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Town clerk's car taken without consent 15.12.09

by Linda McGrory

A CAR belonging to a senior Buncrana council official was taken without his permission by a lodger before it was involved in an horrific crash killing five, an inquest has heard.
The 1994-registered maroon-coloured Audi, belonging to the now-retired town clerk, Paul Doyle, was taken by Danielius Abartis (23) a Latvian man who was staying at Mr Doyle's home along with a number of other non-national men.
An inquest in Carndonagh on Friday heard how Mr Abartis was over the legal alcohol limit when the Audi was involved in a head-on crash three miles outside Buncrana in the early hours of Saturday, February 18, 2006. Mr Abartis died instantly in the accident.
The four others who were killed were Aija Porcika (38), her daughter Ginta Veite (19); Marita Kerpe (28) and Ricardas Bielskis (35).
Ms Porcika, her daughter, Ms Kerpe and Mr Bielskis, who was driving, were all travelling to Buncrana in a white Volkswagen Vento, after collecting Ms Veite from Dublin Airport. They were just three miles from their destination when the crash occurred.
Paul Doyle The inquest examined the deaths of Ms Porcika, a divorced mother of one from Latvia, living in Buncrana; Mr Bielskis, a father of one who was from Lithuania but was living and working in Burnfoot, Co Donegal, and Mr Abartis, also from Latvia, who was working in construction in Buncrana. He was unmarried but his girlfriend was pregnant in Latvia. Ms Veite and Latvian mother-of-two Ms Kerpe both died at Altnagelvin Hospital within hours of the crash and, therefore, their inquests cannot be heard in the Republic.
Garda Paul Mannion told the inquest he was on duty in the patrol van with two other officers that night. They were parked in Buncrana town centre, when the Audi erratically drove past around 4.05am. Garda Mannion said the officers witnessed the vehicle glance off a parked car 100 yards down the street. He said they suspected the driver was intoxicated and gave chase. He told the court, sitting at Carndonagh public services centre, the car reached very high speeds and eventually went out of view as it left the town on the main Buncrana to Derry road. They radioed for a garda checkpoint to be set up further ahead.
Garda Mannion said as they rounded a sweeping bend at Beach Halt, Fahan, they came upon the Audi on its side in the middle of the road. The badly smashed white Vento was on the hard shoulder facing the Derry direction.
As he inspected the Audi, the engine caught fire and he extinguished the flames, said Garda Mannion. He said he found one man moaning and one man motionless in the car. In the Vento, he found a woman moaning in the front passenger seat and two females in the back. One had no pulse and the other was having difficulty breathing. The male driver, he said, was "badly trapped and lifeless".
Garda Anne McGreal said she found it difficult to make out how many were in the Vento because it was "completely mangled". She said the front seat female passenger was clinging to the car radio which "must have come out on impact".
The only other occupant of the Audi, Armondas Degimas, was to become the sole survivor of the accident.
The inquest heard of efforts by the authorities to identify the three deceased at the morgue in Letterkenny the following day. These included finger-printing and the taking of dental records by Buncrana dentist Maeve Mulholland. Positive identifications were eventually made that day by friends and housemates of the deceased living in the Inishowen area. In his deposition, Valdas Salinas from Latvia, said Mr Abartis was working with him in construction and was also living with him and a number of other Latvians in Mr Doyle's five-bedroom residence at The Crescent, Buncrana. He said he was insured and had permission to drive Mr Doyle's car but Mr Abartis did not. Mr Salinas said: "Danielius always wanted to drive Paul Doyle's car but he was never allowed to drive it." He said that night, Mr Abartis, himself and a number of others drank some alcohol with Mr Doyle at his home, before everyone, except Mr Doyle, went to a local nightclub. The group drank more at the nightclub and drank again when they returned to The Crescent around 3.30am. They tried to be quiet because Mr Doyle was asleep. Mr Salinas said he did not know how much Mr Abartis had to drink on the night nor did he see him leave the house with the car keys.
Meanwhile, Inishowen coroner, Dr John Madden said the autopsies showed that Mr Bielskis had "zero alcohol" in his blood while Mr Abartis was over the legal limit at 240mg of alcohol to 100ml of blood. All three suffered multiple injuries and massive blood loss. Dr Madden said the testimonies included those of garda officers, ambulance personnel, fire-fighters, the pathologist and morticians.
"All these people are part of the much-reviled public service. There are not many people who could do the kind of work they do. They see some pretty gruesome and traumatic things. They should get more appreciation than they have done in the recent past," said Dr Madden. A verdict in accordance with the medical evidence was returned in each of the three deaths.
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