Athy murder victim ‘battered about the head,’ trial told

Trial of Seamus Morgan (49) for allegdly killing Laurence Keane (56) in July 2013 begins

Seamus Morgan (49), of The Hollands, Athy, is charged with murdering Laurence Keane (56) on July 19th, 2013. Mr Morgan pleaded not guilty to the charge at the Central Criminal Court on Monday.

The skull of a man killed in Co Kildare over two years ago was severely fractured when he was “badly battered about the head”, a murder trial has heard.

Seamus Morgan (49), of The Hollands, Athy, is charged with murdering Laurence Keane (56) on July 19th, 2013. Mr Morgan pleaded not guilty to the charge at the Central Criminal Court on Monday.

Prosecution counsel Tom O’Connell SC told the jury it is the prosecution’s case that the attack on Mr Keane took place “shortly before midnight on July 18th 2013” but the deceased did not die until the next day.

“I think the prosecution in this case will establish to your satisfaction that it was an unlawful murder. Laurence Keane was in his mid to late fifties at the time of his death and was not in good shape as he had been in a traffic accident so he walked with a stick,” said Mr O’Connell.

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‘Four places’

The court heard Mr Keane was “very badly battered about the head with an object which caused him severe fracturing of his skull in at least four places.”

The prosecution said the court would hear Mr Keane was “attacked” in a laneway between St John’s Lane and the Greenhills estate in Athy between 11.30pm and 11.45pm on July 18th, 2013.

“He died in Naas General Hospital as a result of his injuries. A postmortem was carried out by Deputy State Pathologist Dr Michael Curtis who concluded that the cause of death was as a result of blunt force trauma to the head with four fractures to his skull,” Mr O’Connell said.

Counsel told the jury they will hear evidence from eye witnesses concerning “Seamus Morgan attacking Laurence Keane.”

The court heard these eye witnesses were a “number of young men on bicycles in in the “reasonably well lit lane-way at the time of the killing” who knew both the accused and deceased.

“Two of those who observed the assault will say they saw Seamus Morgan assault Laurence Keane,” Mr O’Connell said. “One other (person’s) recollection is that he saw Mr Morgan assault somebody but he couldn’t say who was on the ground. There is also evidence that the attacker Mr Morgan used an iron bar to beat Mr Keane with.”

Search warrant

Regarding DNA evidence counsel told the court that on July 19th, 2013, gardaí obtained a search warrant to search Mr Morgan’s home.

“It was during this search that Garda Jason Hughes found a pair of wet, grey and yellow Adidas runners in a bin in the garden, at the side of Mr Morgan’s house,” said counsel.

Mr O’Connell told the jury they will hear the runners were seized, then placed in an evidence bag, photographed and later sent to Dr Hilary Clarke at the Forensic Science Lab.

“Dr Clarke found there were small blood stains on both the right and left runner. She will tell you the blood profiles found on the runners were full DNA profiles which matched the blood sample taken from Mr Keane at his post mortem. Dr Clarke will tell you that the chance of finding this profile if the DNA had come from someone unrelated to Mr Keane would be considerably less than one in one thousand million,” said counsel.

The barrister said the jury will hear how Mr Morgan was arrested on suspicion of the murder of Mr Keane on July 25th, 2013 and brought to Newbridge Garda station and detained there for “five periods in all”

“He admitted to gardai he had been in the lane-way with Mr Keane and there was long standing animosity between the two men. He was subsequently rearrested on April 17th, 2014 as some new evidence had come to light,” said Mr O’Connell.

The trial continues.