Quinn clashes with head of former business empire
Amid claims by chief executive Paul O’Brien that someone could be killed if the violence persists, Mr Quinn said the new boss had implied he was interfering inhis old business.
Mr O’Brien also accused Mr Quinn of refusing to renounce the violence despite a letter from the board and a subsequent appeal.
Mr Quinn reacted angrily, warning that he has told police in the North that anyone trying to sabotage Quinn Group property or intimidate staff was not acting in his name.
“I wish to state in the most categoric terms that I have no knowledge whatsoever of any unlawful acts in relation to individuals or property associated with the Quinn Group other than what I have read in the media,” Mr Quinn said.
“When I was contacted by the chairman of the Quinn Group in May to condemn reported acts of sabotage and intimidation, I replied that this was a clearinference that I was interfering in the business. In my response I also stated that I found such an inference ‘deeply offensive’.”
Mr Quinn, who was stripped of his empire last April, said he spoke with Chief Inspector Sue Steen of the PSNI about attacks several weeks ago.
“I stated, in clear and unequivocal terms, that persons carrying out such acts were not acting in my name and requested them to cease,” he said.
Mr Quinn said his condemnation has been widely reported and was repeated yesterday hours after Mr O’Brien’s home was targeted in an arson attack, the latest in a string of intimidating actions.
The chief executive’s BMW 4X4 was burnt out and windows smashed in his home in Ratoath, Co Meath, which the company branded sinister and an act of terrorism.
The family, including three young children, were on holidays at the time.
Mr O’Brien called on Mr Quinn to publicly denounce the violence before claiming someone could be killed unless it stopped.
“It is unprecedented that it is a personal attack. The previous attacks have been on the property of the business,” Mr O’Brien said.
“When you go down the route of a personal attack, it’s a much different matter. It’s crossing the line.”
Mr O’Brien took over at the head of the Quinn Group after Anglo Irish Bank appointed a share receiver and controversially stripped Mr Quinn of his cross- border business empire.
The nationalised bank seized the tycoon’s company as it chased €5 billion of family and company debts caused mainly by catastrophic share deals.
The deal ensured the vast majority of the 4,200 jobs in the manufacturing and insurance wings were safe for at least five years.
Since then, vandals have targeted Quinn property at sites across Northern Ireland, causing tens of thousands of euro worth of damage, with trucks and diggers set alight and an electricity pole cut down.
“As the events of Monday night have shown, it is escalating to a very dangerous level where somebody has the potential to be killed,” Mr O’Brien said.


