logo
Man who died after being found with injuries in Waterford named locally

Man who died after being found with injuries in Waterford named locally

Irish Times21 hours ago
Gardaí in Waterford have begun an investigation into the circumstances surrounding the death of man in his 70s, who died at University Hospital
Waterford
on Sunday following an incident at a residential property in the city on Friday.
The man, who has been named locally as Pat Fitzgerald, a former ATGWU official at Waterford Crystal, was found with injuries and unresponsive when gardaí and emergency services responded to an incident at a residential property at St Catherine's Grange shortly after 2pm on Friday.
Mr Fitzgerald was transported to University Hospital Waterford for treatment but died on Sunday and gardaí have requested the services of the State Pathologist's Office and a post-mortem is expected to be carried out on the deceased in the coming days.
Gardaí arrested a man in his 30s at the scene at St Catherine's Grange and he was detained for questioning before being charged at a special sitting of Waterford District Court on Sunday in relation to the assault on Mr Fitzgerald.
READ MORE
A senior investigating officer has been appointed, and a family liaison officer is providing support to the deceased's family. Gardaí have appealed to any witnesses to contact them at Waterford Garda Station on 051 305300 where an incident room has been established.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Funeral details announced for man who died two days after incident at his home
Funeral details announced for man who died two days after incident at his home

Irish Daily Mirror

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Daily Mirror

Funeral details announced for man who died two days after incident at his home

The funeral details of a man who died two days after an incident at his home in Waterford have been announced. Pat Fitzgerald, who was in his 70s and a former chairman of the Amalgamated Transport and General Workers Union (ATGWU), was found with injuries and unresponsive at his home in St Catherine's Grange on Friday, August 1. He was brought to University Hospital Waterford but passed away on Sunday, August 3, two days after the incident. Mr Fitzgerald was a former chairman of the ATGWU and had been employed for many years at Waterford Crystal, his death notice on stated. Mr Fitzgerald is predeceased by his wife Kathleen (nee Flynn), his father Jack, brother Mark and nephew Luke. 'Much loved father of Wayne, Joanne and Karl. Will be sadly missed by his mother Maura, brothers Nicky and John, sisters Joan, Margie, Brenda, Helen, Ann and June, grandchildren Mia, Ruben, Sofia and Adam, son-in-law Mick, daughter-in-law Barbara, his brothers-in-law, sisters-in-law, nephews, nieces, extended family, neighbours and friends," his death notice continued. He will lie in repose at Tom Hennessy's Funeral Home, 45A Johnstown, Waterford on Thursday, August 7 from 5.30pm to 7pm. Mr Fitzgerald's funeral will walk from Ballytruckle Green at 11.40am on Friday, August 8 to the Sacred Heart Church, The Folly, Waterford for Requiem Mass on arrival at 12 noon followed by burial afterwards in St Mary's Cemetery, Ballygunner, Waterford. Mr Fitzgerald's funeral announcement comes after David Norris, 35, appeared before a special sitting of Waterford District Court on Sunday, August 3 on a charge of assaulting Mr Fitzgerald causing him harm. Norris, of Assumption Terrace, Rosbercon, New Ross in Wexford, appeared before Judge Miriam Walsh. Garda Donal Donohue of Waterford Garda Station gave evidence of arrest, charge and caution. Norris is charged with assaulting Mr Fitzgerald causing him harm at St Catherine's Grange, Waterford City on Friday, August 1. That offence is contrary to Section 3 (1) and 3(2) of the Non-Fatal Offences against the Person Act 1997 (as amended by Section 20 of the Criminal Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions Act 2023). Norris was remanded in custody to appear before the court again today (August 5). 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

Records falsified relating to mentally ill inmate found dead, prison watchdog finds
Records falsified relating to mentally ill inmate found dead, prison watchdog finds

Irish Times

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Records falsified relating to mentally ill inmate found dead, prison watchdog finds

Records relating to the supervision of a severely mentally ill Spanish resident who was found dead in his cell in Cloverhill Prison were falsified, a prison watchdog has found. The Office of the Inspector of Prisons, which is led by Mark Kelly, was highly critical of how the Irish Prison Service (IPS) handled the detention of the deceased, whom it called 'Mr O', in 2022. It determined Mr O was in custody on suspicion of a minor offence and was due to be transferred to a psychiatric hospital the day after he was found dead in a close-supervision cell on August 10th, 2022. Prisoners under close supervision are supposed to be checked every 15 minutes. A prison journal recorded that staff had checked the prisoner at 7am, 7.15am and 7.30am. However, Mr O had been found unresponsive sitting on the toilet in his cell at 6.50am, causing staff to issue a 'Code Red' and call for an ambulance. This 'clearly' indicates the three journal entries had been filled in ahead of time by staff, 'entirely negating the value of this recording safeguard', the inspectorate said in a newly published report. The inspectorate also noted 'an (unsuccessful) effort had been made to erase the three entries'. The statutory inspection body has raised concerns about the falsification of prison records on several previous occasions. It echoed concerns contained in a recent report by the Council of Europe's Committee for the Prevention of Torture (CPT) that found several cases of records being falsified. The issue was particularly notable in Cloverhill and Limerick Prisons, where falsified records were discovered following several prisoner deaths in close-supervision cells. The CPT said minimal action had been taken by local prison management to address this. The Inspector of Prisons said it is 'imperative' the falsification of records 'is treated with the utmost seriousness' by management. Regarding Mr O, it said he was detained on a public order charge at Dublin Airport on August 4th after he was observed acting erratically. He was unable to take up bail after he was judged to be of unfit mind to sign the bond. In Cloverhill, his behaviour was observed as 'bizarre and erratic'. Staff reported he 'was standing on his bed in a state of undress and shouting at the floor and refused to respond to questions asked by the nurse'. Gardaí told prison staff the judge would strike out the charge against Mr O if treatment could be arranged. Staff also learned he had spent time in psychiatric hospitals outside the State and had not been taking his medication for a lengthy period of time. A place was found for Mr O in St Vincent's hospital in Fairview. He was due to be transferred on August 11th. However, early on August 10th, he was found unresponsive in his cell. Attempts to revive him were unsuccessful and he was pronounced dead at 9.45am. The inspectorate's report does not detail a cause of death. The inspectorate repeated recommendations that 'urgent consideration' be given to quickly transferring mentally ill suspects charged with minor offences to local psychiatric hospitals. 'It remains unacceptable that prisoner-patients such as Mr O, suspected of minor offences, and suffering from a mental health disorder, cannot more rapidly access in-patient psychiatric treatment in local civil psychiatric hospitals.' In response, the IPS said it is working on implementing several recommendations in this area and that additional resources are being assigned to Cloverhill. Regarding the falsification of records, it said a 'digitisation project' will commence later this year that will improve record-keeping and limit 'the risk of falsification'. It said staff who are found to falsify records 'are sanctioned in line with the code of discipline'.

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