Shortt accepts State's apology over conviction

Donegal nightclub owner Frank Shortt today accepted a belated apology from the State for being framed by corrupt gardaí and wrongly…

Donegal nightclub owner Frank Shortt today accepted a belated apology from the State for being framed by corrupt gardaí and wrongly jailed for 27 months.

The 71-year-old was falsely convicted of allowing drug dealers free reign to sell ecstasy to clubbers at the popular Point Inn on the Inishowen Peninsula in 1992.

After years battling for justice, last autumn he was awarded €1.9 million compensation in the High Court and that was followed today with the state finally apologising for his suffering.

Speaking after appealing to the Supreme Court to increase his damages, Mr Shortt said he accepted it in the manner it was intended. "We finally have received an apology, so long in coming after so many years, and we certainly are pleased in receiving it," he told RTÉ Radio.

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"And I have to say this on behalf of myself and Sally [his wife] we accept that apology in the spirit that it was given."

Mr Shortt was the victim of a grave miscarriage of justice at the hands of disgraced former Superintendent Kevin Lennon and his shamed side-kick Noel McMahon who resigned from the force following the damning findings of the Morris Tribunal.

The pair orchestrated a case against the successful businessman which led to him wrongly standing trial for knowingly allowing drugs to be sold on his premises.

The officers convinced both the DPP and the courts that Mr Shortt had turned a blind eye to dealers in his club. In fact, Mr Shortt had already approached gardai to ask for their help in catching the dealers.

Upon conviction he was sent to Mountjoy Prison in 1995, put on antidepressants and lost two-and-a-half stone in a few months. Mr Justice Joseph Finnegan, President of the High Court, awarded him €1.93 million in October last year stating that he had suffered an outrageous abuse of power.

But Mr Shortt is appealing the award in the Supreme Court claiming it is insufficient and inadequate for what he went through.

His lawyers said he had suffered back, heart and mental problems as a result of his incarceration and that the damage to his character was sustained. And they added that the local community in Inishowen saw the false conviction as a case of no smoke without fire, with many people treating him like a pariah to this day.

PA