the failure of the company to comply with a previous order to clear up a major illegal dump in west Wicklow

Some 8,000 tonnes of rubbish, including waste from three Dublin hospitals collected by Dublin Waste, was found on a two-acre site at Coolnamadra near the Glen of Imaal in 2001. The hazardous material included blood-stained bandages, used incontinence pads, bodily fluids, scalpels, needles, laboratory waste and gas cylinders.

Mr Moriarty said he had no knowledge of the illegal activity, which he claimed was carried out by a subcontractor.

Last month, a Co Meath man, a subcontractor who worked for Dublin Waste, was jailed for six months at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court for illegal dumping. Another man was fined €150,000 for allowing his land at Baltinglass, Co Wicklow, to be used as an illegal dump.

The investigation was prompted by a Wicklow County Council complaint. The council said it could cost up to €10 million to make the dump safe.

Kilian Doyle

Kilian Doyle

Kilian Doyle is an Assistant News Editor at The Irish Times