Pubdate: Sat, 14 Feb 1998 Source: The Examiner (Ireland) Author: Liam Heylin Contact: SKIPPER FREE AFTER COCAINE CHARGES ARE THROWN OUT THE Icelandic captain - and former Lutheran Minister - thanked God and his legal team as he walked free from Cork Circuit Criminal Court, yesterday, when the case against him for conspiring to import cocaine collapsed, and a Youghal fisherman who pleaded guilty to the same charge was given a 10-year suspended prison sentence. John O'Shea (44), 7 Raheen Park, Youghal, Co Cork, pleaded guilty on Monday for his part in a conspiracy to import cocaine, and Judge AG Murphy imposed the suspended sentence. However, the media was ordered not to disclose this decision until the trial of Sigurdur Arngrimsson ended, as it was believed that such disclosure might have prejudiced the jury in their consideration of the case that went to trial. Det Sgt John Healy testified that O'Shea was the cook on the Tia and was involved in a conspiracy to import cocaine from Surinam in South America to Ireland. He described O'Shea as "a small cog in a big machine." O'Shea told gardai he was paid a monthly salary to do the cooking on the voyage. Judge Murphy said that he would normally impose a custodial sentence on such a serious charge, but he noted the garda's evidence that O'Shea "tried to back out," but was under pressure from other individuals. As events unfolded in courtroom one at the Washington Street courthouse in Cork, yesterday, the jury was told by Judge Murphy to return a verdict of not guilty in the case against Arngrimsson from Malmo, Sweden, on the conspiracy to import drugs charge. Defence senior counsel Ciaran O'Loughlin, made a successful submission to the judge that key evidence was inadmissible as Arngrimsson had been unlawfully detained, following the failure of the gardai and customs officials to find any drugs on the ship. Arngrimsson was arrested on November 5, 1996, at Castletownbere, Co Cork, and Mr O'Loughlin said that he should have been released at 1 p.m. on November 9. Judge Murphy agreed, and ruled: "That was not done and anything else that emerged afterwards was inadmissible." The development followed three days of legal argument, in the absence of the jury, on the admissibility of evidence. The court had been told that gardai "were acting on confidential information that he (the defendant) was involved in drug-trafficking from South America to Ireland; that alterations had been carried out to his ship that were not justified; that drugs were concealed on the ship, and that the ship had gone a long journey without a cargo." Arngrimsson said he did not trust the Irish legal system until yesterday, and solicitor Ray Hennessy joked that there were times when the defendant did not even trust him. He said that the first time that he worried about the outcome of the trial was on Monday when O'Shea pleaded guilty. The former Lutheran priest said that his wife Siggi died six years ago, yesterday. He believed that she and his mother were both "with me in spirit," he said, as he wept outside the courtroom. He said that he saw a good omen during the week at the guesthouse where he stayed in Cork. "My mother used to feed stray cats. The woman there (in the guesthouse) was feeding stray cats, too. I knew from that that my mother was with me in spirit." Relieved that the trial was over, the 66-year-old defendant plans to return to Sweden. He said that the idea of drug-trafficking went against everything he had done in the course of his life.