
Inside Ireland's Midlands Prison as ‘virtual tour' shows behind bars reality for criminals with barber shop & library
The fascinating insight into the Midlands
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Lags who have been locked up have access to fitness and education facilities
Credit: PR Handout
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The prison is currently holding a major recruitment drive
Credit: PR Handout
Justice Minister
He said: "This innovative project not only greatly enhances the public's understanding of the work that goes on within our prisons, its release now also allows potential future recruits to come and tour their potential future workplace.'
Available on the Irish Prison Service website, the tour brings you on a step-by-step guide with a virtual officer explaining the structured life and the day-to-day activity within the system.
You can see inside a cell, as it's explained how lags have access to a
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It also walks you through the gym and prison yard, where inmates exercise while being monitored.
Other areas shown are the barber
The virtual prison officer talks through rules and also explains how life in jail works.
This includes the
Most read in The Irish Sun
The Irish Prison Service, told how the tour highlights the work done by officers, giving an insight for potential recruits.
Director General Caron McCaffrey said: "The Recruit Prison Officer campaign is a vital opportunity to attract individuals who are committed to public service and rehabilitation, and who will play a central role in maintaining safe and secure prison environments.
Corruption & bribery behind bars exposed as ex-con reveals lags pay £500 for KFC & how inmates have sex with guards
"The incredible work of Prison Officers is complex and often hidden from public view, but our annual competition and the launch of the virtual tour allow us the opportunity to let the public see the teamwork, integrity, potential, safety and support that Prison Officers not only offer to prisoners, but to their colleagues as well.
"I wish to commend all those involved in delivering the Virtual Tour, an innovative and informative project that highlights the professionalism and dedication of our staff across the prison estate."
'REWARDING CAREERS'
Applications for the role of a prison officer opens on
from July 4 and will run until August 1.
Minister O'Callaghan added: "The
'This year's campaign is a vital part of a much wider investment in our prison systems.
"
Prison officers are at the heart of our justice system and have the potential to positively impact the lives of some of Ireland's most vulnerable people, as well as Irish society as a whole."
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A virtual guide shows viewers around the prison's library, barber shop, and inside cells
Credit: PR Handout
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The new virtual tour shows viewers inside the life of those behind bars
Credit: PR Handout
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The Midlands Prison is home to some of Ireland's most notorious criminals
Credit: PR Handout
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The Journal
40 minutes ago
- The Journal
Revealed: How Hezbollah fundraisers helped finance the €157m MV Matthew drug operation
THE KINAHAN CRIME group and international drug criminals partnered up with Iranian fundraisers for Hezbollah and paid €5 million up front for the cocaine that was to be shipped to Ireland on board the MV Matthew, The Journal has learned. The money was handed over to a South American drug cartel and an agreement was made that the estimated €152 million in profit from distributing the drug would be split between the various entities who put the cash up. Irish authorities – including the specialist forces of the Army Ranger Wing – intercepted the cargo ship off the Waterford coast and staged a dramatic raid in September 2023. To date, the shipment – worth around €157 million in total – is the biggest drug seizure in the history of the Irish state. Eight men found guilty of playing a part in the operation were sentenced today at the Special Criminal Court, they were sentenced to between 13 to 20 years in jail . The LÉ William Butler Yeats escorts the MV Matthew to Cork on 26 September 2023. David Creedon / Alamy Live News David Creedon / Alamy Live News / Alamy Live News The Hezbollah link The ship – originally registered to a legitimate Dubai-owned company – was purchased, in complicated steps, by intermediaries and ultimately placed in the control of the drug traffickers. The front company set up by the traffickers was 'Matthew Maritime Inc' which even had its own website, where the firm touted its experience in shipping and referred to its 'expert team'. The address for the company was on Ajeltake Island in the pacific archipelago of the Marshall Islands. It was all, of course, a ruse. The Matthew had been bought, not for the purposes of setting up a single-ship bulk carrier business, but to ferry drugs across the Atlantic to Ireland. The ship collected the drugs off Venezuela, using a method to trick ship-tracking tech known as 'spoofing' – essentially, manipulating data to give the impression the ship is in a false location. The bulk carrier departed from Curacao, off the Venezuelan coast, and sailed across the Atlantic before arriving in Irish territorial waters. She was sailing under the flag of Panama – a common practice in the world of international shipping as it's (quite literally) a flag of convenience. The plan was to meet up with a trawler, the Castlemore, which had been purchased with the aim of ferrying the 2.25 tonnes of drugs ashore for distribution in Ireland and across Europe – a smuggling method known as 'coopering'. The Castlemore was to be sailed out of Castletownbere – a port town some 125 km south-west of Cork city on the Beara Peninsula – to meet up with the smuggling 'mothership'. Sources we spoke to ahead of today's sentencing said Venezuelan-based Hezbollah operatives were key to the MV Matthew operation. Investigators have assessed that the smuggling operation was ultimately managed from Dubai by the Kinahan Cartel. The gardaí and their international intelligence partners have identified a key part of the operation by Iranian operatives, based in Venezuela and Iran as well as other locations who were working behind the scenes. This was further backed up by the numbers in chat groups used by the smugglers. In return for part funding the operation they would receive money that would be directed back to the Hezbollah group. This gave the Iranians some distance from the money trail, is one of the theories being explored by investigators. It was in the South American phase of the operation where the connections to Iran and Hezbollah were of most benefit. Venezuela and its regime have close connections to Iran and Hezbollah, the Iran-backed Lebanese militant group which places itself as an alternative to the government in Beirut and has been involved in a recent war with Israel. It's likely the criminals raising funds for Hezbollah came on the radar of the group behind the MV Matthew operation after the Kinahan OCG had developed connections to other drug traffickers with links to Iran. Whatsapp and Signal groups The operation was managed on Whatsapp and Signal. When gardaí examined those messaging groups they determined that the main criminal commander was in the Emirates but that there were also participants in Germany, Turkey, Iran, Britain, the Netherlands and Spain. Sources we spoke to said that the Matthew was in poor condition – its accommodation in a dishevelled state and much of the machinery in a state of disrepair. The drugs gang deployed a retired Ukrainian fishing boat captain – Vitalyi Lapa, one of the eight men sentenced earlier today – to Ireland in July of 2023 and he stayed in various hotels in the Republic and in Northern Ireland. Advertisement His job would be to operate as the expert mariner on a fishing boat that would be bought from unsuspecting fishers somewhere in Ireland. It is believed he was to be joined by an Irish gangster but that that plan fell through and he was joined instead by British man Jamie Harbron. Harbron – who was also sentenced today after entering a guilty plea in the trial last December – pitched himself in Garda interviews as an unwilling vulnerable drug user who was dispatched to Ireland to pay off a debt he owed to criminals. Sources have said that the reality of intelligence gardaí have gathered is that he was a much more willing participant and further up the food chain. In court it was said that his apparent job, arriving by ferry the day before he and several others headed to west Cork to buy the trawler, was to act as a deckhand on the trawler while Lapa, the Ukrainian, would be its pilot. The crew of the MV Matthew on deck passing Cobh flanked by the Army Ranger Wing. Alamy. Alamy. Habron and Lapa met up and headed south to purchase the trawler with two gang members from Newry and a third man. He is a Scottish national who was a senior Kinahan operator who flew in, with the money, from Dubai. The two people from Newry and the man from Scotland remain at large. As they moved towards Castletownbere they could not have known that an elite team from the Garda National Surveillance Unit was following close behind. 'Spare parts' The crew of the Matthew were told the drugs on board were 'spare parts' – but they told gardaí in interviews, after their arrest, that the men who came to load the cargo at sea off Venezuela were heavily armed. To quell their suspicions the Iranian captain Soheil Jelveh (51) offered them a bonus to keep quiet. Jelveh would claim to gardaí that Cumali Ozgen, a Dutch national with connections to Iran, was running the operation. Regardless, both men have now been sentenced and face spells in Irish prisons. In court it was said that Ozgen was a cleaner, but he was in accommodation on the Matthew that is known as the pilot's cabin – the equivalent of a VIP room and right next to the bridge. Gardaí believe that he was the man onboard to monitor proceedings. In court, his defence team admitted he was there to be the 'eyes and ears' of those directing the operation from Dubai, and had no seafaring experience. He took the job, the court was told, in a 'misguided attempt' to provide for his family. Tracking the operation Key to the whole operation was the information that tipped the Irish off to what was going on. This came from analysts at the EU- and UK-funded MAOC-N agency in Portugal along with other high level intelligence sharing. That intelligence is a mix of profiling ships, monitoring communications and high level sharing of data between agencies across the globe with Irish partners. Gardaí from the Drugs and Organised Crime Bureau, led by Detective Superintendent Keith Halley, began the endgame operation armed with the European agency's intelligence. It was thought first that the drugs would be landed on the east coast near Wicklow and Wexford and the guards deployed specialist units there near Kilmore Quay. What followed was a far more dramatic operation as the ship was stormed and brought to harbour in Cork. Those on board the MV Matthew knew the game was up long before the first boots of the Army Ranger Wing landed on their deck. The Castlemore ran aground off Wexford, en route to Castletownbere, and Habron and Lapa had to be winched to safety. Panicked messages appeared in the Signal and Whatsapp groups. Those messaging began to contemplate putting the drugs in a lifeboat and sailing it to Ireland. They also thought about getting criminals in Dublin to come out and meet them. A long-back-and forth between Irish authorities and the ship's radio then ensued before the order was ultimately given to raid the vessel, following a sign-off from then-Tánaiste and Defence Minister Micheál Martin. The crew of the Matthew sentenced today were relative bit players - just pawns in a much bigger global level enterprise of terror group fundraising and drug cartels. They were Iranian Saied Hassani (39), Filipino Harold Estoesta (31), Ukrainian Mykhailo Gavryk (32), Ukrainian Vitalit Vlasoi (32), Iranian ship's captain Soheil Jelveh (51) and Dutchman Cumali Ozgen (49) Other crew members on board, deemed to have no involvement with the smuggling operation, were not prosecuted. Sources have said that gardaí and other law enforcement agencies are not finished – they still must arrest the other organisers, including those aligned to the Kinahan OCG. Routes have diversified but sources said that Dutch and Iranian gangsters are now running the shipments across the Atlantic either towards Rotterdam, the Irish and Cornwall coast or to Cape Verde and Senegal. As one Irish security source put it: 'We need another few Matthews and that might help to stop it.' Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal


Irish Daily Mirror
41 minutes ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Kneecap suggested as 'secret set' to replace Bob Vylan for festival
Kneecap were suggested as a replacement for Bob Vylan by organisers of a festival who dropped the punk duo after Glastonbury. Bob Vylan's performance at Radar festival in Manchester was cancelled after singer Bobby Vylan, whose real name is reportedly Pascal Robinson-Foster, 34, led crowds in chants of "death, death to the IDF (Israel Defence Forces)" during their Saturday afternoon set at Glastonbury. Speaking on the 2 Promoters, 1 Pod podcast, Radar organiser Catherine Jackson-Smith said the festival was "forced into a position" they did not want to take in dropping the band from their upcoming headline slot this Saturday. On acts that could replace Bob Vylan, Ms Jackson-Smith said her colleague Joe had suggested a Kneecap "secret set" in order to "make a statement". "You can say nothing publicly but if you go and book, and as I did mention, Joe's first response was, 'What if we did Kneecap as a secret set?' because that makes a statement, and it makes a statement without having to make a statement and that is what we wanted to do so we are going through options," she said. "We might end up with somebody that has no discernible political opinion in any manner at this point because if they're free and they could play on Saturday, maybe that is the criteria that we're looking for at this stage." Irish rap trio Kneecap, whose member Liam Og O hAnnaidh, also known as Mo Chara, appeared in court in June charged with a terror offence, performed on the West Holts Stage at Glastonbury after Bob Vylan. As of Friday afternoon, Radar has not announced a replacement for Bob Vylan and the festival's website lists the Saturday line-up as "headliner TBA (to be announced)". Of the conversation Radar organisers had with Bob Vylan, Ms Jackson-Smith said it was "one of the most horrendous professional discussions" she has ever had. "I cannot express clearly enough that I wanted Bob Vylan to perform at our festival," she said. "Bob Vylan know that we wanted to book them. Why else would we have booked them?" she added. "And Bob Vylan also know that we didn't want to pull them, because we tried our hardest not to do that… but ultimately, it still ends at the same point the headlines will be 'Radar festival pulled Bob Vylan'." Bob Vylan issued a statement on Tuesday claiming they were being "targeted for speaking up". It has emerged that Bob Vylan were already under investigation by police for comments made at a performance one month before Glastonbury. Video footage appears to show Bobby Vylan at Alexandra Palace telling crowds: "Death to every single IDF soldier out there as an agent of terror for Israel. Death to the IDF." The duo have had their US visas revoked before their tour later this year and have been pulled from an upcoming performance at a German music festival, following their appearance at Glastonbury. They are currently expected to perform at the Boardmasters surfing and music festival in Newquay, Cornwall, in August. The group was formed in Ipswich in 2017, and are known for addressing political issues in their albums including racism, masculinity and class.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
‘The situation is f***ed up, we don't have many options'. Inside the bungled €157m cocaine operation onboard the MV Matthew
As the MV Matthew sailed towards Irish waters on September 22, 2023, carrying 2,253 kilos of cocaine, a reassuring message came through from the crime group's leadership overseeing the operation in Dubai.