Following the arrest of
Hugh McAteer in October 1942, Kerins was named
Chief of Staff of the IRA. Despite a massive manhunt by Gardaí, Kerins remained at large for just under two years. On 1 July 1943, Charlie Kerins, alongside fellow militants
Archie Doyle and
Jackie Griffith arrived on bikes at the gates of Player Wills factory on the
South Circular Road, Dublin. With scarves around their faces, they stopped the van carrying £5,000 for wages and gunpoint, and drove away with both the van and the money, which was used to finance the IRA's operations. Travel author
Dervla Murphy recounts in her book on Northern Ireland,
A Place Apart that Kerins stayed at her family's
County Waterford home for two weeks while he was on the run, having given his name as Pat Carney. He had been sent to the Murphy's by Dervla's aunt, Dr. Kathleen Farrell, who was a staunch IRA supporter, and Dervla (aged 12 at the time) and Kerins struck up a friendship. Several months after Kerins left the Murphy's, he was captured. Kerins had previously left papers and guns hidden at Kathleen Farrell's house in the
Dublin suburb of
Rathmines. He telephoned the house, as he intended to retrieve them. However, Dr. Farrell's telephone had been
tapped by the Gardaí. On 15 June 1944, Kerins was arrested in an early morning raid. He was sleeping when the Gardaí entered his bedroom and did not have an opportunity to reach the
Thompson submachine gun which was hidden under his bed. ==Trial==