U2 bassist Adam Clayton 'had 2.8m euro stolen by his trusted PA who embezzled hundreds of cheques'
U2 bassist Adam Clayton's former
personal assistant is on trial for embezzling 2.8 million euro of his
personal funds, a Dublin court heard today.
Carol
Hawkins worked for Clayton for 16 years starting as a housekeeper and
earning his trust before being promoted to the role, earning up to 48,000 euro a year and living rent free at his home.
She is on trial for 181 counts of stealing cheques from the bass player between 2004 and 2008.
Adam Clayton and Carol Hawkins pictured outside The Circuit Criminal Court in Dublin today before prosecution opened its case
Hawkins was initially employed as a
housekeeper at the bassist’s Georgian mansion - Danesmoate - in
Rathfarnham, South Dublin, but quickly gained his trust and was promoted
over the years to the role of personal assistant.
Prosecution
barrister, senior counsel Colm O’Briain, told the jury of seven men and
five women at The Circuit Criminal Court in Dublin that Clayton
appointed Ms Hawkins as signatory to a number of his bank accounts.
t was from two particular accounts -
known as the Fitzwilliam account and the Danesmoate account - that she
is accused of withdrawing a total 2.8 million euro (2.25 million pounds)
over four years.
Clayton, dressed in a dark jacket and white shirt, sat intently at the back of the court as the prosecution opened its case.
Clayton (right) and U2 manager Paul McGuinness
leave Dublin Circuit Criminal Court. The court was told that Adam
Clayton will be called to make a witness statement
Mr O’Briain said Ms Hawkins and her
then husband John Hawkins, who had also been employed by Clayton as a
driver, lived at the musician’s Danesmoate home - where U2 recorded
their album The Joshua Tree.
The
property was refurbished during 2005 and Ms Hawkins and her husband
were forced to move into another house, which Clayton picked up the
monthly rent bill of around 2,600 euro.
The pair had also been paid a joint salary, taking in around 3,800 euro a month.
But
Clayton continued to pay Ms Hawkins the full amount even after her
marriage ended in 2007, eventually raising her monthly income to 4,080 -
representing a net salary of around 48,000 euro (38,715 pounds), the
barrister added.
Ms Hawkins, from Lower Rathmines Road in Dublin, denies all the charges.
The trial is expected to last six weeks.
Mr O’Briain described the case as “a grubby tale” involving a gross breach of trust.
He urged the jury not to be swayed
by the fact that Clayton is famous and wealthy, saying no man deserves
to be stolen from by someone he trusts.
'Mr
Clayton employed Ms Hawkins from 1992. She lived in his own house for
13 or 14 years, he placed a substantial amount of trust in her'
Mr O’Briain added:
'Trust developed. He is no different from anyone else in respect of
that. He is as entitled as any other to place his trust in people, to
rely on that trust and to not go about his life thinking the worst of
people.'
Ms Hawkins is accused of stealing cheques from two bank accounts on which she was a signatory.
She
allegedly withdrew 1.7 million euro (1.1 million pounds) from the
Fitzwilliam account and 1.1 million euro (889,400 pounds) from the
Danesmoate account.
The
funds were then placed in three separate accounts - her own personal
account, a joint account between herself and her husband John and a Bank
of Ireland Credit Card Services account.
Clayton will be called as a witness during the trial.
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