Pubdate: 18 June1999 Source: Irish Independent (Ireland) Copyright: Independent Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd Contact: http://www.independent.ie/ Author: Isabel Conway, in Amsterdam SENTENCE FOR DRUGS 'SHOULD BE DOUBLED' A convicted Irish drugs trafficker's Dutch jail sentence should be doubled, an Amsterdam Court has heard. Judges of Amsterdam Court of Appeal yesterday were requested by the state public prosecutor to increase a two-year sentence imposed on Cork drugs trafficker Sean O'Flynn last December to four years. O'Flynn (49) of Arigadeen Lawn, Togher, Cork was convicted of trafficking 25,000 ecstasy tablets and sentenced to two years at Utrecht Court. At the time of his arrest garda sources said the drugs haul found in a car in which O'Flynn and a Dutch accomplice were traveling last August in Utrecht were destined for markets in the Munster area. O'Flynn had earlier been jailed for three years in Spain for possession of 104 kilos of hashish, the Court there heard. The Amsterdam Appeal Court judges were told yesterday by O'Flynn that he came to the Netherlands on August 9 last year hoping to find a job in the offshore oil industry and travelled to the northern town of Den Helder to attend interviews. He said he agreed foolishly to collect a sports bag for an acquaintance outside an Amsterdam cafe after being told by a contact that the man was stuck in traffic and couldn't make the pick-up himself. When Court President Mr C Streefkerk said they had some difficulty believing that O'Flynn had no prior knowledge of the bags contents E tablets worth half-a-million guilders (nearly pounds 170,000) and that he claimed the bag was handed to him by a man whose name he said he did not even know and for no payment O'Flynn replied: ``I was a small time I was just to pick them up.'' He was unaware that he was transporting a bag later found to contain 25,000 E tablets, the Irishman added. His lawyer Ms Benedicte Ficq said media reports had put O'Flynn under extreme psychological pressure and he did not want to reveal personal details while a press reporter was in court. The court chairman Mr C Streefkerk ruled that O'Flynn be allowed to supply personal information about himself to the court sitting in camera and the Irish press representative was asked to leave. Defence counsel said that police telephone tap evidence in his original trial confused him with other Irishmen involved in drug related crime. O'Flynn admitted transporting the E tablets but was neither a buyer nor a trafficker. But Dutch public prosecutor Mrs M Koers said it has been proven that Mr O'Flynn came to Holland to close a drugs deal and called for the original two-year sentence to be increased to four years. The verdict will be given on July 1. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea