Murder trial is told of football pitch stabbing

A man accused of murder allegedly told gardai he fetched knives to save his friend from a mob minutes before he stabbed another…

A man accused of murder allegedly told gardai he fetched knives to save his friend from a mob minutes before he stabbed another man to death, a jury in the Central Criminal Court heard yesterday.

Mr Michael Doyle (22), of Tonduff Close, Greenpark, Greenhills, Tallaght, has denied murdering Mr Mark O'Keeffe (20) on May 30th, 1997, at a football pitch in Tallaght, west Dublin.

Det Sgt Tony Healy said Mr Doyle had told gardai he had been attacked by a gang of around 10 youths, one of whom tried to stab him with a Stanley knife.

After running away and returning from the house with the knives, Mr Doyle said, a man whom he did not know approached him with his arms outstretched.

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"I raised the knives and tried to stop him but he just kept coming."

Asked by gardai if he saw this man as a threat, Mr Doyle allegedly replied that he did.

"I raised both my hands with the knives so he could see I had the knives. I stabbed him then. I know I stabbed him."

Asked by gardai why he went back to the house, he allegedly replied: "To scare them away and to rescue (a friend) Patrick."

A prosecution witness, Mr Leighton Kelly, told the court that Mr O'Keeffe had assaulted the accused man during a scuffle among a group of four or five people on the football pitch minutes before the fatal stabbing.

The trial resumes on Monday.