Gerry Hutch plans to run in General Election as he eyes seat in Mary ...

5 hours ago
Gerry Hutch

Friends of the veteran criminal say he has talked with his family, put together a campaign team and identified Corinthians boxing club as his HQ should he run.

Gerry ‘The Monk’ Hutch is considering running in the General Election as a candidate in Dublin Central.

Friends of the veteran criminal say he has talked with his family, put together a campaign team and identified Corinthians boxing club as his HQ should he run.

Hutch would be vying for a position in the four-seat constituency against elected representatives Sinn Fein Leader Mary Lou McDonald, Fine Gael’s Paschal Donohoe, the Green Party’s Neasa Hourigan and Social Democrats Gary Gannon, elected in 2020.

Gerry Hutch at Kellie Harrington’s homecoming in Dublin. Photo: Conor Ó Mearáin / Collins

“He has been asked a number of times over the years to go up for local or general election,” a source said. “He is very seriously considering it this time.”

Hutch, who was acquitted of the murder of David Byrne last year at the Special Criminal Court, has enjoyed huge popularity around the north inner city where he grew up and where members of his family still live. He recently attended the homecoming of Olympian Kellie Harrington where he was treated like a local celebrity.

Sources say Hutch has considered any obstacles that could hinder him entering the race for the Dail, including his own security concerns. He was issued with a Garda Information Message in 2016 of a threat to life – which remains active – but he lives quite openly in Dublin when he is home from Lanzarote.

Mary Lou McDonald with Jonathan Dowdall

Hutch moved to the Canary Island full time 12 years ago but has retained Irish citizenship which makes him eligible to run for the Dail. He has told pals he would have no problem declaring his assets should he be elected.

While The Monk’s mind is not yet made up and he is still in consultation with his family about the pros and cons of running for election, he has said he’d like to run on a mission to improve the north inner city area.

Hutch has long championed his old neighbourhood.

Read more

He was a huge supporter of the late Tony Gregory TD and purchased the Corinthians Boxing Club near Buckingham Street, renting it to the club for €1 per year on a 99-year lease after its premises burnt down.

At one point he became a treasurer at the club where boxers like Harrington trained.

Hutch hasn’t been convicted of a criminal offence since the 1980s, but is suspected of masterminding two significant armed robberies. He settled a tax bill of more than €3m with the Criminal Assets Bureau in the late 1990s and moved to Lanzarote in 2012 after a stint as a celebrity limo driver.

Gerry Hutch at Dublin Airport in a limousine to pick up former boxer Mike Tyson in 2006

In 2015 he came out of retirement to broker a peace deal between his nephew Gary Hutch and his one-time best pal Daniel Kinahan, who had fallen out in Spain.

The Monk mediated a meeting and helped organise a compensation pay out to Kinahan which was to spare Gary’s life. However, after the money was paid Gary Hutch was murdered and on New Year’s Eve, Kinahan sent hitmen to Lanzarote to kill The Monk.

The Hutch Organised Crime Group hit back with two attempts to kill Daniel Kinahan, at boxing weigh-ins at the Red Cow and later The Regency Hotel. What followed was a shocking wipeout of The Monk’s family and friends; first his brother Eddie, then his nephew Gareth followed his old pal Noel ‘Kingsize’ Duggan.

Raiders disguised as Gardai armed with AK47 weapons enter the front door of The Regency Hotel in February 2016

There were serious attempted hits on his brothers Johnny and Patsy, his nephew Jonathan and later the murder of another nephew, Derek Coakley Hutch, and his pal Noel ‘Duck Egg’ Kirwan.

The State claimed that Gerry Hutch was the gunman who shot dead David Byrne after Kinahan fled The Regency but he was found not guilty. During his trial, evidence was given in relation to the existence of the Hutch Organised Crime Group which was described as ‘familial’ and ‘patriarchal’.

No evidence was given regarding what type of crime the group was involved in, although sources say it is funded through drug dealing and robbery.

Evidence around his dealings with dissident groups in Northern Ireland and his links to old school Provos was also heard during the high-profile trial.

Read more
Similar news
This week's most popular news