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Central Criminal Court

Jury in trial of man who allegedly 'floored' Dublin construction worker fail to reach verdict

Maurice ‘Mossie’ Boland, who pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to the manslaughter of Cian Gallagher in 2022, will be retried in November.

A CENTRAL CRIMINAL Court jury has failed to reach a verdict in the murder trial of a man who the State argued “floored” a young Dublin construction worker with a “Conor McGregor” style knockout after targeting him as he walked alone in a rural town late at night.

The prosecution had told the jurors that it was a punch thrown by Maurice ‘Mossie’ Boland which caused 26-year-old Cian Gallagher to fall and hit the back of his head.

It was the State’s case that Boland had intended to kill or cause serious injury to the deceased at the time. The trial heard that both men had been drinking before Gallagher was killed.

However, the defence argued in their closing address that the pathologist could not have been clearer in her evidence that the fall caused the damage to the deceased Gallagher and not the punch from the accused.

In her closing speech, prosecution counsel Roisin Lacey SC told the murder trial jury that Boland “targeted” and “relentlessly pursued” Gallagher as he walked alone on the street of a rural town before “proudly and boastfully” using the phrase “a Conor McGregor knockout” to describe “flooring” the victim as he retreated.

The prosecutor said injuries to Boland’s hand were caused by the punch to the deceased and that CCTV footage showed the accused punching Gallagher, who was retreating at the time.

In seeking a manslaughter verdict for his client, Michael Bowman SC, defending, submitted in his closing statement that the “ludicrous and offensive statement” of “a Conor McGregor knockout” was no more than “drunken mouthing off” and was a facile reference.

The defence barrister said it had not been proven beyond a reasonable doubt that his client had the requisite intent at the time and to suggest his client was “targeting” the deceased was not sustainable on the evidence.

Boland (36) of Bridgeview Close, Tallow, Co Waterford had pleaded not guilty to murder but guilty to the manslaughter of Cian Gallagher (26) at Barrack St in Tallow on 10 November 2022.

At the opening of the trial, prosecution counsel told the jury that CCTV footage showed the accused punching Gallagher when the deceased had his hands up and was backing away. Lacey said the footage showed that Gallagher was not at all offensive even when he was being “set upon”.

After 13 hours and 23 minutes of deliberations over four days, the jury returned to court this afternoon unable to reach a verdict.

The jury had previously asked the trial judge if it was a legal defence that the deceased was so intoxicated at the time that he could not break his fall. Mr Justice McDermott said it was not.

The eight men and four women of the jury had deliberated for five hours and 44 minutes last Thursday when Mr Justice Paul McDermott gave them the option of reaching a majority verdict.

When the registrar asked the foreman of the jury today if the panel had reached a verdict on which at least ten of them agreed, he replied: “No”.

At this point, Mr Justice McDermott asked the jurors whether further time would be of use to them in considering their verdict.

The foreman told the judge: “We are all in agreement that there is no more value in deliberating for any longer”.

Mr Justice McDermott said that this can sometimes happen and in those circumstances the court would record it as a disagreement. The judge told the foreman to write the single word ‘Disagreement’ next to the count on the issue paper.

He thanked the jury for the care and consideration that they had given the case and said that “these are not easy cases”.

The judge exempted them from jury service for the next five years before listing the case for retrial on 25 November.

Witnesses told the trial that the accused boasted he had knocked Gallagher out in the style of mixed martial artist Conor McGregor “like he was proud of it” and said that he should have been in the UFC and didn’t know his own strength.

In his charge to the jury, Mr Justice McDermott said “the key issue” for them was whether the defendant intended to kill or cause serious injury in striking Gallagher.

The jury had the option of returning two verdicts in relation to the murder charge against Boland, namely; guilty of murder or not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter.

The jury had heard that the deceased man was from the Malahide Road in Dublin 17 and worked in a managerial type role mainly on civil construction projects up to the time of his death.

The 12 jurors were told by the State in the opening address that Gallagher, who was working on a construction project in Co Waterford, died from a brain bleed eight days after he was punched and knocked to the ground by the accused man in the early hours of 2 November.

Author
Alison O'Riordan