*The bag of coal was presented at Corofin Garda Station in February. 

A judge has freed a Corofin man who spent five weeks on remand in Limerick prison after he presented a stolen €15 bag of coal at his local Garda Station after phoning a Garda beforehand to say that he was going to carry out a theft.

At Ennis District Court, James (Jamie) Lally (47) of Newtown, Corofin walked free from court after Judge Valerie Corcoran imposed a six week prison term backdated to a date in February when Mr Lally first voluntarily went into custody.

Judge Corcoran said Mr Lally has served the sentence which allows him to leave custody.

Judge Corcoran said that to Mr Lally, “If you need assistance again, go to the drug services or go to services that can assist you and try to avoid something that would put you in this situation again. Go for assistance to those services, it is a better route to take”.

In evidence, Sgt John Burke told the court that Mr Lally took the €15 bag of coal from outside a shop in Corofin on February 17th.

Sgt Burke said, “It is quite an unusual offence and he went to Corofin Garda Station where he admitted to Garda Andrew Monahan and was arrested and charged and declined to sign a bail bond”.

Sgt Burke said that Mr Lally has 59 previous convictions including nine for theft.

Solicitor, John Casey for the accused man, said that Mr Lally has a very good relationship with Garda Monahan and before committing the offence told Garda Monahan that he needed to be put into prison and that he “needed to get off the streets”.

Mr Casey said that Mr Lally told Garda Monahan that he was going to carry out a theft of drink but instead stole the bag of coal and brought the bag of coal to the Garda station.

Mr Casey commented that “this is more a welfare call than anything else”.

In the case, Mr Lally pleaded guilty to the theft of one €15 bag of coal from Hogans Shop, Market Street, Corofin on February 17th.

The charge was contrary to Section 4 of the Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001.

Mr Lally told Judge Corcoran that he wanted to apologise to the court and after Judge Corcoran asked how he was, Mr Lally said he was feeling good.

Related News

irish coast guard helicopter 21-06-23 2
Tragedy in Doonbeg as two anglers die after falling into the sea
dog 1
Fencing works underway for dog park in Shannon
shannon airport easter 1-2
132k Easter passengers at Shannon Airport
twiggy lurcher 1
Cratloe family help starving stray lurcher birth six pups
Latest News
dog 1
Fencing works underway for dog park in Shannon
shannon airport easter 1-2
132k Easter passengers at Shannon Airport
brian mcnamara ul 1
Brian Mc named Sigerson Cup footballer of the year
twiggy lurcher 1
Cratloe family help starving stray lurcher birth six pups
waterford vs clare minor 30-03-26 shane cahill cian power 1
Waterford lose Clare minors in the fog in opening round upset
Premium
Successive Clare Cup wins for Clarecastle, Scariff, Kilmaley, Feakle, Doora/Barefield & Mills
Farmers in Kilnamona & Kilrush owed more than €106k by meat operator
'It was only a football game but we still wanted to win it for Jack' - Clare U20 boss Coughlan
Clare cling on to Division 3 status
US military's use of Shannon is Government failure to uphold genocide - claims activist charged with causing closure of airport

Subscribe for just €3 per month

If you’re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just €3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter €8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.