Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Contact: Website: http://www.examiner.ie/ Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 1998 Pubdate: Fri, 18 Dec 1998 Author: Isabel Conway ACCUSED WAS A 'BIG PLAYER' IN SMUGGLING OF ECSTASY A CORKMAN convicted of drugs possession was described in a Dutch court, yesterday, as a big player in a long-running ecstasy trafficking network between the Netherlands and Ireland. Sean O'Flynn (48) of Arigadeen Lawn, Togher, Cork, travelled frequently to Holland arranging ecstasy shipments until his arrest here last August, his trial in Utrecht heard. The accused, who had served a three-year sentence in Spain for possession of 104 kilos of hashish, came out of prison there late last year, judges heard. O'Flynn had a large number of convictions in Ireland, none of them drugs related, and according to reports from Interpol and the gardai, it was stated he had left the country and gone into offshore activities in 1995. He was arrested in Utrecht on August 15 last, having being tailed by a police undercover team, who found 25,000 ecstasy tablets in the boot of a red Volkswagen Polo in which he and a Dutch accomplice were travelling. His arrest was the culmination of a major garda surveillance operation spearheaded by the Garda National Drugs Unit and Cork Drugs Squad, and by the time O'Flynn arrived in Holland on August 9, allegedly carrying Pounds 45,000 to buy ecstasy, he was under observation. He was secretly filmed picking up the sportsbag containing the tablets from a Dutch national, believed to be a ring-leader in a long-running ecstasy smuggling racket between Holland and Ireland. Taps on mobile phones revealed that O'Flynn made numerous calls in which prices, pick up points and details on transportation of the drugs were discussed. A Dutch police team, began a surveillance operation of a number of Dutch criminals with whom O'Flynn was in contact last June. A confiscated diary of drugs deals kept by O'Flynn's co-accused, Dutchman Rob de Krijger whose own trial was postponed, mentioned at least four visits by the Corkman with notes about orders involving thousands of ecstasy tables on different dates. It also referred to 132,500 guilders which O'Flynn allegedly brought to Holland to buy 30,000 ecstasy tablets for shipment back to Ireland last August. According to his co-accused, O'Flynn was unhappy about letting others do the transporting of the ecstasy, and he was planning to get his own van or lorry to move shipments. Describing O'Flynn as a central figure in a big-time ecstasy smuggling racket, Dutch public prosecutor Mrs Chila van der Bas called for a four-year jail term, heavy by Dutch standards, for possession and trafficking of ecstasy. The bearded grey-haired accused man told judges he knew there were ecstasy tablets in the car but he had nothing to do with them. He claimed that he was only a small man who went along for the craic from A to B. Asked who the tablets were intended for and what he was doing in the car he mumbled: "I cannot say anything about that." O'Flynn whispered all his answers into the ear of his interpreter who, speaking in Dutch, told judges he was unhappy to discuss his personal circumstances because of the presence of the Irish media. O'Flynn's Dutch lawyer said that as a result of media reports about him, O'Flynn's wife in Cork was abused on the streets; his children were victimised and his daughter could not find work. She said the family were in very poor circumstances and could not afford to visit Holland. Judges will deliver their verdict on December 31. - --- Checked-by: Richard Lake