Department of Taoiseach and NAMA spent €14.4 million on investigation into €1.6 billion Project Eagle land deal

The Department of the Taoiseach and NAMA have spent at least €14.4 million on a seven-year inquiry into a controversial land deal that was only finalised last week.

A breakdown of costs shows that the chair of the commission of investigation Susan Gilvarry received fees of around €500,000 in the period between 2023 and January of this year.

The inquiry began in 2017 and concluded that NAMA had got the best price for the €1.6 billion Project Eagle lands while critical of a “success fee” that formed part of the deal.

The Department of the Taoiseach has confirmed that it has so far spent €7.7 million on the inquiry, which included around €2.8 million costs over the past two years.

A detailed breakdown of the most recent expenditure showed €506,000 was paid to Susan Gilvarry in her role as sole member of the commission, which included a small amount of IT costs.

Another solicitor working on the inquiry Susan Connolly received fees of €443,510 while barrister Darren Lehane got payments of €454,729 over the two-year period.

Three other lawyers were paid between €100,000 and €200,000, according to the data released under Freedom of Information laws by the Department of the Taoiseach.

Another six received fees of between €13,800 and €95,000.

The database covers all payments that were made by the department between January 2023 and January 2025 but may also cover some work from prior to those dates.

A bill of around €142,000 was run up on IT costs which included software licences, infrastructure backup, file management, and the purchase of computers.

There were far more mundane costs as well including around €17,000 for the rental of photocopying machines and €1,000 for copying paper.

Four shredders cost €137 while €32,000 was paid to the Civil Service Credit Union for shared electricity costs for the inquiry premises at St Stephen’s Green.

There were stenography costs of around €2,000 and phone bills of around €5,800 paid to the telecom provider EIR.

Cleaning services – including a number of “deep cleans” of the offices – cost €16,000 and €10,500 was paid for specialised legal software.

Asked about the expenditure, the Department of the Taoiseach did not respond to a request for comment.

A separate breakdown of figures from NAMA shows expenditure of €6.78 million by them on the investigation, the vast majority of it paid to a single legal firm.

NAMA said fees of €6.72 million had been paid to McCann Fitzgerald with five-figure sums paid to two other legal practices.

Below is a data-dump of expenditure by the commission of inquiry from 1 January 2023 to late January of 2025.

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