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Glen Ward was sentenced to five-and-a-half years in prison. Irishphotodesk

Man named as 'Mr Flashy' jailed after firing semi-automatic rifle at a house party in Finglas

GardaĆ­ recovered the weapon with a “sizeable cache” of ammunition during a house search in February 2022.

GLEN WARD, THE man named in the High Court as the leader of the so-called ā€˜Gucci Gang’ and referred to by gardaĆ­ as ā€˜Mr Flashy’, has been sentenced to five-and-a-half years in prison for firing a semi-automatic rifle during a house party in Finglas.

Presiding over the trial today, Justice Melanie Greally said the firearm Ward used was powerful and capable of causing serious injury or death.

She noted that gardaĆ­ found the weapon alongside a ā€œsizeable cacheā€ of ammunition.

Video footage retrieved from a phone showed Ward, having already fired the gun, encouraging his younger brother Eric O’Driscoll to take and discharge the firearm, she added.

32-year-old Ward previously pleaded guilty to a charge that on January 1, 2022 at an address in Finglas he possessed or had control of a .223 calibre Remington AR-15 semi-automatic rifle in circumstances giving rise to a reasonable inference that he did not have it for a lawful purpose.

O’Driscoll (23) pleaded guilty to possession of the same gun.

GardaĆ­ discovered the rifle alongside a military sub-machine gun during a search of a house in Finglas in February 2022.

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Judge Greally said that in June of that year, gardaĆ­ responded to reports that shots had been fired at a taxi on the Tolka Valley Road. When they searched the taxi, they found a phone that they were later able to connect to O’Driscoll.

Analysts discovered a video clip on the phone in which Ward could be seen pointing the AR-15 rifle towards the sky and firing.

Judge Greally said a number of young people were present and watching. Ward, she said, then handed the firearm to O’Driscoll, who fired three shots into the air.

In passing sentence, Judge Greally said there is a ā€œcertain unrealityā€ to the suggestion that Ward had only a fleeting involvement with the firearm. However, she accepted that there was a ā€œdearth of evidence of his relationship to the firearmā€, and his plea was accepted based on what can be seen in the video clip.

In mitigation, she considered the negative impact on Ward’s mental health after spending his first seven months in prison on 23-hour lockup with his brother.

A prison governor’s report states that his behaviour has improved recently.

The court also noted that Ward had undertaken not to associate with six individuals whose names were handed into the court.

Judge Greally sentenced Ward to six years and three months, but suspended the final nine months. She added that the defendant must keep the peace and be of good behaviour for 12 months after his release, or he could serve the suspended portion of the sentence.

The court previously jailed O’Driscoll for five years.

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