
Bryson and McKay cleared in Nama trial
Mr McKay, 43, from Loughan Road in Dunnamanagh – who was chairman of the finance committee at the time – was found not guilty of misconduct in public office.
Mr Bryson and Mr McKay said there are now questions for the Public Prosecution Service (PPS) over why the prosecution was brought.
Daithi McKay outside Belfast Crown Court on Thursday (Liam McBurney/PA)
Trial judge Gordon Kerr KC said he believed Mr Bryson had lied while giving evidence in the case, but said he was not involved in a criminal conspiracy.
The long-running Nama trial had related to Mr Bryson's 2015 appearance before the Stormont committee, chaired by Mr McKay, which was investigating the sale of Nama's Northern Ireland assets to a US investment fund.
The criminal probe was launched after the publication of leaked Twitter messages between Mr Bryson, Mr McKay and the account of Mr O'Hara, who at the time was a Sinn Fein activist in north Antrim.
Mr McKay quit as an MLA within hours of the Twitter messages being published in August 2016.
The Stormont Finance Committee inquiry was set up in 2015 amid political controversy over the multimillion-pound sale of Nama's property portfolio.
Nama, the so-called bad bank created by the Irish government to deal with the toxic loans of bailed-out lenders during the economic crash, sold its 800 Northern Ireland-linked properties to investment fund Cerberus for £1.2 billion.
Giving evidence to the committee in 2015, Mr Bryson used Assembly privilege to name former DUP leader Peter Robinson as a beneficiary of the sale.
The then-first minister of Northern Ireland strongly rejected any suggestion he benefited from the deal. All other parties involved in the transaction also denied wrongdoing.
Delivering his judgment in the non-jury trial on Thursday, the judge said: 'Despite his lies in court, I am sure that Mr Bryson was at all times communicating with Mr McKay.
'I am sure that the communications were designed to give Mr Bryson the best advice and guidance to maximise his chances of giving evidence.
The judge said the evidence against Thomas O'Hara 'fell well short' of anything which would convince him of his guilt (Liam McBurney/PA)
'My analysis of the messages do not show any occasion where Mr McKay undertook to say or do anything outside his duties as chairman to ensure Mr Bryson's evidence would be in open session.
'Clearing Mr Bryson, the judge said the evidence did not establish there had been a criminal conspiracy between him and Mr McKay.
He said: 'In the absence of an agreement, the conspiracy charge must fail.'
Turning to Mr McKay, the judge said there was 'no doubt he deliberately misled the committee to ease the way for Mr Bryson's presentation'.
The judge pointed out the Assembly had its own code of conduct and said there was 'no precedent for a prosecution in these circumstances'.
Clearing Mr McKay, he added: 'I do not consider it my role to expand the offence.'
The judge said the evidence against Mr O'Hara 'fell well short' of anything which would convince him of his guilt.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
6 minutes ago
- The Independent
Legacy body to investigate Narrow Water and M62 bombing atrocities
The body tasked with probing outstanding cases from the Northern Ireland Troubles is to investigate the Narrow Water atrocity in which 18 soldiers were killed in Co Down in 1979. The Independent Commission for Reconciliation and Information (ICRIR) will also investigate the 1974 M62 coach bombing in England, which killed nine soldiers and three civilians. They are among the latest cases that have been accepted by the commission and are in the information recovery stage. The Narrow Water atrocity occurred on August 27 1979, as a convoy of vehicles transported Parachute Regiment soldiers from Ballykinler barracks to Newry. As they passed the old Narrow Water castle ruins, IRA terrorists remotely detonated the two bombs from a firing point across the Newry River in the Republic of Ireland. Eighteen soldiers were killed, the highest death toll suffered by the Army in a single day during the Troubles. There was also a 19th victim – Michael Hudson, who had been visiting the Republic of Ireland from London, who was killed by army gunfire across the river following the blasts. Nobody was ever convicted over the attacks. The incident came just hours after Lord Mountbatten, two members of his family and a Co Fermanagh teenager had been killed by the IRA in a boat bomb in Co Sligo. The M62 coach bombing in West Yorkshire occurred on February 4 1974. The coach was carrying soldiers and their families back to their Catterick base when an IRA bomb hidden in the luggage compartment of exploded. Twelve people were killed, including two children aged five and two. The ICRIR was created by the previous government's controversial Legacy Act and is headed by former Northern Ireland Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan. Bereaved families, victims and certain public authorities can request the commission carry out an investigation into Troubles incidents. While the Labour Government has said it will repeal and replace parts of the Act and reinstate inquests and civil cases, it is retaining the ICRIR. Many bereaved families are unhappy with the retention of the commission and have vowed not to engage with it. Victims have questioned the body's independence and its ability to uncover answers about Troubles crimes. The commission has previously revealed that it is carrying out an investigation into the Guildford pub bombings of 1974 and has also been asked to investigate the Kingsmill massacre in Co Armagh in 1976.


BreakingNews.ie
6 minutes ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Date set for inquest into death of London man found at Giant's Causeway
An inquest into the death of a London man found at the Giant's Causeway is set to be heard in September Lester McLennan, 20, of South Vale, was reported missing to police last November 2nd, sparking a search operation. Advertisement The keen hiker had been on a family holiday in Northern Ireland, when he took a solo visit to see the natural beauty spot on the region's north coast. His body was found on February 23rd at the Giant's Causeway close to Bushmills. A brief review hearing at Belfast Coroner's Court on Monday morning was told the inquest is likely to be heard on the planned date of September 8th. Mr McLennan's mother, Lalitha, was among those who attended the hearing remotely. Advertisement Coroner Joe McCrisken said they are in a 'good position to proceed on the date that has been listed, September 8th'. The inquest is to be heard in one day at Coleraine courthouse.


The Independent
36 minutes ago
- The Independent
Date set for inquest into death of London man found at Giant's Causeway
An inquest into the death of a London man found at the Giant's Causeway is set to be heard in September Lester McLennan, 20, of South Vale, was reported missing to police last November 2 sparking a search operation. The keen hiker had been on a family holiday in Northern Ireland, when he took a solo visit to see the natural beauty spot on the region's north coast. His body was found on February 23 at the Giant's Causeway close to Bushmills. A brief review hearing at Belfast Coroner's Court on Monday morning was told the inquest is likely to be heard on the planned date of September 8. Mr McLennan's mother Lalitha was among those who attended the hearing remotely. Coroner Joe McCrisken said they are in a 'good position to proceed on the date that has been listed, September 8'. The inquest is to be heard in one day at Coleraine courthouse.