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Man (20s) dies after being struck by a car in Ballymun, Dublin
Man (20s) dies after being struck by a car in Ballymun, Dublin

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Man (20s) dies after being struck by a car in Ballymun, Dublin

A man has died after being hit by a car in north Dublin in the early hours of Saturday. The incident occurred in Ballymun shortly before 5am, An Garda Síochána said. 'At approximately 4:55am, gardaí and emergency services were alerted to a road traffic incident involving a car and a pedestrian at Balbutcher Lane,' the force said in a statement. 'The pedestrian, a man aged in his 20s, was pronounced deceased at the scene.' READ MORE The road was closed on Saturday morning to allow Garda forensic collision investigators to carry out a technical examination of the scene. Local diversions were in place. An Garda Síochána appealed to anyone who may have witnessed the collision to come forward. 'Any road users or pedestrians who were in the vicinity of Balbutcher Lane and Balcurris Park areas of Ballymun, between 4am and 5am, and have camera footage (including dash-cam), are asked to make this available to investigating gardaí.' Gardaí at Ballymun station can be contacted on (01) 6664400 or through the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111. The young man killed in the incident is the 82nd person to die on the State's roads this year, with the total including 22 pedestrians.

Gardaí on alert over increase in number of drugs being obtained for use in sexual assaults on partners
Gardaí on alert over increase in number of drugs being obtained for use in sexual assaults on partners

Sunday World

time3 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Gardaí on alert over increase in number of drugs being obtained for use in sexual assaults on partners

Gardaí have been advised by international police agency Europol to take 'preventative and cautionary measures' on the crime, which is happening more frequently in homes as opposed to nightclubs. An alert has been issued to gardaí about an increase in the number of drugs that are being procured by sexual predators to facilitate rapes and assaults on unsuspecting partners. Gardaí have been advised by international police agency Europol to take 'preventative and cautionary measures' on the crime, which is happening more frequently in homes as opposed to nightclubs. Sexual abusers are ordering the substances online – which are often disguised in cosmetic products – and drugging their partners without their knowledge. Officers have listed four main drugs commonly used, including potent benzodiazepines like flunitrazepam ­(Rohypnol). 'The background to this alert is the high-profile case that recently occurred in France,' a source said, referring to Gisele Pelicot, who was repeatedly drugged and raped by her ex-husband, Dominique Pelicot, and dozens of men, without her knowledge, over a decade. 'The Garda National Protective Services Bureau (GNPSB) is aware of that case, and it is understood that a detective from that unit sent a memo to all gardaí about dealing with this particular type of crime.' After the sedatives are procured online, they are often stored in hiding places in the home or in the car, with the victim having no knowledge of what is going on. The abusers are often people who the victims have been in a close and trusting relationship with for many years. International police say investigations show that footage is often distributed or shared, with the abusers discussing how the victims would never allow these sexual acts in a conscious state. The victims usually have no memory of the sexual abuse and are completely unaware of what has happened to them. 'The belief is that similar crimes are occurring in our jurisdiction right now and have done so in the past, but not on the scale we saw in France,' the source added. Gisele Pelicot was drugged and raped by her husband and other men. Photo: Reuters 'This is not your typical nightclub scenario which gardaí find very difficult to investigate. This is a warning about targeted and deliberate abuse in a domestic situation.' ​ In a statement, An Garda Síochána said it would advise victims of any form of 'spiking' to come forward and report the incidents to gardaí. 'An Garda Síochána takes all reports of spiking very seriously and continue to investigate to determine the nature of every incident reported to us, including results of toxicology reports in each case,' a spokesperson said. 'Any incident of this type of crime, ­including those with evidence to suggest a link with 'spiking', will be investigated by either local gardaí supported by or attached to divisional protective services units.' Ms Pelicot (72) said 'police saved my life' when they investigated her husband's computer in November 2020, after a security guard caught him filming women in a supermarket in southern France. Police said they found a file labelled 'abuses' on a USB drive connected to his computer that contained 20,000 images and films of his wife being raped almost 100 times. He admitted to inviting dozens of strangers over nearly ten years to their house to rape her after he had drugged her. He was found guilty and sentenced to 20 years in prison.

New CCTV cameras on hold awaiting Garda code of practice
New CCTV cameras on hold awaiting Garda code of practice

Irish Independent

time8 hours ago

  • Irish Independent

New CCTV cameras on hold awaiting Garda code of practice

In a written reply to a motion by Cllr Dominic Finn, Divisional Manager Kevin Morey said that the Garda Síochána (Recording Devices) Act 2023 was enacted and signed into law by the President in December 2023. However, a commencement order authorising community CCTV has not yet been signed and can't be until An Garda Síochána submit a code of practice governing the installation and operation of a CCTV scheme. 'There is no deadline in the legislation for the completion of this code of practice, therefore we await guidelines,' Mr Morey said. Section 6 of the new act repealed the current authorisation process for community CCTV provided in the Garda Síochána Act 2005 and no new schemes can go ahead until the new code of practice is submitted and the commencement order is signed. This month's meeting of the West Cork Municipal District heard of anti-social behaviour at the Rock Amenity Park in Skibbereen where vandals were smashing bottles on the ground, leaving broken glass strewn around. Cllr Brendan McCarthy called for the installation of a CCTV camera to curb the problem. 'We need to install a camera at the location to root out the people doing this up there. A pole is in place as part of the redevelopment of the site for the specific purpose of putting a camera on it,' Cllr McCarthy said. 'The Gardaí have also stated that they have no issue with a camera or cameras being installed there, in fact they would roundly welcome their installation to stop this horrible behaviour.' However, a Council official responded that the local authority can't install any new CCTV systems until the new code of practice is circulated.

Mick Clifford: Defective pistol holsters a smoking gun for An Garda Síochána
Mick Clifford: Defective pistol holsters a smoking gun for An Garda Síochána

Irish Examiner

time14 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Mick Clifford: Defective pistol holsters a smoking gun for An Garda Síochána

The shooting accident occurred on June 11, 2020. The detective involved was from the special detective unit. He had been assigned to the Israeli ambassador's residence on routine protective work. At around 4.30pm, his gun was accidentally discharged. He suffered injuries to his lower body that were significant but not life-threatening. It then emerged that concerns had been expressed in An Garda Síochána about holsters issued to armed members before the detective shot himself. When Detective Garda Colm Horkan was murdered with his own weapon a week later, these concerns were elevated and multiplied. An issue arose immediately as to whether or not the accident was in any way attributable to the quality of the holster the detective was wearing. There had been mumblings among some armed gardaí about the holster. A batch of these holsters had been acquired from a saddlery in the east of the country. The leather material was softer, and a safety feature that was part of the previous issued holster was off-centre and didn't cover the handle of the firearm. As a result, the firearm could be grabbed from within the holster by somebody else or, in some instances, the firearm could fall out of the holster. On the day after the incident outside the embassy, the detective's firearm, hip holster, magazines, and loose and spent rounds were delivered to the Garda National Technical Bureau for forensic examination. This is standard practice. The bureau routinely examines firearms and ammunition in criminal investigations. It has accredited testing and calibration laboratories that have achieved the IOS 17025 standard. The Garda Technical Bureau examines firearms and ammunition in criminal investigations. Picture: Colin Keegan When that was awarded in 2016, then commissioner Nóirín O'Sullivan noted that 'achieving accreditation to this standard means that the Garda Technical Bureau is providing a high quality forensic investigation service to An Garda Síochána, the Criminal Justice System, and the public. This will help improve and ensure trust among the public in the criminal justice system'. So it was that the holster and other items were examined in conditions conforming to the highest standard. The ambassador residence incident occurred at least a year after a protected disclosure had been made over concerns about the holsters, among other issues. Included in that protected disclosure was an allegation about the method and reason for procuring the supplier of the controversial holster. There were also fears expressed about the safety of the holsters. Concerns were expressed elsewhere, including from the firearms training unit within the force and the corresponding unit in the training college in Templemore. On June 16, five days after the accidental shooting, an email was sent between officers from these respective units. 'As you are aware this issue was raised before with [another officer] about this particular make of holsters and pouch,' the mail read. 'This softer style was supposed in both Sig and Wather [makes of firearms] configuration. It proved dangerous… I concur with your recommendation that this make of holster and pouch should be withdrawn for safety reasons.' The following day, just before midnight on June 17, Det Garda Horkan stopped a man on a motorbike in the centre of Castlerea, Co Roscommon. The man, Stephen Silver, was apparently driving erratically. Just after the garda approached him, a struggle ensued. Det Garda Horkan's official firearm came loose from its holster and Silver managed to get his hands on it. He fired up to 15 shots, at least four of which hit Det Garda Horkan, killing him. Silver then waited until gardaí arrived on the scene five minutes later. He is now serving a life sentence for murder. Stephen Silver is serving a life sentence for the murder of Det Garda Colm Horkan. Picture: Colin Keegan Det Garda Horkan's holster was one of those acquired from the saddlery in Kildare. Early the following morning, a detective from the technical bureau examined the murder scene. He put the holster in a bag and tagged it as exhibit DOL2(a). For whatever reason, that holster was not sent to the bureau for examination. This was highly unusual. Following every shooting incident, it is the technical bureau, with its access to the IOS standard lab and practices, that is charged with conduction ballistic and associated investigations. Not in this case. Instead, the holster — but not the firearm or ammunition — was sent to another senior garda with an instruction to have it tested for serviceability. The reason for this is entirely unclear. This officer did pass it on to a sergeant who had experience with firearms training but was not an expert in either ballistics or firearms. A Garda spokesperson said the holster was tested by Forensic Science Ireland. The murder of Det Garda Horkan, in an incident where his attacker got access to his firearm, raised further concerns in sections of An Garda Síochána. One piece of correspondence from a senior officer is dated June 22, five days after the murder. 'Prior to the murder of Det Garda Horkan, the sergeants attached to firearms training were looking into problems with the official issue leather holster and magazine pouch. "I feel this now needs to be acted upon as a matter of urgency; I believe the issue had been flagged earlier and remedial work was carried out on the holster in order to make it more durable. "However, the problem still exists in that when weapons are being holstered, the leather gathers under the trigger guard and there is potential for an unintended discharge.' That letter was accompanied by further correspondence from officers in the firearms training unit recommending that 'these holsters and magazine pouches be removed from service on health and safety grounds'. Apart from all that, the technical bureau did its testing of the holster as per usual in the wake of the accidental shooting at the ambassador's residence. The murder of Detective Garda Horkan, in an incident where his attacker got access to his firearm, raised further concerns in sections of An Garda Síochána. Picture: Denis Minihane The results, while entirely removed from, and independent of, the correspondence referenced above, largely agreed with the conclusions that the holsters were dangerous. On March 4, Labour TD Alan Kelly, who has followed this story closely, read out in the Dáil what he said were the conclusions of the technical bureau examination. 'It was discovered by forensic experts attached to the Garda National Technical Bureau that the leather pistol holster issued to the member was so dangerously defective, the holster could actually engage the trigger and fire the weapon of its own accord,' Mr Kelly told the House. 'It was further identified by the ballistic experts, who operate under ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation, which is the legal requirement for all forensic laboratories, that the holster was so poorly designed, the firearm could be removed from the holster with so-called retention strap fully fastened. 'This left the gun open to removal by individuals other than the Garda member carrying the firearm. This critical health and safety risk later became the subject of a warning notice from the acting head of the Garda National Technical Bureau, given the very real concerns for the safety of Garda members.' The investigation of the holster's safety was a damning indictment. It concurred with the opinions generated in the firearms unit and the training college. In addition, and again entirely separately, the protected disclosure made in 2019 raised very similar concerns. If all of this was found to be factually and forensically accurate, it would represent a major scandal for An Garda Síochána. Bad enough that one garda had accidently shot himself. If defective equipment, about which fears had been expressed, contributed to a dangerous individual getting his hands on the member's weapon and murdering him, there would be a huge scandal. Such a scenario would not just invoke controversy among the public and the political class. Crucially, it would in all likelihood spark outrage internally within An Garda Síochána. However, the forensic examinations and opinions of experts were not the final word on the holsters' safety. As stated above, Det Garda Horkan's holster was dispatched to a senior officer who gave it onto a sergeant in his division who had experience in firearms training. He did not have access to the kind of laboratory conditions used in the technical bureau. He compiled a report suggesting that while the holster was not ideal, neither did it represent any danger to officers using it. This was contrary to the opinions expressed by others, as seen above, involved in firearms training. There was one more opinion or conclusion to throw into the mix. After the technical bureau returned its damning verdict on the examination of the holster in the ambassador residence accidental shooting, something unusual occurred. It was ordered from the upper echelons of the force that a second report be compiled. This was to be done by personnel in the Garda armoury, the unit that stores weapons, and the same unit that entered into a contract to acquire the holsters from the Kildare saddlery. No criticism The Irish Examiner understands that no criticism was ever made of the technical bureau's examination of the holster. Neither was there any suggesting that any individual officer in the bureau had erred, had any kind of conflict of interest, had done anything other than their professional duty, as per every other incident that they examined. Yet a second report was ordered. This was to be conducted by a unit that arguably was open to, at the very least, a perception of a conflict of interest. There is no reason to believe that this second report was conducted other than with the utmost integrity. In any event, the outcome was an opinion that the leather in the holster was more malleable than the model previously used, and there was an issue with a part of the stitching. Neither of these factors would render the holster dangerous in the manner that had been expressed by the technical bureau's examination or the opinions offered by personnel in the firearms training unit. There was now, within the force, a stark conflict of opinions on the safety of a holster that was used by officers involved in two shootings, one fatal. It would have been open to management within the force to seek an external expert opinion. If they were not happy with the result from the technical bureau, there was nothing to stop sending the holster to its equivalent unit in the PSNI, or one of the British policing divisions. That was not done. The holster was withdrawn later in 2020. In 2023, Mr Harris confirmed to then minister for justice Helen McEntee that all of the holsters in question had been withdrawn and shredded beyond use. Last Thursday, the Oireachtas Public Accounts Committee heard that the contract for the holsters was valued at €500,000. Two postscripts to the matter that threw up other questions. A senior officer was appointed to investigate the protected disclosures made by the garda back in 2019. As part of the investigation, this officer required expert opinion on the holster. The Irish Examiner understands the officer was referred to the sergeant who had compiled the report on Det Garda Horkan's holster, the report that, to a large extent, gave the equipment the all-clear. Later again, the State Claims Agency, which oversees legal actions against state bodies like An Garda Síochána, wanted an opinion on the holster. Independent investigation call Again, it was referred to the same sergeant. A very simple question raises its head once more. Why, in both these cases, not to mind following Det Garda Horkan's murder, was the equipment not referred to the recognised authority on these matters, the technical bureau? Mr Kelly says that the whole issue around the holsters requires urgent independent investigation. Labour TD Alan Kelly says that the whole issue around the holsters requires urgent independent investigation. Picture: Stephen Collins 'I have been raising the issue of defective leather pistol holsters on issue to Garda members, for months now,' he said. 'I believe the safety of Garda members was put at risk. "Furthermore, it is abundantly clear that the concerns of those who spoke up about these defective leather pistol holsters were not welcome at the highest levels in An Garda Síochána. "Those who attempted to push this issue up the reporting structure to safeguard their colleagues have been treated appallingly. "This significant issue isn't going to go away for justice minister Jim O'Callaghan. He needs to address it and he needs to do so immediately. "There's no point in sticking his head in the sand and hoping it will go away. It won't.' A spokesperson for the Garda ombudsman Fiosrú said it cannot comment on anything to do with protected disclosures. A series of questions were submitted to the Garda press office. Each question, in general terms, received a response that An Garda Síochána would not or could not comment on the particulars. Read More Labour's Alan Kelly exposes alleged garda failures in gun safety and drug storage

Off-duty garda who assaulted hotel porter while 'paralytic drunk' avoids conviction
Off-duty garda who assaulted hotel porter while 'paralytic drunk' avoids conviction

Irish Examiner

time20 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Off-duty garda who assaulted hotel porter while 'paralytic drunk' avoids conviction

An off-duty Garda got 'paralytic drunk' after drinking sambucas during a stag weekend before assaulting a hotel porter in Ennis, a court has heard. At Ennis District Court, Judge Alec Gabbett said: 'It is a shame really that but for the isolated incident on a stag night where Caoileann Fitzmaurice drank sambuca he probably wouldn't be here at all. 'Mr Fitzmaurice had four or five drinks and all of a sudden he was paralytic drunk and he had to be brought home. Then he was confronted by this nice man (Olufegun Lawal) who was trying to direct him to the right place when the melee ensued.' Caoileann Fitzmaurice, aged 31, stationed at Pearse Street Garda Station in Dublin, pleaded guilty to assaulting Mr Lawal at the Queen's Hotel, Abbey Street, Ennis, Co Clare on January 21, 2023. Judge Gabbett said he would not impose a conviction on Mr Fitzmauraice and instead imposed the Probation Act and made a compensation order for €5,000 for Mr Lawal. He said he was not convicting Mr Fitzmaurice of the offence 'due to the exemplary fashion in which he has engaged with the probation services'. Judge Gabbett said the manner in which Mr Fitzmaurice — who has no previous convictions — has met the case 'is an example to others'. He has met the case head on, shown remorse, apologised, faced up to it and paid compensation. 'He has given up alcohol, he has engaged in counselling, he is getting married, he has engaged in very pro-social activities.' Judge Gabbett said that Mr Fitzmaurice 'is a very well-educated gentleman and has a qualification in criminology'. He said it is never easy for a member of An Garda Síochána to be before the courts. He said that he was conscious of the internal disciplinary proceedings within An Garda Síochána which, he said, will have to happen because it is an assault. Judge Gabbett said that the significant aspect of the disciplinary proceedings is to get Mr Fitzmaurice 'off administrative duties and back to his normal duties of preventing crime'. Counsel for Mr Fitzmaurice, Cian Kelly BL asked that the case be struck out due to the manner in which Mr Fitzmaurice has met the case. Judge Gabbett said that he didn't think it would change the outcome of the disciplinary process if the case was struck out. On his way out of the courtroom, Mr Fitzmaurice shook hands with Mr Lawal. In the prosecution against Mr Fitzmaurice taken by the Garda Siochana Ombudsman Commission (Gsoc), Sarah Jane Comerford BL previously outlined the facts in the case to the court. Due to Mr Fitzmaurice's intoxicated state, his friends left him in the care of hotel porter, Mr Lawal and asked Mr Lawal to bring him up to his room.' Ms Comerford said: 'Unfortunately Garda Fitzmaurice was in such an intoxicated state that he started walking around the hotel. He was very disoriented — he dropped the key to his hotel room and Mr Lawal who was at all times trying to assist him picked up the key and at that point, Garda Fitzmaurice struck him two times — once in the nose and once in the left eye and Mr Lawal caught the third blow. 'Mr Lawal suffered a bloody nose and he did get some medical attention later that morning.' 'The incident spilled out onto the street where a witness saw Mr Fitzmaurice holding onto Mr Lawal and kicking out. The incident was also captured on CCTV footage.'

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