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26 Jan 2026

BREAKING: Emotional scenes as jury deliver verdict in Limerick garda trial

Retired superintendent and four serving gardaí were on trial at Limerick Circuit Court

BREAKING:

CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT: Retire Superintendent Eamon O’Neill; Sergeant Anne Marie Hassett; Garda Colm Geary; Garda Tom McGlinchey and Sergeant Michelle Leahy

THE FORMER garda superintendent and four serving gardai on trial in Limerick Circuit Criminal Court have been found not guilty on all counts.

The jury of eight men and four women indicated they had reached their verdict shortly after 2.15pm this Monday. They had deliberated for six hours and seven minutes.

Retired superintendent Eamon O’Neill, Garda Colm Geary, Garda Tom McGlinchey, Sergeant Michelle Leahy and Garda Anne-Marie Hassett sat stony-faced after the nine-week long trial. They were suspended from the force six years ago.

Each of them had pleaded not guilty to a total of 39 charges, which all relate to attempting to pervert the course of justice over Fixed Charge Penalty Notices relating to road traffic offences. 

They include the squaring away of penalties for offences including speeding, holding a mobile phone while driving, having no insurance and not wearing a seatbelt.

The registrar said “not guilty” to each of the 39 charges.

READ NEXT: Limerick Inspector hits out at commonly used driving conviction excuses

Mr O’Neill, Garda Geary, Garda McGlinchey, Sgt Leahy and Garda Hassett all wept openly after the verdicts were announced.

There was loud applause in the packed courtroom from their supporters.

Outside Limerick Courthouse, Daniel O’Gorman, solicitor for Mr O’Neill, read a statement to media in attendance, saying “so many lives ruined for years and years”.

“Eamon O’Neill and the other defendants have been fully acquitted. Their families have been devastated. The State with all its power came after Eamon O’Neill and the other defendants. The State said yes and the people have said no. The people speak and the State must and will listen. We are the people,” read out Mr O’Gorman.

The solicitor quoted Supreme Court Judge Peter Charleton who said, in another Court, “The State say the accused are corrupt and the accused say the State is corrupt.” 

Mr O’Gorman said “we know the accused are not corrupt”. 

“Now it is time to see if the State has been corrupt. The newly minted Commissioner, the Minister and the State must take steps immediately to restore the people’s confidence in the State. 

“There are immediate steps that he can take now and if Commissioner Justin Kelly doesn’t know what they are, he can call me,” concluded Mr O’Gorman with Mr O’Neill by his side.

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