Northern Ireland

Greenvale Hotel manslaughter case returned for trial five years after tragedy

Owner and self-employed member of security staff will stand trial following protracted legal argument

Conor Currie (16), Lauren Bullock(17) and Morgan Barnard (17) died after a crush at the Greenvale Hotel on St Patrick's night
Conor Currie (16), Lauren Bullock (17) and Morgan Barnard (17) died after a crush at the Greenvale Hotel

Five years after three teenagers died during an event at the Greenvale Hotel, the owner and a self-employed member of security staff have been returned for trial.

Lauren Bullock and Morgan Barnard, both 17, and Connor Currie (16) died in a crush involving hundreds of people queued to enter the hotel on St Patrick’s Day 2019.

Michael McElhatton (57) of Rock Road Moneymore and Seamus Mitchell (45) of Mullan Road, Coagh are jointly charged with unlawfully killing the three teenagers.

The case first reached Dungannon Magistrates Court on December 2 2022, and was scheduled to be returned straight to trial but numerous adjournments followed.

In a ruling on Wednesday, District Judge Michael Ranaghan said the victims lost their lives from compression asphyxia caused by crowd crush.

Mr McElhatton as a director of Tobin Limited (against which criminal proceedings are not challenged) was, “the controlling mind and acted in a hands-on capacity within the company and is contended personally and criminally liable. Mr Mitchell likewise as self-employed is, the prosecution say, criminally liable”.

The event was sold as a “queue-skip” system whereby bus-operators organise the trip and patrons pay them to be transported and provided with a ticket which gets them into the venue without having to queue.

The judge continued: “To describe the event as a tragedy is an understatement. Conor, Lauren and Morgan lost their lives that night. They went out to have fun as teenagers do. The outcome of that day was horrible for all parties.

“Mr McElhatton and Mr Mitchell did not mean to cause any harm. That is not the prosecution case. It is a breach of duty-of-care to Conor, Lauren and Morgan and the prosecution say they are criminally liable and there was a fundamental failure to ensure the safety of persons.”

The defence argued the prosecution had failed to establish their clients had failed in their duty of care and therefore criminally liable.

However, Judge Ranaghan noted there had been issues at the Greenvale Hotel before which must have been known and the prosecution contend the event was oversold on “queue-skip” tickets alone, there was also no risk assessment and insufficient door staff on duty.

It is contended 56 safety breaches were found against both McElhatton and Mitchell.

A further 21 are alleged solely against Mitchell.

The pair were remanded on £500 bail to appear for arraignment on a date and court venue to be fixed.