Man caught with drugs worth €1m gets seven years’ jail

Dubliner under surveillance when gardaí saw him hand drug package to another man

Ketamine and cocaine worth over €1m were found by gardaí in  Kildare lock-up  where Patrick Purcell (33) had been spotted
Ketamine and cocaine worth over €1m were found by gardaí in Kildare lock-up where Patrick Purcell (33) had been spotted

A Dublin man who was holding more than €1 million worth of drugs in a rented Co Kildare storage facility has been sentenced to nine years in prison with the final two years suspended.

Patrick Purcell (33) was under surveillance when gardaí witnessed him handing over a drug package to another man.

A warrant was then secured for a lock-up he had been spotted in earlier that day, where quantities of ketamine and cocaine were discovered.

Purcell told gardaí he had been paid €500 to hold and distribute the drugs. He accepted he had been renting the lock-up for €15 per week, but claimed he had been using it to store tools for his landscaping business.

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Purcell of St Finian’s Green, Lucan, pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to possession of 18kg of ketamine worth €1.08 million and 212 grammes of cocaine, worth some €14,900, for sale or supply at the premises in Straffan, Co Kildare, on June 4th, 2015.

He also pleaded guilty to possession of 2.2 kg of ketamine, worth an estimated €103,100, at Maiden’s Row, Chapelizod, on the same date.

Purcell has four previous convictions, including one for a drug offence for which he received a suspended sentence.

Judge Melanie Greally said “a large number of impressive testimonials” had been handed into court from reputable people who spoke well of Purcell.

Genuine regret

She noted that he had expressed genuine regret for the impact his crime had on his family and the wider community and that he had co-operated with the Garda investigation.

Det Garda Daragh O’Toole told John Quirke, prosecuting, that he and colleagues had received confidential information about Purcell and had his home under surveillance.

They saw him pick up a co-accused Jordan Maher (19), before Purcell drove to the lock-up in Straffan.

The men later drove on to Chapelizod, while some gardaí remained in Straffan and searched the premises after securing a warrant.

Maher, of Arthur Griffith Park, Lucan, pleaded guilty to possession of the ketamine at Maiden’s Row when he was spotted handling the package. He was previously given a four-year suspended sentence.

Det Garda O’Toole said a follow-up search at Purcell’s home led to the discovery of a smaller amount of cocaine and a weighing scales that had traces of drugs on it

Purcell told gardaí in interview that Maher did not know what was in the bag at the handover in Chapelizod.

He said he had agreed to take the drugs because he had a €1,500 cocaine debt.

Det Garda O’Toole agreed with senior counsel Giollaíosa Ó Lideadha, defending, that Purcell’s role was to store the drugs and assist in their distribution.

He also accepted that while Purcell took responsibility for his own role, he claimed his life was at risk if he gave gardaí information about others involved.

Mr O’Lideadha said his client had a bigger problem with alcohol than drugs at the time of his arrest.

Purcell had written a letter for the court in which he acknowledged that he hadn’t appreciated the true consequences of his actions when he agreed to get involved in the offence.