Tag Archives: Denis O’Brien

Seriously?

What kind of [REDACTED] jury would award this [REDACTED] cherubic-faced [YIKES] who made his first fortune [This whole Section needs To Go, Karl] to wallow [And this bit] and [Also here] while [REDACTED] Michael Lowry and Fine Gael.

Free speech? The [Redacted] doesn’t know [REDACTED] the [REDACTED] of [REDACTED].

He’s a total [Ah Here] with stupid hair.

Jury Finds For Denis O’Brien In Action Against Daily Mail (Belfast Telegraph)

(Laura Hutton/Photocall Ireland)

 

Get up.

There’s more.

Lars adds:

Worth catching RTE News  for Sandra Hurley’s piece to camera. She said that DO’B described Charlie Bird as “high maintenance” and Charlie signed an email to him with “Love, Charlie” and that “it was quite the romance”.Denis’ explanation for his Malta address brought the lulz.

 

Watch here.

Via Mark Tighe

Pic: RTE

Not him,

Silly.

This guy:

Meanwhile, in The High Court.

He [Denis O’Brien, above] denied that he had engaged in a very professional PR campaign after receiving the preliminary findings.
Lawyers for the newspaper said he had taken out newspaper ads “slagging off tribunal lawyers”, was quoted in the Sunday Times as saying he “had a plan” and described fighting the tribunal “street by street”.
Mr O’Brien said he was involved with the tribunal for ten years, he was quite emotional and upset and questioned the credibility of the legal team for the tribunal.

 

Denis O’Brien Accuses Daily Mail Lawyers Of Re-running Moriarty Tribunal To Blacken Him (RTE)

(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

 

Last Friday, Bloomberg reported on Denis O’Brien’s whirlwind trip to the World Economic Forum in Davos.

One of those he met was Stephen Schwarzman (top), the CEO and chairman of private equity firm, Blackstone.

It was reported O’Brien gave Schwarzman his phone number and business card.

And well he might.

Last February, the Sunday Independent reported that IBRC (formerly Anglo) hired Blackstone to advise it on how to sell its loan book.

Which is a large book that includes the €500 million-plus owed by Denis.

Billionaire O’Brien Finds Linger Free Zone In Davos (Bloomberg)

How US Vulture Capitalist The-Blackstone Group Is Insinuating Itself Into The Fabric Of Irish State Business (NamaWineLake)

(Bloomberg, Photocall Ireland)

Denis O’Brien (top) and James Osborne.

In today’s Irish Times, former INM chairman James Osborne recalls the spat with Denis O’Brien which led to his exit from the company earlier this year.

Osborne goes back to Saturday, April 14th, when he says Denis O’Brien rang him and demanded an article about him in the following day’s Sunday Independent be pulled.

“I said, ‘No, that’s not what I’m going to do’,” Osborne explains. “It was an article that turned out to be pretty innocuous . . . about the biggest borrowers with Anglo and he was one of them.”

 

The Sunday Independent article by Tom Lyons was the first mention in an irish newspaper of the extent of Denis O’Brien’s borrowings with Anglo.

It reported that he owed the bank €833.08 million as of May 2009 “on foot of personal and corporate loans” (the article claimed the overall debt had been reduced to €500 million).

Making him Anglo’s sixth largest borrower.

And how did he acquire the debt?

Purchasing – at the top of the market – shares in INM.

‘I Don’t Mind A Bit Of An Oul’ Scrap Every Now And Then. That’s Me’ (Ciaran Hancock, irish Times)

Previously: Denis O’Brien: Dividends, Debt And Paying Back Anglo

So, You Know That Denis O’Brien Story…

Like A Spoilt Teenager

(Saso Lazarov and Eamonn Farrell/Photocall ireland)

 

Previously: For Whom The Bell Tolls

He’s Got Her Back

Meanwhile, back in March:

“There has been considerable public and political unease about the fact that Mr. O’Brien has continued to pop up at various public events, most recently at the New York Stock Exchange…. It is perhaps time for the Government to reflect on how it should in future interact with people against whom adverse findings have been made by tribunals.”

 

Joan Burton.

 

Bringing Denis Down To Size (Broadsaheet, March 28, 2012)

Representatives of IBRC (ex-Anglo), including chairman and former Fine Gael leader Alan Dukes and CEO Mike Aynsley are before the Public Accounts Committee Joint Committee on Public Expenditure and Reform this morning.

Fianna Fail’s finance spokesman Michael McGrath asked Mr Aynsley (above) about those texts.

Later Aynsley moved to rubbish ‘anonymous notes’ alleging some carry-on between banking officials, IBRC clients and private jets.

That’ll be Denis O’Brien’s private jet so

What rumours are these?

Michael McGrath: “I think you need to understand why I’m asking this question because we’re trying to be absolutely reassured that what’s left of the former Anglo and Irish Nationwide has moved away with entirely, from the culture that prevailed in those institutions where there were very close relationships between the people running those institutions and their largest clients and borrowers. And I want that reassurance from you because you are involved in making commercial decisions involving tens of billions and hundreds of billions of euro. And you can go through all the governance process that you have referred to Mr Dukes, but it does come down to judgement calls ultimately. Now it’s not my job to say whether or not you’re making the correct judgement calls but it is my job to be reassured that you’re going about it the right way. And that there is nothing else involved, much in anyway, influencing your decisions. So I’d be interested in your comments on that.”

Mike Aynsley: “Look there’s nothing untoward in anyway about the approach to Mr McKillen to advise him of the decision put forward. The reality was that we were going through a process that Mr McKillen and the Barclay brothers’ representatives were well and truly aware of, which culminated in a submission to the board and approval of the board to maintain a process of consensual restructuring with Mr McKillen around his loans, rather than selling a portion of those to the Barclay brothers. Now we came out of those meetings and my colleague Mr Woodhouse was given the authority to contact the Barclay brothers and inform them of the decision. I intended to call Mr McKillen but of course, couldn’t get hold of him. He doesn’t do email. So I sent him a text and it was as simple as that. And the reminder to him, following it up, was simply that this was a board decision and it’s a bank-client relationship that shouldn’t be divulged. Of course, being aware at the time that he was acutely in litigation with the Barclay brothers it was inappropriate, we felt, that he should admittedly go to the press with that. Of course it ultimately came out during the discovery process in that litigation. That’s all that there was to it. Now I would like to just go on a minute because it is a very important aspect in you being confident that this bank is operating in a total other way than the old management of the bank, pre-nationalisation. I think that the key point here is that there is no one individual in the organisation who has the capacity to influence and make decisions around any of these loans. We have a very well structured governance process…”

And then later

McGrath: “There’s one answer that you could give, which would be the departure from the practices of the past in the institutions you inherited, would be on the issue of hospitality. And I know the bank has a very clear policy in that regard that, in general, directors and employees must not accept gifts or the conveyance of anything of value, including entertainment from current and prospective banking customers or suppliers, is that fully adhered to in the respect of IBRC?”

Aynsley: “We have a full entertainment and travel policy in place. We still maintain a situation where we will have entertainment, client entertainment in certain circumstances, that’s controlled under the policy. It’s specified under the policy, what is appropriate, what is not appropriate. There is, and I’ve seen some of the anonymous notes that have been sent to various members and press, that have been sent on to me, I can assure you that, as far as I know in the organisation, there is no participation by any member of the bank’s management team or staff in any of the allegations that have been made around, flying in jets and staying in people’s personal homes and all these sorts of things”

Hmmm.