
Second person dies following road crash in Carndonagh, Co Donegal
An Garda Síochána said the woman (20s) who was driving the vehicle died at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast on Thursday.
A six-year-old girl was fatally injured in the crash on the R240 road at Carrowmore, Glentogher, which involved a car and a van. Gardaí and the emergency services were alerted to the crash shortly before 6.30pm.
Two others people who were travelling in the vehicle remain in hospital.
READ MORE
'A female child, who was a rear passenger, is being treated for non-life-threatening injuries at Royal Victoria Hospital,' An Garda Síochána said in a statement.
'A male front seat passenger (30s) is being treated for non-life-threatening injuries at Altnagelvin Hospital, Derry.'
The road was closed on Thursday while a technical examination was carried out but it has since reopened.
The scene of the crash on the R240 between Quigleys Point and Carndonagh in North Donegal. Photograph: Joe Dunne/North West Newspix
Albert Doherty, a Sinn Féin councillor for the Carndonagh area, said the local community was 'raw with grief' at the news of the crash.
'Our local community just feel devastated that once again a local family have been challenged and having to face the loss of a loved one, it's terrible news here.'
Cllr Doherty told RTÉ Morning Ireland that conditions for driving at the time were favourable, but that the road in question had been the scene of previous fatal crashes.
'Unfortunately locally here in Carndonagh at the turn of this year, we had the tragic loss of a young man. And here again now, a local family are having to face the terrible, terrible burden of losing a loved one...'
A parish priest who rushed to hospital following the tragic crash said he would never forget the scenes in the emergency department.
Fr Con McLaughlin attended Altnagelvin Hospital in Derry as soon as he heard about the incident in an effort to provide comfort for those involved.
'On hearing about the accident I went straight over to Altnagelvin Hospital and the scene (in accident and emergency) is something I will never forget,' he said.
'In the community there is a shock and a disbelief. One can only imagine what the family are going through and I witnessed that pain in the hospital last night.
'The scene in the hospital was just so, so sad. You had doctors and nurses running around trying to do their best to help these poor helpless people. It is something I will never, ever forget.
'I just wanted to be a presence there for the family and I did not speak too much but I just wanted them to know that we are all there for them.'
Sinn Féin TD for Donegal Pádraig Mac Lochlainn said it was 'such heart breaking news this morning about another tragedy on our roads in Donegal'.
Gardaí are appealing to anyone who may have witnessed this collision to contact them. Any road users who may have camera footage (including dashcam) and were travelling in the area between 6pm and 6.30pm on Wednesday are asked to make this footage available to gardaí.
Anyone with information is asked to contact Buncrana Garda station at 074 932 0540, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111, or any Garda station.
Hashtags

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


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Judge wants explanation from solicitors over letter saying client had ‘no knowledge' of surveillance of payroll manager
A High Court judge has said he wants an explanation over a letter from the solicitors for human resources (HR) firm Deel Inc saying their client had 'no knowledge' of the following by private investigators of a payroll manager at the centre of a rival business' 'spy' affair. Mr Justice Brian Cregan said he was not going to join Deel as either a defendant or notice party in proceedings being brought by Keith O'Brien, the man who was allegedly paid €5,500 a month to pass on trade secrets of his former employer, HR software firm Rippling, to rival Deel. Rippling is now suing Deel and others, including Mr O'Brien, over the matter. The judge said he would not join Deel in Mr O'Brien's separate case alleging harassment and surveillance because doing so, of the court's own motion, was an exceptional jurisdiction. It was also unfair to the O'Brien side who did not want Deel added anyway, and because of the separate Rippling case against Deel. READ MORE Mr O'Brien's case is against two private investigators which he claims have been involved in harassment of him and his family, including one who allegedly followed him by car to various locations and photographed his children playing in their garden. The investigators, Mark Murran, also known as Rock Investigations, and Cliona Woods of Gotham Services, strongly deny any overt surveillance or claims of harassment and intimidation. That case was back before Mr Justice Cregan on Friday when the judge ruled out joining Deel but said his main outstanding concern was a pre-litigation letter written by Deel's solicitors Hayes LLP in reply to a call from Mr O'Brien's solicitor to desist from the alleged surveillance/harassment. In that letter, Hayes stated their client had no knowledge of the cars allegedly following Mr O'Brien. On Tuesday, the judge described the Hayes letter as either a 'blatant lie or a misrepresentation' because it was later admitted as being incorrect because Deel said it had organised 'discreet' but not overt surveillance on Mr O'Brien. On Friday, he said: 'The question from my point of view is that this is a letter from reputable solicitors who are officers of the court and it is blatantly wrong'. He said Deel's barrister, Paul Gardiner SC, instructed by Hayes, indicated he (judge) should not have said it was a lie or misrepresentation but it seemed to the judge that it is still an issue for the court and should be properly addressed. He said because of that letter, earlier this week in another case in which Hayes were representatives, he had a question as to whether he could rely on it although he did do so in that case. He believed the next step was for Hayes to swear an affidavit as to how that replying letter to the O'Brien side was written. Mr Gardiner said the letter was true at the time and while it turned out to be incorrect because discreet surveillance was commissioned by Deel, when written it was believed to be correct. He felt what the court might be doing is 'putting a wedge' between Deel and its representation. Mr Gardiner also believed the judge was being unfair to both Hayes and Deel in circumstances where fair procedures and due process have yet to take place and where the judge's words were being widely reported. If the court is to have a separate inquiry into this letter, it should at least not take place until the O'Brien harassment proceedings have concluded which may well find there was no harassment, he said. Mr Justice Cregan said he would give two weeks for Mr Gardiner to take instructions and consider the matter more fully and he said his concerns may be assuaged if it is explained in an affidavit. The judge also granted consent orders, sought by Mr Murran and Ms Woods, that Mr O'Brien preserve any information, including on CCTV, dashcam and phone, relating to the allegations against them. He also continued the injunctions restraining further surveillance.


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Former HSE employee who acted as getaway driver for Lisa Thompson's killer is jailed
A former HSE addiction counsellor has been jailed for two years for acting as a getaway driver for the 'violent and abusive thug' who murdered mother-of-two Lisa Thompson, with a judge noting the defendant 'had not fully come to terms' with her role in the crime. Sentencing judge Mr Justice Patrick McGrath said that this was a 'difficult case' and there was no doubt Deirdre Arnold (42) was subjected to appalling domestic abuse and considerable violence at the hands of Brian McHugh during the course of their relationship. However, the judge found it could not be said that she didn't have a choice in deciding what she did on the day in question. Mr Justice McGrath said he had to take into account that Arnold was under McHugh's 'dominion', was the subject of abuse and was fearful of him. READ MORE The Central Criminal Court heard that Arnold, who in a 'terrible twist of fate' became addicted to heroin and crack cocaine after meeting McHugh, had previously made domestic abuse complaints and got an interim barring order against him. Lisa Thompson (52) was found dead in her home in Ballymun. Photograph: Colin Keegan, Collins Dublin In March this year, Brian McHugh (40), with a former address at Cairn Court, Poppintree, Ballymun in Dublin 11 was jailed for life for murdering 52-year-old Ms Thompson, after a jury found he had inflicted 11 stab wounds to her chest and wrapped a blind cord around her neck. In a separate trial last April, a jury agreed with the prosecution that Arnold was not an 'innocent abroad' and had 'decided at every turn' to assist her then-partner McHugh, whom she knew to have murdered mother-of-two Ms Thompson. The jury unanimously accepted the State's case that Arnold impeded McHugh's prosecution by driving him to Ms Thompson's home at Sandyhill Gardens in Ballymun on May 9th 2022, where she waited outside for 'well over an hour' before driving him away from the scene. Arnold later checked McHugh into the Clayton Hotel near Dublin Airport in an effort to help him evade prosecution. It was also the prosecution's case that the defendant allowed her silver Hyundai Tucson to be used to dispose of evidence taken from Ms Thompson's home. Before delivering the sentence today, Mr Justice McGrath said Arnold was in a very abusive relationship with McHugh and there was no doubt he was particularly aggressive and violent to her on a number of occasions. 'To some extent she was under his dominion and became a user of heroin, no doubt due to the appalling abuse he visited on her in the course of their relationship,' he added. Brian McHugh, of Cairn Court, Poppintree in Ballymun, was found guilty of murdering Lisa Thompson (52) in May 2022 The judge went on to say the court had heard that McHugh had allegedly broken Arnold's arm by holding it on the bottom of a stairway and stamping on it. Mr Justice McGrath said McHugh had also made threats against Arnold's children and behaved in a 'monstrous fashion' towards her in their relationship. Passing sentence on Friday, Mr Justice McGrath said he had been provided with a book of mitigation on behalf of the defendant. Referring to a letter from Arnold, the judge said he accepted it was a genuine expression of remorse on her part, where she said she wished she had acted differently or recognised the warning signs from McHugh. The judge said Arnold also outlined in her letter that she didn't expect forgiveness but wanted the Thompson family to know she was truly sorry for their loss and would never forget the consequences of that day. Mr Justice McGrath pointed out that Arnold's daughter had also written a letter to the court, where she called the defendant a devoted mother and said she was 'the glue that holds the family together'. A senior investigating officer had told the jury that details of the ligature and strangulation of Ms Thompson had not been released into the public domain in June 2022. The judge said on Friday that Arnold had not fully come to terms with her role in this matter. The judge said Arnold had provided 'a considerable degree of assistance' by her presence at Sandyhill Gardens, when she was the driver of the getaway car. The judge said Arnold's prospects for future employment had been considerably reduced, with no chance of employment in any public sector job. Arnold's defence counsel, Mr Patrick Gageby SC, told her sentence hearing last month that his client had since resigned from her State job and is the sole financial support for her three children. The judge said Arnold has some insight into the matter and he had been told she would not be appealing the verdict. Referring to the two victim impact statements read to the court by the deceased's sister Ashley Duckett, Mr Justice McGrath said Ms Duckett had referred to the devastating impact which the loss of Ms Thompson has had on her life and had also noted the absence of any remorse from both defendants 'as adding to their pain'. The judge noted there was 'significant mitigation' in the case including that Arnold was a middle-aged woman of good character, an excellent mother who provided fully for her children and was a hard worker. 'Whilst not fully accepting the part she played in the matter she has expressed remorse and I accept that's genuine,' he added. Having considered mitigation, the judge reduced the headline sentence of five years to three years.

Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Defence Forces concerned about sensitive information being revealed at inquest of Private Seán Rooney
The Defence Forces have requested that parts of an inquest into the death of Pte Seán Rooney be held in private after disclosing 'extremely sensitive' information to the coroner. A preliminary hearing on Friday heard that materials received by coroner Dr Myra Cullinane relating to the death, and disclosed to Pte Rooney's family, contain redactions 'in light of operational security and force protection.' Pte Rooney (24), from Newtowncunningham, Co Donegal, was killed in an attack on a convoy of Irish peacekeepers in Al-Aqbiya, a Unifil area in Lebanon, in December 2022. Dr Cullinane said the Defence Forces had expressed concern about putting 'extremely sensitive' material and information included in the documents into the public domain during inquest hearings. READ MORE The Defence Forces argued this would elevate operational risks to personnel deployed to the Unifil mission in Lebanon. Dr Cullinane said some of the 'very sensitive aspects of the documentation' she now holds could be quite relevant to her inquiry into the 24-year-old's death. While acknowledging the need for a public inquiry, barrister Remy Farrell, representing the Defence Forces and the Minister for Defence, highlighted the risk posed to personnel currently serving. [ A 'selfless' soldier who was due to marry Opens in new window ] He suggested the court go into in-camera sessions for certain sensitive evidence. However, Dr Cullinane said she would need to be satisfied that it is 'lawful to do so' noting that such a provision is not referred to in 'any of the statute' in relation to the coroner's court. Counsel for the family Seán Guerin said force protection was a matter 'very close to the heart of the family', though he described the public nature of inquests as 'an important part of the coroner's function.' Mr Guerin said it was not yet possible for the family to be definitive in its position. However, he expected it to adopt the view of the court should some matters be deemed not suitable for public hearing even if it was legal. Mr Guerin asked to be furnished with reasons for each redaction in the documents. Dr Cullinane said her impression was that 'anything touching' the 'most sensitive issue raised' had been redacted. The coroner sought written submissions from both parties concerning the manner in which sensitive evidence could be heard and adjourned the inquest until later this month. Separately, Dr Cullinane told the court she had received materials from the United Nations and was permitted to disclose these to both parties on the condition that they be retained for the use of the inquest and not disclosed further. A previous sitting heard the UN had carried out 'substantial' and 'significant' investigations into the events surrounding the killing of Pte Rooney but the international body considered the reports 'confidential'. Counsel for the family during the previous hearing said they wanted to dispel 'the noxious narrative' that Pte Rooney 'took a wrong turn' while driving a UN vehicle before the attack. Pte Rooney was killed by gunfire when his armoured vehicle was ambushed as it drove north through Al-Aqbiya, a town controlled by the Iranian backed militant group Hizbullah . One man, Mohammad Ayyad, was later arrested and detained for allegedly taking part in the attack. He spent a year in detention before being freed by a Lebanese military court on medical grounds. Mr Ayyad failed to turn up at subsequent hearings. Four other accused have never appeared in court, and their location is unknown. Earlier this year, Tánaiste and Minister for Defence Simon Harris expressed 'deep disappointment and dissatisfaction at the slow progress of the legal proceedings'.