logo
Expert calls on CAB to target relatives stealing from the elderly

Expert calls on CAB to target relatives stealing from the elderly

Extra.ie​10-07-2025
Experts have called for the Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB) to be used against people who steal money from their elderly relatives.
A TD yesterday told the Oireachtas Health Committee that he went to the gardaí after he learned that a man with dementia had over €100,000 taken from his bank account in 12 months.
However, the gardaí told him that they couldn't act against the man's relative because dementia sufferers cannot give evidence in court. Pic: Gareth Chaney/Collins
Mervyn Taylor, a board member with the Safeguarding Ireland charity, told the committee that such crimes could be tackled by the Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB).
'CAB is one mechanism that can be looked at because the person is in receipt of the money – they have to explain how they got it,' Mr Taylor said. 'They still committed a crime, and that can be investigated regardless of where it came from.
'It is the same principle as drug seizures.' Safeguarding Ireland chair Patricia Rickard-Clarke told the Oireachtas committee that the abuse and neglect of vulnerable adults is 'endemic'. Pic: Leah Farrell / RollingNews.ie
'There is culture in Irish society regarding older people,' she said. 'Decisions are made for them, money is taken from them, no issues are raised, and everyone turns a blind eye. There is a passive acceptance of abuse, if I can put it that way.'
According to Ms Rickard-Clarke, her organisation received daily reports of financial abuse, coercive control, self-neglect, as well as other practices which indicate 'very serious violations of human rights'.
'The alleged harms occur, in the main, in the community, with a significant component also relating to people in residential care,' she said. Ms Rickard-Clarke singled out the volume of vulnerable adults who are the targets of financial abuse. Pic: Getty Images
She said that the practice 'is widespread', although it often goes 'undocumented'. The committee's vice-chair, Fine Gael TD Colm Burke, raised a case known to him of an elderly man with dementia who saw €100,000 taken from his account over 12 months.
'When I tried to make a complaint to gardaí, I was told that An Garda Síochána could not take any action because the man would not be able to give evidence [due to his dementia]. There was clear evidence that money was taken,' he said.
Ms Rickard-Clarke and Mr Taylor said that the example provided by Mr Burke was 'hugely familiar'. Mr Taylor said gardaí have yet to develop a safeguarding policy for adults and 'lack skills' in investigating the suspected financial abuse of vulnerable people.
The discussion came in the 'aftershock' of a damning RTÉ investigation into nurs – ing homes operated by Emeis Ireland – which is now the subject of a Garda investigation.
Ms Rickard-Clarke said: 'While the current focus is welcomed, it should not require an exposé to generate political and public engagement on the exploitation of adults in Ireland.' She added that these reports 'give only a partial insight into the extent of adult abuse'.
Caroline Walker Strong, chief operations officer of the Irish Association of Social Workers (IASW), told the committee that people in nursing homes 'vanish' from their community and lose the ability to advocate for themselves.
'When people are ageing in their own communities, they are known… What we are seeing is once people go into nursing homes, they vanish from their community, and that diminishes their own voice,' she said.
She cited research from DCU highlighting 'the association between the private-sector care model and poorer outcomes for residents'.
'This should serve as a wake-up call to Ireland,' she said. 'Despite commitments made during Covid by our Government to downsize and decongregate large nursing homes, we continue to see planning approval for large-scale, privately run nursing homes, often built on the outskirts of towns.'
She added: 'We recognise individual homes are providing good care, but life is about much more than receiving good care – we have to ask ourselves: who among us would like to age into our current care model? No one.'
Ms Walker Strong also called for more 'localised' facilities across the country. Both Safeguarding Ireland and the IASW renewed calls for the Government to progress the Adult Safeguarding Bill of 2017, 'which could have addressed many of the issues that remain of urgent concern today', and establish a National Adult Safeguarding Authority.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man, 60s, killed in overnight Cork house fire as woman, 60s hospitalised as scene sealed off ahead of technical exam
Man, 60s, killed in overnight Cork house fire as woman, 60s hospitalised as scene sealed off ahead of technical exam

The Irish Sun

time4 minutes ago

  • The Irish Sun

Man, 60s, killed in overnight Cork house fire as woman, 60s hospitalised as scene sealed off ahead of technical exam

A MAN, 60s, has died after a blaze broke out at a home in a busy village in Co Cork late last night. The tragic incident occurred at a property in the Ardcullen residential development in Gardai and A man in his 60s was pronounced deceased at the scene. Another occupant, a woman in her 60s, had been able to escape the house fire with neighbours' help and was rushed to The spokesperson for the READ MORE ON GARDA The fire was extinguished by the Cork City Fire Brigade. Talking to the "When crews entered the house, a second male was found. Resuscitation efforts were made, but unfortunately, he was pronounced deceased." The scene is currently preserved for a technical examination, which will be conducted in due course. Most read in Irish News A post-mortem examination will also be conducted, with the local coroner notified. Investigations into the incident are ongoing and the cause of the house fire is unknown at this time. Gardai and RSA measures aimed at driving crash deaths on Irish roads Separately, pensioner Cork, early on Saturday morning. At around 6.30am, a member of the public spotted a bicycle in the middle of the road with Dempsey's body lying nearby. Dempsey's sad passing comes just months after his It's reported that the retired farmer returned home on May 5 to find emergency services attending to the blaze. He had been living alone in Horsehill, Ballinadee, near Bandon when the fire broke out. Following the incident, the bachelor stayed with a neighbour and was approved for emergency accommodation by Cork County WITNESS APPEAL have made an urgent appeal for witnesses following the discovery of Dempsey's body. They said: "Gardai are appealing for witnesses to come forward. "In particular, they are seeking information regarding a male observed cycling on roads in the vicinity of Kildarra in the early hours of Saturday 19 July 2025. "Additionally, any road users who may have camera footage (including dash-cam) and were travelling in the area at the time are asked to make it available to Gardaí. "Anyone with any information is asked to contact Bandon Garda Station on 023 885 2200, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111, or any Garda Station." 1 Cork City Fire Brigade attended the scene Credit: Cork Council

Man who caused death of niece weeks after she gave birth is gangster's brother
Man who caused death of niece weeks after she gave birth is gangster's brother

Sunday World

time3 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Man who caused death of niece weeks after she gave birth is gangster's brother

Criminal Assets Bureau claimed that sibling was involved in massive money-laundering operation A MAN who admitted causing the death of his niece after ramming steel gates with a van is the younger brother of a Limerick gangland figure. Danny O'Donoghue (42) pleaded guilty this week to dangerous driving causing the death of 21-year-old Marguerita O'Rourke in Rathkeale just days before Christmas. He also admitted possession of a machete, making threats to kill and causing criminal damage to a van. O'Donoghue who has been in custody since his arrest last December is due to be sentenced in October. His brother John O'Donoghue is a convicted drug dealer who has also been targeted by the Criminal Assets Bureau. John recently spent time in Portlaoise Prison before a conviction for a feud-related attack in Rathkeale was quashed on appeal and he was set free last year. His brother Danny appeared by video-link from the same prison this week at Limerick Circuit Court. John O'Donoghue Marguerita O'Rourke, who had her first child just three weeks earlier, had been closing steel gates to a property when Danny O'Donoghue hit the gates, killing her. The property is not far from the house where John O'Donoghue lives and which has been the target of an attempted pipe bomb attack in the past. It was also the scene of raid by the Criminal Assets Bureau. During his two years behind bars, it also emerged in a Cab case that John O'Donoghue was regarded as significant player in massive money laundering scheme. The senior investigating officer also described O'Donoghue as being 'closely associated' with Eds McCarthy, a leading figure in the McCarthy-Dundon gang. In the Cab case against a car firm, Bawn Motors, it was highlighted how O'Donoghue had 'established himself as a key figure in the international drugs trade' and has 'extensive criminal contacts with the wider Traveller community'. It was also stated he had met with Chirsty Keane, the leading member of Limerick's Keane gang at a Rathkeale pub along with one of Keane's most trusted lieutenants Dermot 'Pum' McManus. Flowers at Marguerita's funeral Since Marguerite's death family members have continued to post heartfelt tributes to the young woman expressing their huge sense of loss. Even this as news of the court case went online this week one woman commented: 'My beautiful sister you didn't deserve this l love you so much forever in my heart.' Her death last Christmas came after a number of incidents of violence in the Co Limerick town during the traditional influx of people ahead of Christmas. A house was damaged and in a shocking incident in which a BMW X5 was used to smash into property and was then set alight in November. In October a truck was used to damage a property in another incident and petrol bombs thrown at a house. Three years ago, Rathkeale saw a terrifying incident during the Christmas period in which a series of vehicles were rammed and written off. The Sunday World revealed at the time that the incident came as part of a three-way fight for dominance between criminal gangs. In a video of the aftermath a machete was visible lying on the road. Just a few weeks before Ms O'Rourke's tragic death, a man was attacked by hurley-wielding assailants and his car smashed up in the town. Marguerita O'Rourke (née Sheridan) Today's News in 90 Seconds - July 21st At one point there were plans to close a number of roads in the town as part of a garda operation did not go ahead after objections from local residents. Ms O'Rourke's funeral became a memorable as well as a huge vigil in the Co Limerick town, where balloons were released into the sky. Among the many heartfelt tributes online was one from her brother Freddy, who said at the time it had taken him days to able to put his feelings into words. He said that Christmas would never be the same, 'not just Christmas; my life will never be the same' and that she had left behind 'a very special boy.' He added that he couldn't believe he was saying 'rest in peace, our Marguerita.' Her father John paid tribute to the people who had shown such public support for the family for the daughter he described as 'a true legend.' Hundreds of family and friends turned out on Christmas at a candlelit vigil in the town on Christmas Eve. In a social media post he thanked 'the gardaí, nurses, doctors, priests, the settled people in Rathkeale, the Travelling people and everyone for their messages. 'The local shops, hotels for everything and everyone who called to my house and everyone over the world, thank you.'

Lobby group weighs in against Ryanair in US legal battle
Lobby group weighs in against Ryanair in US legal battle

Irish Independent

time5 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

Lobby group weighs in against Ryanair in US legal battle

The lobby group has claimed that Ryanair is attempting to stymie competition by taking on Ryanair sued the website in 2020 in Delaware, alleging that it was screen-scraping the airline's fares without permission. Screen-scraping involves accessing an airline's ticket prices and flight data, and then selling tickets for those flights through a third-party website. After a four-day trial last July, a jury in Delaware convicted of having caused economic harm to Ryanair. The jury awarded the Irish airline just $5,000 (€4,293) – the minimum threshold required to state a claim under the US Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA). However, the district court judge who heard the case then agreed with that Ryanair had not met the requirement of proving that at least $5,000 of loss was attributable to which is a prerequisite to any finding of civil liability under the CFAA. Accordingly, the judge overturned the ruling. Ryanair has now appealed against that decision, seeking to have the judge's decision reversed, or to have a new trial. The Electronic Frontier Foundation has weighed in behind The lobby group's founders were US author and lyricist John Barlow and entrepreneur Mitch Kapor. Its backers also included Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak. It has argued that the continued reliance on the CFAA by companies to take legal actions could stymie competition. 'If unauthorised access can be predicated on a violation of a website owner's stated preferences, rather than hacking technological barriers, then companies will continue to use the CFAA to fend off competition,' the lobby group has claimed in its submission to the US Court of Appeals. 'For example, companies commonly use automated web browsing products to gather web data for a wide variety of uses.' Those practices include manufacturers tracking performance ranking of products in the search results of retailer websites, or monitoring posts on social media, it points out. Inhibiting competition is precisely what Ryanair sought to do here 'If the use of valid credentials in a way that has been disallowed as a matter of stated – or even unstated – policy were a CFAA violation, a company could create a password-protected 'gate', make the key freely available to all, and then send cease-and-desist letters to anyone they don't like,' Electronic Frontier Foundation said in its submission. 'This concern is not speculative. Inhibiting competition is precisely what Ryanair sought to do here, and in keeping with what companies have repeatedly tried to do in the past, with partial success.' Ryanair has already claimed that the travel firm has 'escaped liability' after the Delaware judge overturned the jury's verdict. 'The court impermissibly usurped the role of the jury as the ultimate finder of fact when it found that no reasonable jury could conclude that Ryanair's costs due to Booking's conduct from March 1, 2022, to February 28, 2023 would have exceeded $5,000,' it has claimed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store