Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jan 1999 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: Tomas Mac Ruairi TRANSPORT CHIEF GETS THREE YEARS ON DRUGS CHARGES A CORK transport company manager who imported massive amounts of cannabis resin for John Gilligan has been jailed for three years by Dublin Circuit Criminal Court. John Dunne made a profit of about IEP600 after his expenses for each consignment, but gardai estimated that Gilligan made some IEP100,000 profit each time on a shipment of some 250 kilograms, Judge Kieran O'Connor was told. Det Sgt Noel Browne said Gilligan paid a IEP1,000 fee per consignment to Dunne who then had to pay groupage fees of IEP300-IEP400 each time. Gardai had uncovered what was a most sophisticated drugs operation in the course of the Veronica Guerin murder investigation. Dunne (42), married and the father-of-three, of Midleton, Co Cork pleaded guilty to 10 charges of unlawfully importing cannabis resin on dates in each month of January to October 1996. He had no previous convictions. Det Sgt Browne said Gilligan organised the shipments from Holland via Cork Port in conjunction with Dutch criminals. He bought the cannabis for IEP1,600 per kilo and sold it to his leading managers for IEP2,000 per kilo. Each shipment contained about 250 kilograms. The cannabis was in packages addressed to reputable Cork companies and marked usually as machine parts. Dunne's job was to collect these packages and drive them to Dublin to what gardai called the Greenmount gang. Det Sgt Browne said the cannabis was collected at a Dublin hotel by Charles Bowden and Paul Ward. Dunne worked as manager of the Cork branch of a very reputable transport company and had been targeted by Gilligan for his role in this intricate operation. He was unaware initially that the packages contained drugs. Det Sgt Browne told Judge O'Connor that Dunne had gone without any legal compulsion to London some months ago and gave evidence in the British Customs and Excise case against Gilligan. He had co-operated fully with gardai in this case and prior to it was a very well-respected member of his community. There had been some very sinister developments since a recent trial and gardai had to mount a 24-hour armed guard on Dunne and his family which caused him great distress. He was going to have to live with that situation for the rest of his life. Judge O'Connor said Dunne had got mixed up in a reprehensible, vile trade for motives of greed to such an extent he couldn't turn back. The court was left in an awkward position as it had both a duty to the people of Ireland and in this case a duty to Dunne that he have some degree of safety attached to him. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck