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'I thought he'd gone doolally', says Claire over Costello claims

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Claire Byrne leaves court yesterday.

Claire Byrne leaves court yesterday.

Claire Byrne leaves court yesterday.

RTE presenter Claire Byrne told the High Court she thought a former minister of state "had gone doolally" on her radio show.

Ms Byrne thought claims by Joe Costello that Sinn Fein political manager Nicky Kehoe was a member of the IRA army council controlling how councillors voted at meetings were outrageous.

She said her tone towards Mr Costello, then a Labour TD and a former minister for trade and development, was incredulous.

"I thought he had gone doolally. I remember sitting there thinking where is this coming from," she said.

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Nicky Kehoe at the Four Courts yesterday

Nicky Kehoe at the Four Courts yesterday

Nicky Kehoe at the Four Courts yesterday

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"I expected him to represent government policy and what he was doing was bringing it down to local politics.

"My tone was incredulous because that is how I felt at the time."

She was giving evidence as part of RTE's defence of a defamation action against it by Mr Kehoe, a former city councillor and SF director of elections and now employed as a political manager by the party.

He says he was falsely described by Mr Costello, on an October 2015 Saturday With Claire Byrne live panel radio programme, as a former chief of staff of the IRA who was controlling how SF councillors on Dublin City Council vote.

Mr Kehoe's case ended on Friday following further cross examination of Mr Kehoe and evidence from three community activists in Mr Kehoe's Cabra area who all said they did not believe his [Kehoe's] standing in the community had changed as a result of what was said on the programme.

In her evidence, which began on Friday afternoon, Ms Byrne said after Mr Costello made the comments, her producer, Kay Sheehy, pressed the "talk back button" which allowed the producer to talk to her. The talk back button is a warning system between presenter and producer and a click came on in Ms Byrne's headphones.

She thought what Mr Costello had said was outrageous and a strange thing to say and she was about to intervene when another panellist, SF's Eoin O Broin, spoke and named Mr Kehoe.

Before that she did not know who Mr Costello was talking about.

Asked by her counsel Cian Ferriter about a suggestion from Mr Kehoe, during his evidence, that she should have cut Mr O Broin off from naming him again, she said she felt if she had stopped Mr O Broin she would have been doing him [O Broin] and SF a disservice.

She said Mr O Broin, who she earlier described as a very smart and intelligent person and one of SF's three top people, stepped in to defend Mr Kehoe and proceeded to dismantle Mr Costello's argument.

"In my professional opinion, I felt in a live broadcast if I had stopped him from proceeding with that defence that would have caused more harm," she said.

She felt Mr O Broin had, from the minute he intervened, destroyed Mr Costello's argument.

RTE guidelines are that presenters must act promptly when issues like this occur. While this was quite an unusual instance, she had in the past stopped people from naming others during discussions and saw that as her duty.

The case, which is being heard before a judge and jury, continues on Tuesday.


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