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Nama trial: Court hears recording of Jamie Bryson's allegations about Peter Robinson

Nama trial: Court hears recording of Jamie Bryson's allegations about Peter Robinson

A recording of an Assembly committee meeting during which loyalist activist Jamie Bryson claimed the then First Minister Peter Robinson was set to benefit from the Nama deal has been played in court.
The finance and personnel committee meeting – which took place in Stormont in September 2015 – is at the heart of a trial currently being held at Belfast Crown Court.

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Green space or primary school? Opinions divided on the future of the old Jersey Gas site

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BBC News

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Nama trial: Ex-Sinn Fein worker says he was Jamie Bryson go-between

A former Sinn Féin election worker for Daithí McKay has told a court he was "used" as a go-between to send secret messages to loyalist activist Jamie O'Hara told Belfast Crown Court he thought the plan was "mad" as Mr Bryson was "not the biggest lover of the Shinners", but went along with it in September said Mr McKay, who was chair of Stormont's Finance Committee at the time, assured him there was "nothing criminal" about passing on the McKay, Mr O'Hara and Mr Bryson deny charges related to misconduct in public office and have been on trial for the past three weeks. The case centres on a meeting of the Finance Committee on 23 September 2015, at which Mr Bryson gave evidence about how Northern Ireland property loans were handled by the National Asset Management Agency, known as prosecution say the procedural rules of the committee were is alleged that a series of direct messages exchanged on Twitter before the meeting were evidence of a Bryson has admitted sending a series of private messages to the accounts of Mr McKay and Mr O'Hara but insisted he did not break any laws. 'Daithí McKay asked me for a favour' Mr O'Hara, who gave evidence for the first time to the court on Tuesday, insisted he was simply a conduit between Mr McKay and Mr Bryson, copying and pasting messages from one to the other."I just done what I was asked," he told the court."He (Mr McKay) said to me: 'Don't worry about it, it's nothing that serious, it's nothing criminal.'" Mr O'Hara, 40, from Lisnahunshin Road, Cullybackey, is a self-employed plasterer who lives with his mother. He told the court he has dyslexia and left school at 16 with no joined Sinn Féin in 2006 and said he had helped Mr McKay when he was an MLA by working in his constituency, canvassing and putting up election 2015, he said Mr McKay rang him and asked for a "favour", copying and pasting messages to and from Jamie court was told that private messages on Twitter had previously been directly exchanged between Mr Bryson and Mr McKay, but then Mr O'Hara became involved. 'I think he used me' It is alleged that Mr McKay told Mr Bryson to follow Mr O'Hara's Twitter account and they then exchanged a series of detailed messages before the committee meeting on 23 September court was told these included suggestions on how to present O'Hara was asked if he wrote the replied: "No, I didn't. Daithí McKay did."He was asked if he was worried that what he was doing was criminal."No, because he reassured me it wasn't," said Mr O' insisted he did not understand the messages he was passing on as they had "too many big words". Asked if he still regarded Mr McKay as one of his friends, he said: "No, I do not. I think he used me."Mr O'Hara denies a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public court was told by a psychologist who assessed Mr O'Hara that he has an extremely low IQ and a reading age of the view of the psychologist, it was "very unlikely" that Mr O'Hara composed the messages sent from his account to Mr Bryson. All evidence now heard The non-jury trial, in front of Judge Gordon Kerr KC, began last Bryson, 35, from Rosepark, Donaghadee denies a charge of conspiracy to commit misconduct in public McKay, 43, from Loughan Road, Dunnamanagh, denies actual the committee meeting in 2015, Mr Bryson made an allegation about the then leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) Peter Robinson, which was later denied and described by the politician as "scurrilous".The prosecution say Mr Bryson and Mr McKay were involved in an attempt to undermine the rules of the committee, in order to cause "considerable political embarrassment" to a number of people including Mr in the trial, when Mr Bryson gave evidence, he said he was not aware that Mr O'Hara had been acting as an alleged "back channel" to Mr McKay. After Mr O'Hara had been cross-examined, the court was told Mr McKay would not be giving evidence in the trial has now been heard and the case has been re-listed for final submissions on Monday Kerr said he hopes to give his judgement by the end of June.

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