
Garda chief to meet media regulator over disinformation following Dublin City attack
The assistant commissioner for the Dublin metropolitan region, Paul Cleary, said that people 'with their own agenda' spread disinformation about the incident in order to 'inflame situations'.
Footage of part of the attack and the aftermath was uploaded onto social media, which commentary from various accounts stating the perpetrator was an immigrant or a foreigner.
One post from Conor McGregor said: 'A member of An Garda Síochána stabbed this evening, on duty, by one of the Irish Government's new to the parish imports through its human trafficking racket.'
The post was viewed 300,000 times and liked by over 3,000 accounts.
On Wednesday morning, Mr Cleary said he was very concerned about social media posts and said gardaí had to be on the lookout for any follow-on violence or harassment.
'Unfortunately, we see it every day and we have some people with their own agenda trying to use incidents like this to inflame situations for their own ends,' he told RTÉ Radio's Morning Ireland.
He urged people to get their information from credible sources.
Very inaccurate misinformation and disinformation went out online after this incident very quickly
'So it is concerning, and we would ask people to make sure that the source of their information is credible.'
Irish citizen
The Irish Examiner understands that Mr Cleary has sought, and secured, a meeting with Comisiún na Meán, the media regulator, in relation to the incident and to push for social media companies to do more on disinformation and the dangers than can bring.
It emerged on Tuesday night that the suspect was born in Ireland and is an Irish citizen. He comes from a Pakistani background, with an address in Portlaoise, but is also thought to have an address in Dublin.
The 23-year-old is not thought to have come to the attention of gardaí before this incident.
The injured garda, a young probationary, was brought to hospital, but he was due to be discharged.
Sources said the injuries could have been worse and that his anti-stab vest might have saved him.
The officers, based at Bridewell Garda Station, subdued the man with pepper spray and batons.
Due to the factors in the case, the Garda National Crime and Security Intelligence Service has been brought in to support investigators in establishing a motive for the attack.
It is analysing evidence from digital devices and social media posts and information from family, friends, religious contacts, and associates.
Garda Representative Association vice president Niall Hodgins, who is also a representative for the Dublin North Central garda region, said: 'I wish to extend our heartfelt wishes to our injured friend and colleague, and wish him a speedy recovery.
"This young probationary member was subject to a quite terrifying and unprovoked attack, and only for his bravery and that of his colleagues this incident could have resulted in far worse and unthinkable consequences."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Daily Mirror
19 minutes ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Gardai who disregard traffic duty ‘seriously letting colleagues down'
Any Gardaí who have shown a 'brazen' disregard for roads policing are 'seriously letting their colleagues down', Tánaiste Simon Harris has said. The Fine Gael leader was responding to comments by Garda Commissioner Drew Harris about a report that found some Gardaí showed a 'blatant disregard' for roads policing duties while they knew their actions were being reviewed. It comes amid a focus on road safety in Ireland, with the Government introducing new speed laws and after the Garda Commissioner mandated that frontline Gardaí dedicate 30 minutes of road policing duties per shift. Simon Harris said he did not want to 'tar any one group with one brush' and said he has the utmost respect for Gardaí. 'Indeed, it's not that long since we were at a funeral of a member of An Garda Síochána killed while on road traffic policing duties,' he said at Government Buildings. 'Having said that, I am concerned with what I've heard and I'd like to be in a position to read it. So I think it's important that what the commissioner said he intends to do does happen, that he publishes the report so that we can actually see this and analyse it directly. 'Because any member of An Garda Síochana who is acting in the way that the commissioner outlined is seriously letting their colleagues down in the first instance, colleagues who work every day to keep us safe and would absolutely be undermining our road safety efforts in this country. 'There are far too many empty seats at far too many kitchen tables in Ireland. We've worked extremely hard as a country, I don't just mean as a government, as a country, to improve road safety over many years. 'That progress had stalled in recent years and indeed we'd seen a negative trend, and this is disappointing and concerning. 'But I think it's important that we have the opportunity to see the report, rather than to comment on a comment about the report.' A report found that some Gardaí showed a 'blatant disregard' for roads policing duties (Image: Colin Keegan, Collins Dublin) Asked if he was surprised that a member of government had not seen the report, considering the policing authority had seen the report in June, he said: 'I am somewhat, but I haven't had an opportunity to discuss this with colleagues in government yet and I'd obviously like to discuss it in the first instance with the Minister of Justice.' Sean Canney, a junior minister with responsibility for road safety, said the reported findings were 'shocking' and 'serious'. 'There's no point in us bringing in laws, reducing speed limits, doing all of this kind of thing, if we don't have a functional enforcement section within the Gardaí,' he said on RTÉ Radio. Mr Canney said his thoughts were with the families of the 95 people who had died on Irish roads so far this year. He said he had not read the report from consultancy firm Crowe, which has carried out investigations on behalf of An Garda Síochána previously, but planned to meet Justice Minister Jim O'Callaghan and both the outgoing and incoming Garda commissioners. 'I'll be talking to the commissioners to express my deep concern with what is in this report,' he said. He said the independent Crowe report was conducted while the reviewer was 'sitting in the car with a Garda that wasn't doing his duty and didn't seem to have a problem with that'. 'So I think there is definitely a serious case to be answered here as quickly as possible.' Mr Harris said he commissioned the examination after he received an anonymous report from a whistleblower. Outgoing Garda Commissioner Drew Harris and Policing & Community Safety Authority (PCSA) Chairman Elaine Byrne The chairwoman of the Policing and Community Safety Authority, Elaine Byrne, said the report was 'shocking' and found some Gardaí showed a 'blatant disregard' for road policing while they knew their actions were being reviewed. 'They were openly hostile to doing their job,' she said, in what she described as a 'wake-up call' for An Garda Siochana. She also described an issue with fear among Garda managers of carrying out poor performance management, which she said Mr Harris agreed was an issue. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here. The Irish Mirror's Crime Writers Michael O'Toole and Paul Healy are writing a new weekly newsletter called Crime Ireland. Click here to sign up and get it delivered to your inbox every week


Irish Independent
21 minutes ago
- Irish Independent
‘Lack of transparency' – Garda representative groups hit out at ‘drip feeding' of report on road policing gardaí
On Thursday, a meeting of the Policing and Community Safety Authority heard that the Crowe Report highlighted how some gardaí working in roads policing units showed 'blatant disregard' for their job and were 'openly hostile" to it. While the report has not yet been released publicly, details contained within it were aired at the meeting, with both Garda Commissioner Drew Harris and Chair of the PCSA Elaine Byrne describing these as 'shocking'. The policing bodies representing rank-and-file and supervisory gardí have now denounced what they say is the 'drip feeding' of information into the public domain. The Garda Representative Association (GRA) described it as 'another insult to our overworked and under-resourced' roads policing colleagues and added that the quoting from a report which hasn't been released is 'entirely inappropriate and disrespectful' to its members. 'It appears that for a number of months the Commissioner has been aware of alleged serious issues within the Roads Policing Unit (RPU), but it seems that he failed to take any action. Instead the Commissioner abdicated his responsibilities to another external consultancy firm. "This once again highlights the style of management that has dramatically impacted on the morale and motivation of all members within AGS.' The GRA, which represents almost 11,000 frontline gardaí, also said that the initial feedback from its members who interacted with the Crowe Report 'is at odds' with comments made before the committee. 'Members of the RPU are dedicated members who conscientiously enforce the road traffic acts on a daily basis. "We now anxiously await full publication of this Report and question whether any findings will substantiate the damaging allegations made against our members and the effect on the families of victims of road fatalities and to our colleagues who have died in the line of duty. "This is another blow to the frontline members of a crippling An Garda Síochána rocked by low morale, low numbers and career uncertainty." The Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors (AGSI), which represents around 2,500 mid-ranking gardaí, has called on the full report to be released. It said it 'is deeply concerned by the reported contents of the Crowe Report, which appears to be highly critical of how An Garda Síochána, under Commissioner Harris' leadership, has overseen and supported personnel within a specific section of the organisation, namely Roads Policing. 'Despite its serious implications for our members, the supervisory and middle management of An Garda Síochána, the report has not been released to this Association. As a result, AGSI is prevented from commenting in any informed way on its contents or responding meaningfully to the public commentary surrounding it. 'This lack of transparency and the manner by which this report has entered the public domain is symptomatic of the broader dysfunctionality in how consultation and internal industrial relations matters have been handled within An Garda Síochána.' The AGSI said it was disappointed at how the information was released and that the report's findings should be used for 'dialogue and progressive reform', rather than 'undermining the reputation of hard-working, frontline Gardaí.' The PCSA had received the report in June which found some members showed a 'blatant disregard' for their job, even while they knew their actions were being directly reviewed. 'They were openly hostile to doing their job,' Elaine Byrne said, in what she described as a 'wake-up call' for An Garda Síochána. 'There are members within roads policing who seem very much uninterested in their job, and this is something that we are concerned about in terms of performance of individual guards, and it's something that the previous authority have looked upon, and the current authority would have concerns about the absence of performance management within the gardaí,' the PSCA chair said after the meeting. She said the authority had also been 'shocked' by a fear of carrying out performance management among garda managers. Ms Byrne also urged the Garda Commissioner to publish the report in due course, which Mr Harris said he would do soon. 'What I'll undertake to do is, we just do one final read through the report. I just want to be sure nobody's identifiable, and then we can issue the report,' he said. 'It did arise from anonymous correspondence that I received, obviously from a roads policing member and although anonymous, it had certainly a ring of authenticity about that.'


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Tánaiste to meet mother of murdered peacekeeper Seán Rooney
Tánaiste Simon Harris is set to meet with the mother of murdered Irish peacekeeper Seán Rooney. It comes after Natasha Rooney expressed her disappointment at a 'lack of justice' for her son. Seán Rooney, 24, from Newtowncunningham in Co Donegal, was killed when a convoy of Irish troops serving with a UN peacekeeping force in southern Lebanon was ambushed and fired upon on December 14, 2022. The shooting happened near the town of Al-Aqbiya in a stronghold of Hezbollah. Rooney was from the 121 Infantry Battalion of the Defence Forces. On Monday, Mr Harris said he had been informed of the completion of a military tribunal in Beirut for those indicted for the murder of Pte Rooney. One man was sentenced to death, but he remains at large. A number of other men were also convicted in relation to other offences over the shooting. Simon Harris said he will meet Natasha Rooney next week (Brian Lawless/PA) Ms Rooney expressed disappointment and contended it was 'not justice'. In a statement released through Phoenix Law, she said the perpetrator of her son's murder 'has been untraceable and untraced for many years'. She added: 'The verdict in reality is nothing more than a headline to the Lebanese authorities who masquerade this sham trial process as a semblance of justice for my son.' Ms Rooney also urged Mr Harris to speak to her 'before seeking to speak for me, in his public statements'. Speaking to the media on Friday, Mr Harris said he is meeting Ms Rooney next week. 'I'm going to preserve any further comment 'til I meet her,' he said. 'Natasha is a grieving mother fighting for justice for her son who died while serving with absolute distinction wearing the uniform of Oglaigh Na hEireann. He has my absolute and total respect, as does his family. 'I look forward to meeting with Natasha and engaging with her directly next week.'