September 19, 2024

Widow of Console founder Paul Kelly escapes jail with fine after pleading guilty to fraud probe charge

Paul Kelly #PaulKelly

THE widow of Paul Kelly, the founder of the Console charity, escaped jail with a €1,500 fine today after pleading guilty to a charge of failing to keep proper books of account as a director of the company.

Console was set up in 2006 to provide services on a voluntary basis to people who suffered bereavement as a result of suicide.

Patricia Kelly escaped jail with a €1,500 fine today

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Patricia Kelly escaped jail with a €1,500 fine todayCredit: irishphotodesk.ie

Mr Kelly and his wife Patricia Kelly, 61, were listed as company directors of the registered charity.

Dublin Circuit Criminal Court was told today that the charity received funding totalling €2.03 million between 2010 and 2016, the majority from the HSE.

Kelly of Alexandra Manor, Clane, Co Kildare pleaded guilty to one count of failure, other than wilfully, to keep proper books of account as a director of a company, contrary to the Companies Act, 1990, between December 2006 and May 2015.

The court heard that the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) was not pursuing other charges against Kelly after accepting a guilty plea on the basis that it was not a “wilful” failure, and as such, she could not be imprisoned for the offence.

The maximum fine available to the court for this offence is €10,000.

The court was told that 96 payments – totalling €223,000 – made between 2006 and 2015 were traced by the investigation to accounts controlled by Mr Kelly, which also named his wife as an account holder.

Shane Costelloe SC, prosecuting, said the “lion’s share” of the prosecution was directed against Mr Kelly, and it seemed he was the person controlling the accounts into which payments were made.

He said while Kelly was named on the accounts, there were issues with signatures, and the prosecution was unable to confirm that she was the person who signed certain documents.

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Mr Kelly had been facing multiple charges but died by suicide in February 2020, the court heard.

Judge Martin Nolan today noted the court could not impose a custodial sentence due to the basis on which the plea was entered.

He said: “It seems while the State may have its suspicions, at a certain point it came to the conclusion it could not prove the allegations, so it adopted a position in that it accepted a plea.”

The judge said the investigation took “hundreds or thousands of hours and liquidators were involved, and it seemed like a lot of money, and the main person they were interested in is no longer with us.”

‘Straitened circumstances’

He said Kelly was now living in “straitened circumstances” and imposed a fine of €1,500 with six months to pay. She is also automatically disqualified as a director for five years.

Detective Garda Garry Callinan of the Corporate Enforcement Authority agreed with Remy Farrell SC, defending, that the prosecution had intended to charge his client’s late husband with the same offences that she faced before the plea was accepted.

It was also agreed that Kelly studied to be a beautician and has no training or expertise in bookkeeping.

She is also facing ongoing civil proceedings brought by the liquidator of the charity.

Mr Farrell his client is on a widow’s pension and is of limited means. He asked the court to impose a “modest or very modest” fine.

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