Man stole jewellery from bedroom after helping woman to deactivate house alarm

Sentencing later in case judge says ‘would have been dismissed as unbelievable’ as TV script

Fergal Foley, prosecuting, told Judge Carmel Stewart the investigation  involved  “the most amazing piece of police work” in bringing the thief, Martin Ryan (48), before the court.
Fergal Foley, prosecuting, told Judge Carmel Stewart the investigation involved “the most amazing piece of police work” in bringing the thief, Martin Ryan (48), before the court.

A man who stole €180,000 worth of jewellery from a house after helping a woman who was trying to deactivate the house alarm will be sentenced next month.

"The story as it unfolded, if considered by film producers would have been dismissed as totally unbelievable and not suitable for something on a TV or film set," Fergal Foley, prosecuting, told Judge Carmel Stewart.

He also described the investigation as involving "the most amazing piece of police work" in bringing the thief, Martin Ryan (48), before the court.

Ryan, of North William Street, North Strand, Dublin, pleaded guilty on the morning of his trial at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court to trespass and theft of a quantity of jewellery in Stillorgan on April 21st, 2010.

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He has 71 previous convictions dating back to 1980, including burglary and road traffic offences.

Garda Michael McCarthy told Mr Foley that a local businesswoman had asked one of her newly appointed staff to return to her Stillorgan home and get her laptop. The young woman was provided with the house keys and codes to the alarm.

She had trouble turning off the alarm and ran out on the street to seek help. She waved down a passing car and asked the driver for assistance.

Mr Foley said the driver of the car, Ryan, “very helpfully” came into the house and deactivated the alarm.

The employee then got the laptop but had trouble re-setting the alarm so left it off. She locked the doors and returned to work.

When her employer returned home she discovered that a safe containing €180,000 worth of jewellery had been taken from a wardrobe in an upstairs bedroom.

Garda McCarthy agreed with Mr Foley that the staff member was immediately under suspicion but the gardaí­ were now “100 per cent confident” that the woman “had no hand, act or part in the burglary”.

She told gardaí­about getting the assistance from the passing car and gardaí­ later identified the vehicle on CCTV footage from a nearby hotel.

The car was registered to Ryan’s former partner. During a subsequent search of their home, metallic dust, a used disk from an angle grinder and a receipt for the hire of an angle grinder were found in a garden shed.

Garda McCarthy confirmed that the businesswoman later made an insurance claim and was awarded €108,000. The Rolex watch that had been taken was later tracked down in the UK.

Paul Greene SC, defending, told Judge Stewart his client had assembled together "an unusually large number of people in court to give evidence that they will support him when he is ready to re-emerge into society".

He said Ryan had a chaotic childhood and started abusing drugs at a young age. He later rehabilitated and started working in a drug treatment programme.

Counsel said at the time of the burglary Ryan was abusing alcohol and drugs and had a heavy gambling addiction.

Mr Greene submitted that his client is “now again on the road to rehabilitation to become someone who is no longer a drain on society”.

Judge Stewart said she needed time to consider the case and adjourned it to April.