A man accused of stabbing a garda has been further charged with arson of a pub owned by Conor McGregor and engaging in terrorist activity during the two incidents.
Abdullah Khan (23) appeared at Cloverhill District Court on Wednesday for his fifth hearing since being charged and has not yet applied for bail.
Mr Khan, with an address in north Dublin that cannot be revealed due to a court order, was arrested at the scene following an incident at about 6pm on Capel Street in the city centre on July 29th.
He was initially charged with assault causing harm to the officer and the production of a knife capable of causing serious injury.
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The injured garda, a young probationary member of the force who was on high-visibility patrol with a colleague, received hospital treatment for non-life-threatening injuries.
Mr Khan’s brief hearing on Wednesday marked the most significant development in the proceedings since he was remanded in custody on July 31st.
He faced five additional charges and directions from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) were delivered specifying that Mr Khan is to be tried in the non-jury Special Criminal Court, which is reserved for terrorism or organised crime-related offences.
Detective Sergeant Liam McLoughlin, from the Bridewell Garda station, told Judge Alan Mitchell that Mr Khan “made no reply” when he charged him with two offences: endangerment of life and attempted assault of a second garda at Capel Street, on July 29th.
Det Sgt McLoughlin said the accused was handed a true copy of these charges and made no reply after being cautioned, shortly before his court appearance.
Special Detective Unit Sergeant Eamonn O’Neill then gave evidence, telling Judge Mitchell that at 10.24am he charged the accused with three other offences, and Mr Khan “made no response when cautioned”.
One of these charges was for criminal damage in connection with a fire at the Black Forge Inn, on the Drimnagh Road, Walkinstown, Dublin 12, on July 25th.
The other two are under Section 6 of the Criminal Justice (Terrorist Offences Act), 2005, for engaging in terrorist activity or terrorist linked activity, during the alleged arson on July 25th and the knife attack four days later.
Det Sgt O’Neill said: “The DPP directed that it is to proceed on indictment and the matter is to be forwarded to the Special Criminal Court.”
Asked by Judge Mitchell if the new charges related to the same incident, Det Sgt O’Neill replied: “One of the charges is directly related to the previous charges, and the others are a separate but related incident.”
The sergeant thought that all the charges would be in a single book of evidence.
The accused, dressed in a grey tracksuit, sat with his arms folded behind a transparent barrier on the defendant’s bench.
He did not address the proceedings and spoke only to consult his solicitor Matthew de Courcy, who confirmed that there was no application for bail.
He has yet to indicate a plea.
Judge Mitchell noted that reporting restrictions on Mr Khan’s address would be continued for public safety reasons, “and the safety of other persons not related to this”.
There was no application for legal aid, but the judge said he would note that such an application was being deferred.
The accused was remanded in custody to appear again in one week, as this was the maximum adjournment allowed due to the new charges.
Judge Mitchell said he expected it could take six weeks for prosecutors to complete the book of evidence, which must be served on the accused before a trial order is granted.