Man paid €30 by friend to make hoax Islamic State call to Intel

Colin Hammond (21) admits making bomb threats for friend to didn’t want to go to work

A Dublin man was paid €30 to make hoax bomb calls which shut down a motorway, disrupted air traffic control and prevented 4,000 Intel staff from going to work, a court has heard.

Colin Hammond (21) had been drinking and taking tablets with a friend who paid him to make the calls because he didn't want to go to work at Intel in Leixlip the following morning.

Described by a judge as “profoundly stupid”, Hammond made two 999 calls claiming there were bombs located at Intel which would go off in 12 hours.

“You will not find them. This is a warning, we’re everywhere now,” Hammond told emergency services.

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When asked who was making the call, he replied: “Islamic State.”

Hammond of Bath Road, Balbriggan, Dublin pleaded guilty at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to making a false report giving rise to apprehension for the safety of persons or property at Bath Road on January 13th, 2015. He has no previous convictions.

Garda Eamonn McFadden told the court that 300 employees were forced to leave Intel and a further 3,700 staff were prevented from entering the site.

Judge Martin Nolan adjourned the sentence to October and said he intended to impose 200 hours of community service in lieu of two years in jail if Hammond is deemed suitable for this.

Gda McFadden told Derek Cooney BL, prosecuting, that the M4 motorway was closed and there was also disruption to air traffic control in the location before authorities realised it was a hoax.

He said that one person prevented from attending Intel was the friend who had asked Hammond to make the call and who was getting a lift to work there as a subcontractor with his father.

Gda McFadden revealed that a month after the hoax, a taxi man arrived at Balbriggan Garda Station with a passenger who wouldn’t pay his fare. The passenger was Hammond and a garda at the station recognised his voice from the hoax call.

Hammond admitted he had made the call on his friend’s behalf saying: “He hates work and I made a phone call so he wouldn’t have to go to work.”

Gda McFadden told Mr Cooney that at a “conservative estimate” the incident lost Intel 6,000 hours of production.

The garda agreed with John Costello BL, defending, that his client made the calls from a public phone about 50 metres from his family home. He also agreed that Hammond had entered an early plea to the offence.

Mr Costello submitted to Judge Nolan that his client had not been the brains of the operation and didn’t have any substance abuse problems. He asked the judge to be as lenient as possible as Hammond is “gullible and open to suggestion”.

Judge Nolan commented that “every day presents a new surprise in this court.”

He said: “I thought I’ve heard very asinine tales but this (case) surprises even this court. He’s demonstrated he’s profoundly stupid with his behaviour, that’s the only thing he’s done.”