
Jozef Puska was 'a bit sad' on day of Ashling Murphy murder, court hears
Earlier on the day that Jozef Puska murdered Ashling Murphy, he was "a bit sad" and seemed like he had a "problem he didn't want to share with anyone," the Central Criminal Court has heard.
Lubomir Puska jnr (38) told gardaí two days after the murder that his brother, Jozef Puska, was "not in a good mood" and the family became concerned when he left that afternoon and didn't return. He said he didn't see his brother again that day.
Advertisement
Two days after that first statement, Lubomir jnr returned to Tullamore Garda Station and apologised for lying. He said he had, in fact, seen Jozef again that night, soon after 9pm.
He said Jozef arrived at the house they shared in Lynally Grove, Mucklagh, just outside Tullamore, looking like he had been beaten up.
The trial previously heard that Jozef Puska has been convicted of murdering Ms Murphy, a 23-year-old schoolteacher, on January 12th, 2022. Ms Murphy was exercising by the canal near Tullamore when Jozef Puska stabbed her repeatedly in the neck.
Jozef, Lubomir jnr and another brother, Marek (36), lived at the house in Lynally Grove with their wives Viera Gaziova (38) and Jozefina Grundzova (31) and 14 children.
Advertisement
Lubomir Puska jnr and Marek Puska are accused of withholding information that was crucial to the investigation into Ms Murphy's murder in January 2022.
Marek Puska (L) and Lubomir Puska (R) are accused of withholding information that was crucial to the investigation into Ashling Murphy's murder in January 2022. Photos: Collins
Ms Grundzova and Ms Gaziova, are accused of impeding Jozef Puska's apprehension or prosecution by burning the clothes he wore when he murdered Ms Murphy.
Each accused has pleaded not guilty.
On Tuesday, Det Gda Joanne O'Sullivan told prosecution senior counsel Sean Gillane that Lubomir jnr made voluntary statements at Tullamore Garda Station on January 14th and 16th, 2022.
Advertisement
In his first statement, Lubomir jnr said he first saw his brother in the early afternoon that day. He seemed "a bit sad, not in a good mood," Lubomir jnr said.
He added: "He seemed to me like a person who doesn't want anyone to know what is biting him inside. Some kind of problem he didn't want to share with anyone."
Lubomir jnr left the house at about 11.30, and he said he didn't see his brother again.
In his second statement, after Lubomir jnr apologised for lying, he said that when Jozef arrived home on the night of the 12th, it looked like he had been struck on the forehead.
Advertisement
Ireland
Clare man (76) pleads guilty to assisting unlawful...
Read More
When Jozef complained of a pain in the stomach, Lubomir jnr said he looked and saw three lacerations on his brother's abdomen.
Jozef insisted that nothing had happened, Lubomir jnr said, and didn't say where he had been. He said their parents arrived a short time later and took Jozef to their home in Dublin.
When gardaí asked why he had not told the truth in his previous statement, he said: "It felt strange to tell on my brother. I never had to do it before." He said he came back to tell the truth, adding: "I feel better now that I told the truth. I feel better now."
The trial continues before Ms Justice Caroline Biggs and a jury of seven men and five women.
Hashtags

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


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Cannabis changed me, claims 'sword killer who hacked boy aged 14 to death after hallucinating that his cat was causing "Armageddon"', court hears
A drug-crazed killer launched a samurai sword rampage hacking a 14-year-old boy to death after hallucinating that his cat was causing 'Armageddon', a court heard yesterday. Marcus Monzo, 37, admitted that he had been using cannabis 'extensively' which had changed his personality and caused a mental health decline. In the grip of a cannabis-induced 'psychotic disorder', the Brazilian is said to have strangled, skinned and deboned his cat, Wizard, before attempting to eat it. Minutes later, Monzo is alleged to have set off with the animal's remains on a baking tray, a number of swords and a ball-bearing gun on a mission to kill, shouting 'does anyone believe in God'. Yesterday Monzo claimed he could not remember killing Daniel Anjorin, 14, as he was walking to school. Nor could he remember ramming a pedestrian with his van or charging into a nearby house and attacking a terrified couple in their bedroom in front of their four-year-old child during the 20-minute rampage in Hainault, east London, on April 30 last year. Yesterday Monzo told the Old Bailey that he had been consumed by 'paranoia and anxiety'. Monzo claimed he stopped smoking cannabis in 2015 because it changed his personality, but he started using cannabis daily again in 2023. But he denied smoking cannabis on the day. In the days before the attack, Monzo said: 'I believed the cat was being used against me and I started receiving guidance, communication... telling me to kill the cat.' He tried to cook Wizard, but he became 'panicked and rushed', believing an event 'like an Armageddon' was occurring. Monzo wept while giving evidence saying he did not intend to harm anybody, adding: 'My memory after I left my home... gradually it becomes very vague and abstract... not very clear.' Monzo denies murder, attempted murder, aggravated burglary by entering a property with intent to cause grievous bodily harm, wounding with intent and having an article with a blade or point, namely a kitchen knife. The trial continues.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE How Ballymena boiled over: After horrifying riots sparked by two Romanians being accused of raping teen, RICHARD KAY meets the victims - and locals furious at 'endless stream of migrants' they had no say over
By daylight, Ballymena, a town of 30,000 people in rural County Antrim, bustles with commerce and activity: farmers taking livestock to slaughter while pedestrians cheer on a peloton of cyclists on a training run up the Galgorm Road. But as dusk falls, the bucolic mood is transformed into something rather more sinister. Marauding gangs of masked youths stalk the streets, barricades are set ablaze and the acrid smell of burning tyres fills the night air.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Harry Dunn mother speaks of ‘undeserved' MBE for being ‘mum who was just broken'
The mother of a teenage motorcyclist, killed by a US citizen who was able to leave the UK under diplomatic immunity laws, has said she feels 'undeserving' of her MBE because she was 'a mum who was just totally broken'. Charlotte Charles, the mother of 19-year-old Harry Dunn, said her work on road safety following the crash that resulted in her son's death in 2019 was an 'avenue to direct my grief down'. Harry was killed when a Volvo driven by then-US state department employee Anne Sacoolas hit him while on the wrong side of the road outside RAF Croughton in Northamptonshire. Sacoolas had diplomatic immunity asserted on her behalf following the crash and she was able to leave the country 19 days later. Mrs Charles, alongside Harry's father Tim Dunn, campaigned for justice for three years – which included a meeting with US President Donald Trump at the White House. Speaking about her reaction to when she received the letter telling her she had been made an MBE, Mrs Charles, 50, told the PA news agency: 'One of a bit of bewilderment, I guess. 'I couldn't be happier on behalf of Harry, if I'm honest. 'I just always wanted to make sure his death led to change, and if it means that a few more lives are saved, and victims of a serious crime are treated a little bit better, and that the roads in and around our bases in the UK are safer, then I'm thrilled to accept the award on behalf of him. 'But I don't think it's sunk in yet.' She continued: 'I think when I received the letter I just felt almost a little bit undeserving – because you don't forget all of the achievements that you've worked so, so very hard to secure. But at the end of the day I just view myself as a mum who was just totally broken. 'I didn't know any other way of coping apart from focusing on as many positive things as I possibly could. 'It was an avenue to direct my grief down – so for me, the last five-and-a-half years… campaigning for one more string to the bow of Harry's legacy was a real focus. 'So for it to be honoured and recognised feels a little bit surreal because I was just doing what I desperately needed to do at the time – which was to try and secure safety and a better understanding of everything that we had been going through. 'So it just feels quite surreal.' Questioned on whether she felt her work on road safety and changing the laws regarding diplomatic immunity would be recognised in such a way, she said: 'No, not at all – it's the furthest thing from your mind. 'All you're thinking about at the time is to just try to make sure that what happened to us just never happened to anybody else. 'When Anne Sacoolas left the country and jumped through what we discovered was a loophole – that was one of the main things on my radar, to get that loophole closed. 'Then you start looking more widely.' She added: 'You work on these things and you do your absolute best at the time for what you have in your head and what changes you want to make for the sake of healing your heart a little bit more. 'But you never ever think that a recognition like this is going to come along – it's just not in your realms of thinking at all.' Mrs Charles, and the rest of the Dunn family, are expecting a parliamentary inquiry to be announced soon before the sixth anniversary of Harry's death in August. She told PA: 'I would say that we have been more at peace since justice was done. 'In our eyes, we did achieve what we set out to achieve. 'We were able to show that those who think they are above the law aren't – certainly not in our country. 'We can't control other countries' laws and regulations but we had a lot of faith and hope in our justice system. 'So to be able to achieve that was incredible, and I think the overall feeling is one of peace. 'I carried out that promise to Harry – and the public and the media, and eventually our own Government, helped us to achieve that. 'Life is still really hard – if I'm honest we're still trying to work out what our life is without Harry. 'You constantly live with that pain and that sense of sheer loss – but certainly I can say on behalf of myself and the family that we do have a better sense of peace in our broken hearts now.' Asked if her MBE was on behalf of her son, she said: 'Absolutely it's on behalf of Harry. 'My love for him has got me through all of the fights that we've had to have to get to where I am today. 'So the award is absolutely on behalf of Harry, yes.'