Restaurant worker jailed for systemic theft that forced owners to sell business

Rachel Kenny, (29), Longstone, Pallasgreen, Co Limerick, outside Limerick Circuit Criminal Court, where she was jailed for three years with the final two years suspended, after she pleaded guilty to 10 sample counts of thieving cash from her employers, at the Milk Thistle restaurant, Mungret, Co Limerick. picture Brendan Gleeson

A WOMAN who stole thousands of euros from the restaurant where she worked, forcing the owners to put the business up for sale, has been jailed for three years with the final two suspended.

Rachel Kenny (29), of Longstone, Pallasgreen, County Limerick, pleaded guilty at Limerick Circuit Criminal Court to 10 sample counts of theft from the Milk Thistle restaurant in Mungret.

The charges formed part of a broader Garda investigation into 81 separate incidents of theft from the business over an 18-month period.

The court heard that Kenny, who began working at the restaurant in 2019, and was later promoted to supervisor, abused her position of trust by manipulating the restaurantโ€™s cash online register system and pocketing โ‚ฌ150 a week after allegedly helping an accomplice.

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Detective Sergeant Fiona Oโ€™Connell, Henry Street Garda Station, told the court that the thefts came to light in late 2022 after Kennyโ€™s boss and owner of the restaurant, Denis Cregan, noticed a drastic downturn in the businessโ€™s turnover.

Initially attributing the losses to rising energy costs, Mr Creganโ€™s accountants later flagged inconsistencies that raised suspicions of the internal theft.

After reviewing CCTV footage, Detective Sergeant Oโ€™Connell found that Kenny was falsely recording cash transactions as gift voucher redemptions or, in some cases, failing to record sales altogether.

Gift voucher redemptions in 2022 totalled โ‚ฌ31,689.87, despite only โ‚ฌ5,305 worth of vouchers being sold, the court heard.

The restaurantโ€™s bank balance plummeted from โ‚ฌ149,000 in 2020 to โ‚ฌ69,000 in 2022.

Accountants estimated that the total loss was around โ‚ฌ55,000, though not all of it could be attributed to Kenny, the court heard.

Prosecuting counsel John Oโ€™Sullivan BL described Kennyโ€™s thefts as โ€œrelatively modestโ€ in isolation, but, he pointed out, they were persistent and carried out in a supervisory role.

โ€œShe was essentially dipping into the till week after weekโ€, he said.

Kenny made full admissions when questioned by Gardaรญ.

Reading a victim impact statement on behalf of Mr Cregan and his wife, Mary Lane, who co-owns the restaurant, Mr Oโ€™Sullivan said the couple had decided to put their beloved restaurant up for sale.

โ€œIt has destroyed our trust in people,โ€ wrote Mr Cregan. โ€œWe worked hard to keep the doors open and were always fair to (Kenny). This has had a severe psychological and financial toll on us both.โ€

Defence barrister Erin Oโ€™Hagan BL said Kenny was exceptionally remorseful and had been deeply affected by the criminal proceedings.

Describing Kennyโ€™s relationship with the owners as โ€œalmost parental,โ€ Ms Oโ€™Hagan said the betrayal had caused Kenny deep personal anguish.

Ms Oโ€™Hagan said Ms Kenny had since found work in another restaurant and was trying to rebuild her life.

Judge Colin Daly said the breach of trust could not be understated, adding that โ€œshe deliberately set out to steal from friends who trusted herโ€.

โ€œThe cumulative effect was considerable, especially at a time when small businesses are struggling.โ€

While the maximum sentence for each count of theft is 10 years, the judge opted for a five-year headline sentence, reduced three years with two suspended.

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