TWO LIMERICK brothers John and Wayne Dundon have been found guilty at the Special Criminal Court in Dublin of between them threatening to kill three members of the same family.
The court had heard mother- of-three April Collins was in a relationship with Gerard Dundon, a brother of the accused men, for eight years until late 2010.
There was evidence that the catalyst for the threats was an attack on the home of April Collins’s mother Alice Collins by four women, including John Dundon’s wife Ciara, on the evening of September 30th, 2010.
John Dundon (29), with an address at Hyde Road, Limerick, was found guilty of threatening to kill April Collins (24), but not guilty of making a threat to April to kill her mother Alice Collins (48) at Hyde Road on the weekend of April 3rd and 4th, 2011.
His older brother Wayne Dundon (33) of Lenihan Avenue, Ballinacurra Weston, was found guilty of threatening Alice Collins that he would kill or seriously harm her sons Gareth Collins and Jimmy Collins at Hyde Avenue, Limerick on September 30th, 2010. He was also found guilty of the intimidation of potential prosecution witnesses Alice and April Collins with the intention of obstructing the course of justice at the same address and on the same date.
Wayne Dundon was found not guilty of threatening to kill or cause serious harm to April Collins, and of making threats to April that he would kill her brother Gareth and mother Alice Collins at Hyde Road on March 25th, 2011.
The brothers had denied all the charges against them.
Alice Collins gave evidence that she called for gardaí to come to the scene and that as community garda Niamh Keogh walked in to the house, she heard Wayne Dundon ask: “Why are the guards following her into her house?”
The court heard that sometime after eight o’clock on the same evening, Wayne Dundon walked into Alice Collins’s sitting room in a “very agitated state” and said his brother John was not happy and would “hunt people down” if his wife Ciara went to jail.
Alice Collins said Wayne Dundon asked her if her son Jimmy went to a certain local pub every weekend, before telling her John Dundon would “give some fool 10 grand” to kill Jimmy.
She said Wayne Dundon then told her: “Well, Gareth will stand in front of me and he’ll look at my face and this will be the last face he’ll see because I’m going to kill him myself.”
As he got up to leave the house, Alice Collins said Wayne Dundon told her: “You are digging your own grave; it’s very easy to make people disappear.” She said the threats put the “fear of God” into her, and that she was “living on nerves” and had altered her living habits since the incident.
April Collins told the court she was at home on March 25th, 2011, when a “very angry” Wayne Dundon entered the house and threatened to kill her, her brother Gareth and her mother Alice.
She told the court that over a week later, on the night of April 3rd, 2011, she was sitting on her couch watching TV when someone began “bating” down the door.
She looked out her sitting room door and could see John Dundon through glass panels on the front door shouting: “I know you’re in there you tramp, I want to see my nephews. When I get you I am going to f*****g kill you.”
Ms Collins said she retired to bed with her children later that night, but woke again at 2am to find John Dundon standing on a shed in her back yard, while another man stood in the garden.
April Collins said that when she asked John Dundon what he was doing there, she was “terrified” to hear him reply: “We’re looking for a good place to bury your mother.”
Presiding judge Mr Justice Paul Butler said the court had been impressed by the “entirely credible and convincing” evidence of Alice Collins and was satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Wayne Dundon had intimidated and made threats against her.
With regard to the three counts against Wayne Dundon of making threats to kill on March 25th, 2011, the court found the evidence of April Collins to be credible.
However, Mr Justice Butler said that a part of her evidence could be construed as demonstrating a lack of fear of the threats “sufficient to cast a doubt” at least on an essential constituent of the offence and, at most, on whether the threats were made at all.
He said the court found the actions of John Dundon on the evening and early morning of April 3rd and 4th, 2011, amounted to “sinister and threatening” actions on his part, but that it would be unsafe to construe the words “we’re looking for a place to bury your mother” as a direct threat to kill Alice Collins.
John Dundon smiled and shook his head as the verdicts were read out, while Wayne Dundon made little reaction. Mr Justice Butler remanded both men in custody to appear before the court for sentencing on April 18th.