Brady was born on 20 August 1957.[1] He sat his Leaving Certificate at Synge Street CBS in 1975. He studied law at University College Dublin and received a Bachelor of Civil Law Degree in 1978. Brady was a tutor in Business Law in the Faculty of Commerce at University College Dublin.[3]
Career
Brady was called to the Irish bar from King's Inns in 1979 and to the English bar from Middle Temple in 1986. He was made a senior counsel in 1996 and was chairman of the Bar Council of Ireland from October 2000 until June 2002. He held the view that the Personal Injuries Assessment Board was a "fatally flawed project".[4] He was a member of several statutory bodies within Ireland, including the Courts Service Board (October 2000 to June 2002); the Censorship of Publications Board (which he chaired from December 2001 to June 2002); and the Garda Síochána Complaints Board (from April 2002 to June 2002).
Brady died in July 2010, after two years of illness and was survived by his wife and two daughters.[16] Taoiseach Brian Cowen called him one of the "finest and most able barristers of his time", while Bertie Ahern said he was "a great Dubliner who had a strong affinity with his native city" and that he was his "closest and most trusted colleague at the cabinet table. He was never anything less than brilliant".[17] Ahern had been assisted by Brady in a defamation case.[1]Fine Gael's Charles Flanagan stated that Brady had served "with distinction".[5] Hundreds of people, including politicians, attended his removal,[18][19] while his funeral was also well attended.[20] His interment was in Mount Jerome Cemetery.[21]