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Catherine
NEVIN
Characteristics:
Date of murder:
Date of arrest:
April 1997
Victim profile: Tom Nevin, 54
(her husband)
Location: Brittas
Bay, County Wicklow, Ireland
The jury in her trial also found her guilty on
three charges of soliciting others to kill him after five days of
deliberation, then the longest period of deliberation in the
history of the Irish State. Nevin was the subject of significant
coverage by the tabloid press and Justice Mella Carroll ordered a
ban on the press commenting on Nevin's appearance or demeanour
during the trial.
Doubts have been raised about the safety of
Nevin's conviction and her lawyers say that she was the victim of
a miscarriage of justice.
Early life
Catherine Scully met Tom Nevin in Dublin in
1970 and they were married in Rome in 1976. Within ten years, they
owned two houses and managed a pub in Finglas, Dublin. In 1986,
they opened Jack White's Inn.
Murder of Tom Nevin
On 19 March 1996, Tom Nevin was killed with a
shot from a nine pellet shotgun while counting the day's takings
in Jack White's pub near Brittas Bay in County Wicklow. According
to Catherine Nevin, she was woken by someone pressing her face
into a pillow. She said: "It was a man shouting: 'f**king
jewellery, f**king kill ya'. He had a knife in his left hand.
Everything in the room was coming down around." IR£13,000 was
taken from the pub, and the Nevins' car was stolen and was found
abandoned in Dublin.
The ‘Black Widow’ is told that secret garda
files have raised no new evidence for an appeal of her murder
conviction
TheJournal.ie
November 22, 2010
‘BLACK WIDOW’ CATHERINE NEVIN has this morning
lost her attempt to have her murder conviction declared a
miscarriage of justice.
Nevin – who was found guilty ten years ago for
the murder of her husband Tom at Jack White’s Pub at Brittas, Co
Wicklow – was this morning told at the Criminal Courts of Justice
that there were no new relevant facts in her case.
As a result, the trial judge said, there was no
basis on which to revisit the earlier judgement that found her
guilty of soliciting the services of three men to kill her husband
Tom on March 19, 1996.
Nevin’s lawyer said she was “very
disappointed”, adding that she had “had great faith in that court
to vindicate the constitutional right to a fair trial.”
She said, however, that the verdict would be
appealed, “almost certainly” to the European Court of Justice.
The Court of Criminal Appeal had previously
refused a request from Nevin’s legal team to access secret Garda
intelligence files on the three men Nevin was found guilty of
soliciting.
It did order, however, that those secret files
be made available to the three judges of the court.
BBC.co.uk
April 12, 2000
A pub landlady has been convicted of her
husband's murder following one of the longest courtroom sagas in
the Republic of Ireland's legal history.
Guilty verdicts on charges of murder and
soliciting three men to murder were returned against Catherine
Nevin in Dublin's Central Criminal Court on Tuesday evening.
The verdicts were returned after the jury of
six men and six women had been out for nearly five days - a record
in Irish legal history.
Nevin was immediately handed a mandatory life
jail term for the murder, but sentencing on the other charges
against her were adjourned.
The verdicts were reached unanimously on the
murder and on an 11-1 majority on the other counts.
They followed one of Ireland's most sensational
and high-profile murder trials.
Nevin, 49, pleaded not guilty at the start of
the proceedings in February to killing her 54-year-old husband
Thomas on St Patrick's Day weekend in 1996.
Mr Nevin was shot dead at Jack White's Inn, the
pub he ran with his wife in Ballinapark, County Wexford on the
main road between Dublin and Rosslare.
She had also denied three charges of soliciting
men, two of them with hardline republican links, to carry out the
murder.
In the course of her trial, the court heard of
allegations by Nevin that her husband had been a member of the
IRA, a homosexual and a drunkard.
'Contract' killing
Evidence had also been heard that the accused
woman had affairs before the death of Mr Nevin with a local judge
and a senior Irish police officer.
The affairs were denied in court by both the
judge and members of Mr Nevin's family refuted suggestions he had
ever been in the IRA.
Sentencing Nevin, trial judge Miss Justice
Mella Carroll told her: "You had your husband assassinated, and
you tried to assassinate his character as well.
"I hope his family will take some consolation
from this verdict."
The trial heard prosecution allegations that
Nevin bore animosity to her husband and wanted control of their
pub.
It was claimed Mr Nevin died in a botched
robbery designed to conceal a contract killing carried out at the
behest of his wife.
It was said Nevin approached a member of Sinn
Fein to see if the IRA would carry out the killing.
The jury heard evidence from 170 witnesses and
a three-day address from defence counsel Patrick MacEntee, SC,
earlier this week.
The trial originally began in January, but had
to be abandoned when it was found discussions among the jury could
be heard in the public gallery of the court.
Then a second trial was delayed for some days
when Mrs Nevin was taken ill at the Dublin address where she had
been staying during the court hearing.