Pubdate: Sun, 12 Nov 2000 Source: Sunday Times (UK) Copyright: 2000 Times Newspapers Ltd. Contact: PO Box 496, London E1 9XW, United Kingdom Fax: +44-(0)20-782 5658 Website: http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/ Author: John Mooney DRUG DEALER CALLS JUDGE AS WITNESS IN 'UNFAIR TRIAL' CASE A DRUG dealer is attempting to overturn his conviction on the basis that Cyril Kelly, the former High Court judge, heard part of his co-defendant's smuggling case in private chambers. The former judge will be subpoenaed as a witness for the Dublin drug dealer, who claims that he would not have been convicted if the evidence had been heard in public. The shadowy drama, involving a drug trafficker and a spy, threatens to revive memories of the Philip Sheedy affair. Kelly resigned as a judge after it was revealed that he had reduced the sentence of a drunk driver. Eamonn Kelly, who is serving 14 years in Portlaoise prison, is one of two men tried for drug trafficking after being arrested in a van in Dublin in 1992. Kelly was convicted. His co-accused, John Conlon, claimed to work for international intelligence agencies. Prior to sentencing Conlon, who pleaded guilty, Justice Kelly took the unusual step of allowing officers from the FBI and Scotland Yard to give mitigating evidence about Conlon in private chambers. Eamonn Kelly believes the evidence heard in private would have cast doubt on his conviction by showing that Conlon was acting alone in smuggling the cocaine. Cyril Kelly did not preside over Eamonn Kelly's trial. Legal sources say the judge's decision to hear evidence in chambers was highly unusual. After a lengthy legal battle, Kelly got access to the transcripts of the evidence heard in chambers. The prisoner, who is appealing against his conviction, now plans to force the former judge to disclose the crucial evidence in open court. Conlon has supported Kelly's claims of innocence. The agent, from Westport, Co Mayo, claims to have worked as a spy for international police agencies, including Mossad. In 1992, Kelly was arrested with Conlon soon after picking him up at Dublin airport. Conlon had flown in from Miami. The men, under garda surveillance, drove to Jury's hotel, where Conlon picked up a plastic bag filled with cocaine. Gardai arrested the men. The volume of drugs led gardai to conclude that the haul was destined for Britain. Kelly denied knowing the plastic bag contained cocaine. He said he collected Conlon at the request of a friend, named in court as Jim Beirne from Strokestown, Co Roscommon, who has since been convicted of a separate drug-trafficking offence. In custody, Conlon told gardai he was working for Scotland Yard and was visited by detectives from Special Branch. He and Kelly were released on bail and Conlon disappeared. Kelly, who fought the charges, was tried, released, then re-tried and convicted. Conlon, who was rearrested in London in 1994, was extradited to Ireland and stood trial in 1997. Cyril Kelly sentenced Conlon to 10 years after he pleaded guilty. Eamonn Kelly was one of Dublin's notorious criminals and his conviction was seen as a blow to organised crime. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake