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‘Shocking': Some gardaí ‘openly hostile' towards doing their jobs, roads policing review finds

‘Shocking': Some gardaí ‘openly hostile' towards doing their jobs, roads policing review finds

Irish Times2 days ago
Some frontline gardaí working in roads policing were openly 'hostile' towards doing their jobs and were 'brazen' in expressing it to independent personnel sent to check on their performance. A new report, commissioned by Garda Headquarters after an anonymous garda turned whistleblower, also found some senior Garda members were 'afraid' to intervene when gardaí they were managing were persistently performing poorly.
Garda Commissioner
Drew Harris
said he was 'shocked' at what the report had found. Elaine Byrne, the head of the Policing and Community Safety Authority (PCSA), a Garda oversight agency, said the report was a 'wake up' call for the
Garda
, adding the authority had 'concerns about the absence of performance management within the guards'.
She described as 'shocking' the way some gardaí openly expressed their lack of interest in doing their jobs when the personnel who were reviewing roads policing across the Garda went out on duty with them.
'The blatant disregard that some members have ... and they knew they were being reviewed. They were in the cars with people [reviewing them] and they were openly hostile to doing their job,' she said.
READ MORE
Ms Byrne was also 'shocked' that there 'seemed to be a deference or a fear' among some Garda managers. They were 'not actually doing performance management' because of 'just a fear of being managers within the guards'. She added those managers were based in divisions across the country, where they were responsible for managing policing generally, not just roads policing.
Mr Harris said Crowe consultants had been commissioned to carry out the review of roads policing nationally after he had received anonymous correspondence from a Garda member working in roads policing. The review was complete, and the resulting report had been presented to the PCSA in June.
He planned to publish the report after it was checked to ensure nobody featured in it could be identified. However, it was clear to him a substantial number, though still a minority, of the gardaí engaged in roads policing were 'brazen' about expressing their disinterest in their jobs and their hostility towards carrying out their basic duties.
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Garda roads policing numbers hit historic low of 618
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The duties of gardaí enforcing road traffic laws included performing speed checks, detecting people driving dangerously or using mobile phones. Roads policing Garda personnel are also responsible for conducting checkpoints to detect intoxicated drivers, among a wide range of other enforcement measures.
'It's sobering, to say the least, in terms of its conclusions. It is shocking and very worrying,' Mr Harris said of the as yet unpublished Crowe report. 'We were not pleased to see this report and to see the conclusions within it.'
As well as preparing to publish the report, Mr Harris said a working group had been established to act on the recommendations within the report. Both he and Ms Byrne made their comments to the media after a public meeting of the PCSA in Dublin on Thursday, where senior Garda officers were questioned about a range of policing issues by members of the authority.
In his final address to the authority, before his retirement on September 1st, Mr Harris said he was concerned about the proliferation of violent pornography as it was now being reflected in the nature of the violent sexual offences coming to the Garda's attention.
Some people, mostly young men, had been 'radicalised' by watching violent pornography to the extent that when they were arrested for committing sexual offences 'it literally has to be explained to them what they did was wrong'. He believed sexual crimes and violence in the home needed to become public health concerns, rather than just policing issues.
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Mum and kids killed in Fermanagh shooting are 'together and finally safe', funeral hears
Mum and kids killed in Fermanagh shooting are 'together and finally safe', funeral hears

Extra.ie​

time2 hours ago

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Mum and kids killed in Fermanagh shooting are 'together and finally safe', funeral hears

Crowds turned out in the Co Clare village of Barefield for the funeral of a murdered mother and her children. Veterinary surgeon Vanessa Whyte, 45, and her children James Rutledge, 14, and Sara Rutledge, 13, died in a shooting incident at their home in Maguiresbridge, Co Fermanagh, in July. Agricultural contractor Ian Rutledge, 43, who died on Monday, is understood to be the only suspect in the shooting of his family. Vanessa, James and Sara were laid to rest on Saturday. Pic: Noel Sweeney/PA Wire Police in Northern Ireland have said a triple murder and attempted suicide was a line of inquiry. Following a service of removal in Maguiresbridge on Wednesday, a funeral service took place for Vanessa and her children in Barefield, where she was originally from. Crowds travelled to attend the funeral at the Church of the Immaculate Conception on Saturday. 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'She had a keen interest in the well-being of animals, which was highlighted by the purchase of a donkey with her newfound wealth from making her First Holy Communion… 'Vanessa was a witty, bright, kind and determined young lady. She would sit for hours nursing sick lambs, kittens and calves.' The three victims were huge GAA and animal lovers. Pic: Noel Sweeney/PA Wire Regina told a story about how Vanessa left her job in a local shop at 15 because she saw the owner mistreating a bird. She also explained her sister's love for the GAA led her to travel up to Dublin for the All-Ireland final in 1997 despite not having a ticket. This proved not to be an issue for Vanessa as she secured herself a ticket within 'an hour of reaching the capital.' Vanessa also loved to return to her native Clare, and it was where she 'truly relaxed'. Regina then moved on to the eulogies of Vanessa's 'world' – her children. 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Mother and two children killed in Co Fermanagh shooting are ‘irreplaceable', funeral told
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Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Mother and two children killed in Co Fermanagh shooting are ‘irreplaceable', funeral told

The funeral of a mother and her two children killed in a suspected murder-suicide last week has heard they played an 'irreplaceable' part in the lives of their families, community and beyond. Vanessa Whyte (45), her 14-year-old son James and 13-year-old daughter Sara were shot during the incident at their home in Maguiresbridge, Co Fermanagh , on the morning of Wednesday, July 23rd. The sole suspect, Ian Rutledge (43), died in hospital several days after the shooting. Mr Rutledge was married to Ms Whyte and was the father of her two children. Mourners were asked to wear bright colours to the Mass in the Church of the Immaculate Conception in Barefield, Co Clare , where Ms Whyte is from. READ MORE Bishop of Ferns Ger Nash told those gathered in the church, outside and viewing online that many are 'heartbroken at the tragic and unspeakable loss of three lives with so much to give to the world'. 'Every story and shared memory since their deaths reminds us of the irreplaceable part they played in the lives of their families, their community, their schools, workplaces, teams and clubs,' he said. He said there is no easy answer for why tragic events such as this occur. 'Here in Barefield church today with Vanessa, James, and Sara, we are in the land of 'I don't know',' he said. 'The tragic events of last week, and the ripping away of three people from their family and friends leave us searching for answers and coming back again and again to the only answer that is completely true: 'We don't know.'' The funeral Mass Vanessa Whyte, her son James Rutledge, and daughter Sara Rutledge was held on Saturday. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA The coffins of shooting victims Vanessa Whyte and her children Sara and James Rutledge. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire The coffins of shooting victims Vanessa Whyte and her children Sara and James Rutledge. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA Wire He said Ms Whyte brought immense gifts to her adopted county Fermanagh and the Maguiresbridge community. Bishop Nash said tributes paid to Ms Whyte and her children on came from people who knew them well but also from strangers who signed their messages: 'A Waterford mammy', 'A Cork granny', 'A Wicklow mother' and 'A Dublin family'. 'There were some with both dads and mams mentioned, but there were many where a woman spoke from her own heart. They don't know you, nor you them. But they know your story, and if they hug their teenagers more tightly and call a ceasefire in the perpetual war about tidy rooms, then they have learned that life is precious, and we must be grateful for every day given to us and to those we love,' he said. 'Over and over, I could see that women and mothers, as individuals, reached out in their shock and sadness at the loss of a mother and children ... The messages highlighted the vulnerability of women to pain inflicted by others and [there were] were signs of solidarity in the face of that pain.' Addressing Sara and James's friends, he encouraged the young people to 'talk often about our absent friends and to seek help and support when the sorrow becomes too heavy'. Police Service of Northern Ireland detectives are continuing their murder investigation.

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