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Charity Bóthar claims ex-CEO misappropriated hundreds of thousands of euro worth of donations The charity has secured a temporary High Court injunction freezing the assets of David Moloney. By Aodhan O Faolain Friday 9 Apr 2021, 7:23 AM 4 hours ago 26,638 Views 0 Comments Image: Graham Hughes via RollingNews.ie Image: Graham Hughes via RollingNews.ie WELL-KNOWN CHARITY Bóthar has claimed before the High Court that its former CEO David Moloney has misappropriated hundreds of thousands of Euro donated to it for his own and his associate’s personal use. Yesterday Bóthar, whose activities include aiding poor farmers in developing nations through donations of livestock, secured a temporary High Court injunction freezing the assets of Moloney, who resigned his post as the organisation’s CE ....
RTÉ Courts Reporter Well-known charity Bóthar has claimed before the High Court that its former CEO David Moloney has misappropriated hundreds of thousands of euro from donations to the charity for his own, and his associate s personal use. The charity, which assists farmers in developing nations through donations of livestock, secured a temporary High Court injunction freezing the assets of Mr Moloney, who resigned his post as the organisation s CEO in February. At the High Court, Ms Justice Nuala Bulter also ordered that Mr Moloney not reduce his assets below €465,000. The court heard that Mr Moloney of Clino, Newport, Co Tipperary, denies all allegations of wrongdoing, and has protested his innocence. Today s application was made on an ex-parte basis where only one side is represented. ....
Charity Bóthar claims ex-CEO misappropriated €465,000 in donations irishtimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from irishtimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The shares will instead be divided among the surviving siblings and extended family of the deceased. Thomas O Connell was gifted Kerry Co-Operative shares in a 1990 will of his uncle, John T Cronin who died some 23 years later in 2013, aged in his nineties. Mr O Connell, who inherited his uncle s farm, remains entitled to the estimated €272,438 value of those Kerry Co-op shares but not to the Kerry Group shares. In her judgment on Friday, Ms Justice Nuala Butler noted Mr Cronin, born in 1921, was one of 12 siblings reared on a small farm in Ballahantouragh, near Scartaglin. He left school as a teenager and began farming, later inheriting the 38 acre family farm from his parents. He never married but was an integral part of a large extended family. ....