Dublin pair get 6 years for possessing bomb

Two Dublin men who admitted having a pipe bomb on the city's northside were sentenced to six years imprisonment today, with the…

Two Dublin men who admitted having a pipe bomb on the city's northside were sentenced to six years imprisonment today, with the final three years suspended.

Christopher Mc Carthy (29) of the The Vale, Woodfarm Acres, Palmerstown and Daniel Mc Faul (22), of Croftwood Crescent, Ballyfermot had pleaded guilty last year to the unlawful possession of an improvised explosive device at Belcamp Crescent, Dublin on January 20th last year.

Detective Superintendent Diarmuid O'Sullivan told the court that gardaí mounted a surveillance operation after receiving confidential information that the Continuity IRA intended to carry out an operation at Belcamp Crescent on the night in question.

He told the Special Criminal Court that McCarthy was the driver of a motorbike which arrived at Belcamp Crescent in Darndale in the early hours of January 20th last year. The passenger, McFaul, got off the bike and headed towards Belcamp Crescent but later got back on the motorbike.

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A short time later the same bike returned and McFaul was seen getting off the bike again and walking across a green area towards a van parked in the driveway of a house.Gardaí observed him removing what appeared to be a lunch box from a satchel and putting it under the van. Both men tried to escape when they realised gardaí were present but were arrested.

The Army carried out two controlled explosions on the suspicious device under the van and people were evacuated from their homes.

The components of the device were recovered including a Tupperware box, a 9-volt battery and a pipe bomb with electrical wires protruding from it. It was forensically examined and found to contain nitro cellulose.

Sentencing the men, Mr Justice Paul Butler, presiding, said that the court regarded it as a very serious offence and that a "live device" capable of causing serious harm was involved.

The judge said, however, that the court regarded with "great significance" undertakings given under oath by both men that they would not engage in unlawful activity or illegal organisations and in the circumstances would suspend the final three years of the six-year sentence imposed on each man.