€4m damage chef to start drug rehab course

A young chef, who caused almost €4m damage when he burned Grainger’s public house and ‘Bed and Breakfast’ establishment in Baldoyle to the ground, will start a drug rehabilitation course next week.

€4m damage chef to start drug rehab course

A young chef, who caused almost €4m damage when he burned Grainger’s public house and ‘Bed and Breakfast’ establishment in Baldoyle to the ground, will start a drug rehabilitation course next week.

Gaven Kinsella will begin residential treatment in Coolmine Lodge next Tuesday after Judge Joseph Matthews said his urine analysis report was clean and adjourned the case until July 28 for mention to see how Kinsella was getting on in his course.

Mr Cormac Quinn BL, for Kinsella, said he had given up his job and he was now ready to go for treatment.

Judge Matthews told Kinsella that he deserved a chance because he was a first-time offender and there was a "fine" probation report before him. He had previously expressed concern that Kinsella had been abusing cannabis, ecstasy and cocaine since he last appeared in court.

He told Kinsella that he was prepared to allow him to take up a place in the Coolmine Lodge drug rehabilitation centre but added that if there was no improvement the next time he came before the court, he would have no alternative but to jail him for some years.

Kinsella, aged 20, from Templeview Way, Clare Hall, Baldoyle, a former lounge boy at Grainger’s, pleaded guilty to recklessly damaging it by fire on January 10, 2002.

The court previously heard that Kinsella put a match to a black plastic bag in a wheelie bin outside in Baldoyle when he was on his way home drunk

He told gardaí he did it "for a laugh" and because he was "locked and being a fool".

The lounge area, the ‘B&B’ and the adjacent shop, all the property of Mark Grainger, was completely destroyed as a result but seven people who were staying there managed to escape after they were alerted by the fire alarm.

Det Gda Paul O’Donohue said the damage totalled €3,809,214. Kinsella, who went home after lighting the match, went to the gardaí the following evening after he heard about the fire from a friend and read about it in an evening newspaper.

Mr Peter Thompson, who employed Kinsella as a chef in the Clontarf Court Hotel after the offence, said he was given a promotion after three months working for him and that he had the potential to become a "junior Conrad Gallagher".

He said: "There was no intent to burn down any premises. He was reckless, without any thought for the consequences. That’s the bottom line. But it had a very traumatic effect, not just on a property, but on the lives of people, because of the stupid actions of a drunk youth."

Mr Grainger, who went through a similar arson on his public house in 1992, told the court he had been "to hell and back in the last 18 months" but his biggest concern when he arrived at the scene was the welfare of the seven people who were staying in the ‘B&B’.

He said: "When I arrived, there was panic on the streets but the biggest heart attack I got was when I was asked to identify the people staying there because the premises was completely destroyed. Thank God they were all safe.

"I stood there in the street, seeing my business, that took me over 40 years to build, burn to the ground. I cannot describe in words the feelings of despair and lost hope I experienced that night."

Mr Grainger added that he suffered a personal financial loss of €1m and for the first year after the fire he was unable to get insurance. However, this year was insured for €70,000 when he previously was paying €23,000. He said this would take years to get over.

Judge Matthews offered Mr Grainger his utmost sympathy and wished him the best of luck in the future. He described him as a man of "great substance and integrity".

Mr Martin Giblin SC, for Kinsella, said his client was now a light drinker but hadn’t given up alcohol completely. He pleaded guilty at the earliest opportunity and gave himself up to the gardaí voluntarily.

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