11:57KEY EVENT
'Niall Barry could not control me'
Mr Greaney says: “By 19.40, you were back in Liverpool?”
Peers replies: “I was.”
PG: “At 19.42, you and Ian Fitzgibbon and James Witham went into the Co-op on Pilch Lane?”
JP: “Yeah, that’s correct.”
PG: “Where had Ian Fitzgibbon had come into the events on this day.”
JP: “Erm i’m not too sure to be honest.”
PG: “Had he been waiting for you at the flat when you arrived back?”
JP: “I actually can’t remember.”
PG: “He arrived there, almost as soon as the others who had been to North Wales got back. Was it just pure chance?”
JP: “Erm. I’m not too sure. I probably spoke to him on the phone. I can’t actually remember.”
PG: “You went back to the flat at Pilch Lane, staying there until gone midnight into August 20.”
JP: “Yeah that’s right.”
PG: “You left having spent over four hours in that flat. Getting into a taxi?”
JP: “I did yeah.”
PG: “Another person left after you and got into that taxi?”
JP: “That’s right yeah.”
PG: “You told us you couldn’t remember who that was. Many of the details, the drinks and sweets you bought, you can remember. Can you remember who it was?”
JP: “I’m more than sure it was Sean that left with me at that time.”
PG: “We know now that night.”
JP: “Dropped me off in the taxi.”
PG: “You were in that flat with James Witham, the gunman. With Niall Barry, with Sean Zeisz and with Ian Fitzgibbon.”
JP: “That’s correct.”
PG: “You returned to the flat the next afternoon didn’t you?”
JP: “I did yeah.”
PG: “You returned at 2.52. Were you with Ian Fitzgibbon?”
JP: “I was.”
PG: “Had you arrived together by agreement or was this pure chance?”
JP: “No he asked me do I want picking up to go the flat. Him and Claudia picked me up from my mum’s.”
PG: “Ian Fitzgibbon phoned you, and said he was going to the flat and offered to give you a lift. Did he explain why he was going to the flat?”
JP: “No.”
PG: “Why was it you wanted to go to that flat?”
JP; “I was just getting out the house.”
PG: “You spent a lot of time there.”
JP: “I spent all day in them shops and in the flat yeah.”
PG: “At 5.48, you and Ian Fitzgibbon went to the shop.”
JP: “Yeah.”
PG: “One of the things that you bought was a top up for Niall Barry’s phone?”
JP: “I did yeah."
PG: “This was a phone he was just about to start to use that night. A new phone.”
JP: “I’d be aware I got him a credit.”
PG: “Did Niall Barry explain why in the hours before the attack on 40 Leinster Road he was about to use a new telephone.”
JP: “No, I never noticed nothing. He asked me to get a credit from the shop and I did. I couldn’t say he’s using a new phone. He’s asked me to get him a credit, he gave me 20 quid, I got him a tenner credit. He never explained it. I was going the shop to get a few bits, sweets, whatever. I spent the rest on sweets and coffee I think.”
PG: “James Witham then arrives at 7.20pm.”
JP: “I wasn’t with Witham that day..”
PG: “He’d been to the fotoball with Mr Kershaw. There he is arriving back. Just over five hours later, he launched an attack on 40 Leinster Road.”
JP: “Yeah.”
PG: “In the intervening period you spent hours in his company.”
JP: “I did yeah. From 7.20, I spent a bit of time with him yeah.”
PG: “You spent time laughing and joking.”
JP: “That’s right yeah.”
PG: “Did you not have the slightest inkling of what he was about to do?”
JP: “I didn’t.”
PG: “Sean Zeisz arrives at 9.15. He’ll have his opportunity to tell us why he went there, what did he say to you was his reason?”
JP: “I was in the flat with Ian. They were getting ready to watch the fight. I hadn’t seen or spoke to him that day. It wasn’t until later on that I had a phone call. I said to him, we’re in the flat here. The boxing’s going to be on, are you coming? And he called past. I waited for him to come and remained in the flat for an hour, 40 minutes. Seen him and then got off.”
PG: “He went because you had invited him?”
JP: “That’s correct, yeah.”
PG: “We’ve now reached the point of your departure. You were asked a series of questions yesterday by Mr Reiz. Were you aware he was asking questions on behalf of Niall Barry?”
Peers says he was.
PG: “You agreed that James Witham had become intoxicated?”
JP: “Yes.”
PG: “That he’d become rowdy.”
JP: “Yeah.”
PG: “And because he was spoiling the mood he’d been asked to leave by Niall Barry.”
JP: “That wasn’t for me, that wasn’t in my presence. I got up. I was going home. Whether something’s been said to him as I’m coming the stairs after I’ve come out the living room. It’s a long landing and flight of stairs and hallway. I couldn’t say.”
PG: “I thought you told us yesterday Mr Reiz was correct. Are you saying you have no idea?”
JP: “I’m saying it could be correct but it also couldn’t be. I accept it was getting loud in the flat and it was a bit hairy. That’s what I did accept.”
PG: “I think you may have accepted more than that but let’s just park that. You didn’t hear Niall Barry telling Mr Witham to get out?”
JP: “I never said that.”
PG: “You tell me what the position is please. Mr Reiz said Witham is drunk, rowdy, he’s spoiling the mood. Mr Barry said get out.”
JP: “It wasn’t like get out”
PG: “What did you hear him say?”
JP: “It’s getting a bit too much in here. That’s all I heard him say. What are you doing? Slow down.”
PG: “This is Barry to Witham. Mr Barry was suggesting to Mr Witham he should leave.”
JP: “That’s my understanding.”
PG: “All of that you can remember now in order to answer Mr Reiz’s questions. You can remember that happening.”
JP: “I can.”
Mr Greaney asks Peers to look at his first defence statement, made ahead of the trial.
He reads a section to the court: “The defendant, you, was part of the group gathering to watch the fight. There came a time the defendant announced he was walking home to watch the fight with his dad. He said his phone was on its arse, very low on charge. He recalled Zeisz saying if he called back later could he bring some cigarettes. As he got up to leave, Witham stated he too was going to see his nan in Page Moss and offered the defendant a lift home. Witham was quite insistent that he would give him a lift.”
Mr Greaney says: “You will be able to agree, there’s nothing in your defence statement about Witham being drunk or rowdy or it being suggested he should leave. Instead he was leaving to go and visit his nan?”
JP: “No. I said his nans. That should have been his nans. That’s right yeah.”
PG: “Do you agree the account in your statement is different from the account you have given to me?”
JP: “It was basically right, I just went into further detail with you and Mr Reiz.”
PG: “I’m going to suggest it is a different account and the reason you’ve given that it because Niall Barry is a controlling figure within your gang and you were agreeing because you think that is what he wanted you to do.”
JP: “Niall Barry could not control me nor tell me or give me advice on this. This is what I’ve said and what I believe to be true.”