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Claims Of Over €2M + Euro Funds Go Missing At Garda College, Co Tipperary.

It is understood that the Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission (GSOC), has, at last, sent a file to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), following lengthy investigation into financial irregularities at the Garda Training College, situated in Templemore, Co. Tipperary.

Following investigations, same begun some 75 months ago, a decision is now awaited on whether any serving or retired Gardaí are likely to be charged in relation to this possible embezzlement.

It is understood that millions of euro, including European Union funds just vanished, with over €2m unaccounted for, and linked mainly to a restaurant at the Garda Training College, as well as huge sums linked to golf course land and a boat club.

Included in the internal audit report, are accusations as follows:-
(A) The Training College rented out land it did not own.
(B) Operated some 50 bank accounts with some allegedly used for purposes other than those for which they were intended. This included the buying of gifts, spending on entertainment and sponsoring garda clubs.
(C) Used public money to fit out privately owned shops.
(D) Operated one bank account in the name of the Garda laundry account, which were used for the payment of bonuses, some loans to staff, and the funding of entertainment and sporting expenses.
(E) Redirecting European Union funding into own bank accounts, before possibly being diverted to a Dublin bank account, referred to as the ‘Cabra Account‘.

These allegations first date back to 1999 and were then highlighted by Garda Human Resources boss Mr John Barrett. Mr Barrett gave extensive details of his efforts to raise concerns about Templemore’s existing finances.

Same was not referred to GSOC until June 2017 by the then Garda Commissioner Ms Nóirín O’Sullivan.
In her evidence to PAC in 2017, Ms O’Sullivan said that she first found out about same financial issues at a two hour meeting, described as a brief meeting, at the Training College, back in July 2015. However, inquiries do not appear to have continued, once Garda Commissioner O’Sullivan handed over her report to GSOC.

To date, one former senior Garda member, who was involved directly with the training college, has been deemed unable to fully co-operate with on going enquiries, due to failing health.

It is expected that this case could take the Irish State prosecutor some 12 months to rule if any current or now retired Gardaí should face criminal charges.

Local Community Safety Plan For Dublin’s North Inner City Published.

It would appear that the only way that neglected rural communities can attract the full attention of our present government is to viciously assault and steal from tourists or openly offer for sale various hallucinogens, which can produce an altered states of consciousness in thought, mood, and perception.

Here in Thurles, Co. Tipperary, while unfortunately there are never any tourists found lurking, to assault, we do have the various hallucinogens being offered for sale, which we can highlight.

Minister for Justice Mrs Helen McEntee T.D., was joined by the Minister for Public Expenditure, NDP Delivery and Reform, Mr Paschal Donohoe T.D., yesterday, to launch the Dublin North Inner City Local Community Safety Plan.

In a press release issued, they stated that quote: “Building stronger, safer communities requires input from all State agencies“. The state agencies being suggested in this case – Dublin City Council, Business Groups, HSE, Tusla, Youth services, An Garda Síochána and unspecified others, pointing out that safer communities is not just the responsibility of An Garda Síochána or the justice sector alone.

The new Dublin North Inner City Plan published yesterday outlines 50 actions across five priority areas and these priority areas are:

  • Drugs, Inclusion-Health, Anti-Social Behaviour.
  • Family, Youth and Community.
  • Education, Life Long Learning.
  • Integration, Ethnic and Multi Faith Inclusion.
  • Physical Environment.

Under these priority areas, the detailed action plan includes measures to tackle anti-social behaviour and drug dealing, but also broader actions to improve feelings of community safety, such as integration of new cultures into the area, improved supports for families and increased awareness around issues like domestic violence.

The Community Safety Partnership will work with relevant groups to implement the actions in this plan, such as:

  • Continuing strong Garda presence in the area as well as Gardaí working with others to improve and maintain public spaces identified as ‘hot spots’ for anti-social behaviour and drug dealing.
    But will small time drug dealers be offered freedom from prosecution if they name their suppliers, thus enabling Gardaí to do their job?
  • HSE, Tusla, Department of Justice and An Garda Síochána to extend drug outreach programmes, particularly to the under 18s.
  • Community Safety Wardens to work in Wolfe Tone Square, O’Connell Street and other areas.
  • Dublin City Council to carry out regular audits of streetscapes – lighting, cleanliness, maintenance – to improve feelings of safety.
    Will this action also be undertaken In Thurles, resulting in the lights being switched off during the day time and will the myriad of street potholes be attended too?
  • Dublin City Council to review and refresh infrastructure of key commercial streets, prioritising O’Connell Street, Talbot Street, Moore Street and Capel Street.
  • Dublin City Council to work with business groups such as Dublin Town to tackle illegal dumping.
  • Probation Service, An Garda Síochána, Tusla and others to provide new programmes for young prolific offenders engaged in violent criminal behaviour.
  • HSE to provide health bus to promote positive health interventions such as vaccinations and tackling obesity.
    Localised Mcdonald’s outlets are not going to like that. Maybe cooking classes could be arranged for the lazier members of this community.
  • Increasing the number of after school places for children.
  • An Garda Síochána Community Bus to address small policing matters.

All of the above benefits being offered to this violent, drug dealing, undeserving community will now be financed by the silent hardworking taxpayer.

Minister McEntee has stated: “The north inner city is a wonderful part of Dublin, and indeed of our country. It has brilliant communities – families with roots going back generations, as well as new arrivals making the area their home.
It has fantastic schools and colleges. It is the commercial heart of our city centre, bringing so many of us in to shop and do businesses every day. And O’Connell Street, the historic main street of our capital city, is also at the heart of this area.
There are of course challenges too, and I want to ensure that those living and working and living in our capital, and those who visit the city, are safe and feel safe.”

In July, Minister McEntee announced €10million of additional funding for Garda overtime in Dublin, specifically to increase high visibility policing and prevent crime. She also introduced Garda specialist regional firearms units, as opposed to regular uniformed Gardaí, who are unarmed, and detective gardaí, who are armed but not assigned to ASU roles. Was it her intention to shoot drug dealers and those causing violent disorder, or was it just for ‘optics’, giving the appearance that this government actually were awake.

Minster McEntee added: “Having stronger, safer communities is at the core of my work as Minister for Justice. Gardaí across the city continue to work hard to keep people safe, to prevent crime and provide reassurance.
Where incidents take place, An Garda Síochána move swiftly to fully investigate, make arrests and bring those responsible to justice.
The re-opening of Fitzgibbon Street Garda station last year and the opening of a new station for O’Connell Street in March, have also helped improve that visible Garda presence.
But increasing community safety – people being safe, and feeling safe too – is not only the responsibility of the justice system or An Garda Síochána.
It requires many of us in State agencies and organisations working together – and working with the local community. Because nobody knows better than local communities how to make their areas safer.
This is our new policy on community safety, and it is one we will be rolling out across the country next year.
Communities drawing up plans on how to make their areas safer, with everyone around the table – health, education, business groups, An Garda Síochána, public and community representatives – finding solutions.
The Dublin North Inner City plan being published today is a perfect example of this fresh approach.”

“Wow” and if that wasn’t enough, Minister Paschal Donohoe TD said: “Dublin’s North Inner City is an area of great diversity and vibrancy. Of course some challenges exist. That is why today marks a special day.
The publication of the Local Community Safety Plan for Dublin’s North Inner City aims to bring all those who know the area best and those who are best placed to identify and implement the changes that are needed to ensure that the area is a better place to live, to visit and to enjoy.
By prioritising these five areas, we can make sure that resources are allocated in the right way so that they make the biggest difference.
The people of the North East Inner City are rightfully proud of where they live and come from. This plan will go a considerable distance to making the NEIC a stronger and safer community which is no less that the residents deserve.”

Speaking at the launch of the Dublin North Inner City Community Safety Plan, the Chair of the North Inner City Community Safety Partnership Mr. Eddie Mullins had little to said only: “As the recently appointed Chair of Dublin’s North Inner City Community Safety Partnership I am delighted to welcome everyone here today for the launch of the Community Safety Plan for the North Inner City. On behalf of the Partnership I want to welcome the Ministers McEntee and Donohoe also and thank them for their continued interest in and support for the work of the Partnership. In my short time working with the Partnership I am struck by the commitment of the Partners to the Community and want to recognise and thank the Partners for coming together in the preparation of this document.
The Community Safety Plan is a living a document which we expect will evolve and continue to be informed by the Community we seek to support.”

Just keep throwing taxpayers money at the issues, in the hope that a ‘softly softly’ approach can garner working class votes.

Introduction Of Visa & Transit Visa Requirement For Bolivian Nationals.

The Department of Justice has announced today, that with effect from the September 12th, 2023, all Bolivian nationals will be required to obtain a visa before travelling to Ireland.

A transit visa will also be required, if intending to transit through Ireland en route to another destination.

The introduction of a visa requirement for Bolivian nationals at this time will bring Ireland into alignment with the visa regime applying in the UK and in the Schengen area, as Bolivian nationals are required to obtain a visa prior to travelling to these jurisdictions.

Irish visa requirements are kept under ongoing review, having regard to the need to ensure that effective immigration controls are in place whilst also facilitating those who wish to travel to Ireland for the purposes of a visit, to work, to study or to join family members.

An Garda Síochána’s Plans For €10 million Overtime Allocation.

The press release today issued by Fine Gael Minister for Justice Mrs Helen McEntee: it’s all just about future voter optics.
Would this €10 million not have been better spent invested in health issues like Limerick University Hospital, which has been historically under funded by successive Fianna Fáil & Fianna Gael led governments?
Why didn’t Minister for Justice Mrs Helen McEntee just give €1 million to those who are walking the streets of Dublin, currently causing a state of disorder, due to the total absence of authority and parental control?
Same funding could have been granted on condition that these rude, crude, uneducated, and uncivilized, barbarous persons stay off the streets of Dublin!

  • Increased deployment of public order unit and other specialist units in Dublin City Centre.
  • Overtime will provide up to 48,500 extra Garda hours per month across all Dublin Garda Divisions
  • Days of Action to be held across Dublin, by Gardaí.

The Minister for Justice, Mrs Helen McEntee TD, has welcomed details announced by Ms Angela Willis, Assistant Garda Commissioner for the Dublin Metropolitan Region, of how the additional €10 million allocation to An Garda Síochána will be used to bolster high visibility policing in Dublin city.

Minister McEntee last month announced the additional funding for Garda overtime, to increase high visibility policing in the Dublin Metropolitan Region.

The Minister is committed to ensuring Dubliners working and living in our capital, and those who visit the city, are safe and feel safe. An enhanced visible policing presence is central to achieving this objective and Minister McEntee is in regular contact with An Garda Síochána in this regard.

She welcomed the detail provided today by Assistant Commissioner Willis on how the additional €10 million is being spent, and will be spent, to provide consistent high visibility policing in the capital.

This includes:

Increased deployment of the Garda National Public Order Unit in the city centre, with €2m of the €10million dedicated to increased public order capacity
An enhanced visible Garda presence at strategic locations in Dublin city centre
Uniformed Gardaí supported in the city centre by the Garda Air Support Unit, the Garda Mounted Unit, the Garda Dog Unit, Regional Armed Response Units, and Road Policing Units to enhance visibility in the city centre
Planned days of high impact operations in the city centre and across all DMR divisions
High visibility patrols on the transport network and near transport services
An enhanced Operation Citizen, including a focus on tackling street level drug dealing, anti-social behaviour and the seizure of alcohol in the city centre

Minister McEntee said: “As Minister for Justice I am committed to ensuring that Gardaí have the resources they need to build stronger, safer communities. This additional funding will help with the Garda commitment to continue to protect Dublin communities and ensure that the city is a safe place for all to live, work and visit. I am pleased that the plans now in place by the Garda Commissioner, Assistant Commissioner Willis and Garda management will deliver high visibility policing in the capital to support safety in Dublin.
While policing alone cannot solve many of the factors which contribute to criminality or people feeling unsafe, high visibility policing is crucial to providing reassurance for all who live in, work in or visit our capital city.
I also look forward in the coming weeks to launching the Community Safety Plan for Dublin’s north inner city. This plan, drawn up by the Community Safety Partnership which I established, recognises that increasing safety is not just the responsibility of An Garda Síochána alone.
It also requires significant input from the local community and other State services, such as local authorities, health, education and others.
But nobody knows better than local communities how to increase safety in their areas – and that is why the community is centrally involved in drawing up these plans
.”

The North Inner City Local Community Safety Partnerships (LCSPs) is one of three pilots established by Minister McEntee, ahead of the rollout of the partnerships locally next year. The Dublin LCSP is due to publish its Community Safety Plan in the coming weeks.

Minister McEntee added: “In the coming weeks, I will also announce the latest round of funding grants under the Community Safety Innovation fund, which I established to reinvest the ill-gotten proceeds of crime as seized by the Criminal Assets Bureau into local projects to improve community safety.”

Budget 2023 also reflects the commitment of Government to ensuring that our communities are safe and that An Garda Síochána has the resources required to operate effectively. The budget provided by Government to the Garda Commissioner continues to increase to unprecedented levels, with an allocation of more than €2 billion for 2023.

Minister McEntee said that Garda recruitment is now accelerating after a Covid enforced pause, with new classes both entering and graduating from the Garda College in Templemore every three months.

The Minister said: “We are seeing numbers consistently increase in Templemore. 135 trainees entered the training college in February and another 154 in May. Another class of 174, the largest class since Covid, entered the college at the end of July, continuing the building momentum in recruitment.
100 new Gardaí have attested so far this year; another 470 will be in active training – and two more classes are due into Templemore in October and December. And I also look forward to attending the graduation of the next class in October, as well as working with colleagues in Government to ensure this strong pipeline of recruits is maintained.

Along with Minister of State James Browne (Fianna Fáil), I am also committed to further expanding the number of Youth Diversion Programmes, which do hugely valuable work, across the country.”

Through the Youth Justice Strategy 2021-2027 the Department of Justice is broadening and deepening the services provided by the network of Youth Diversion Projects across the State.

This puts a focus on Early Intervention and Family Support programmes for children at risk, as well as access to appropriate Education, Training and Youth Services.

The Department of Justice is currently funding eight Youth Diversion Projects covering the Dublin City Centre area (specifically Dublin 1, 7 and 8) and is committed to expanding the number of YDPs across the country.

Funding for Youth Diversion Projects is provided by the Department of Justice and co-financed by the European Social Fund’s ESF+ Programme.

New Book Detailing Actions Of Tipperary IRA Priest Fr. Patrick Ryan.

“The Padre” is a new publication which further details the actions of Tipperary priest Fr. Patrick Ryan, latter responsible for arming the Irish Republican Army (IRA), using funding supplied by Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, once known as the “Mad Dog of the Middle East”. Colonel Gaddafi was a Libyan dictator, who was himself deposed and killed in 2012.

In a book published by Merrion Press; authored by award winning journalist Ms Jennifer O’Leary, the Tipperary priest reveals how his tip-off to the IRA led to the mistaken identity and murder of a senior Brussels bank official.

Tipperary-born priest Fr. Patrick Ryan now aged in his nineties, has admitted his link to the murder of the then 47 year old banker Mr Michael André Michaux. Mr Michaux latter a senior official at the Central Bank in Brussels, lived in the same street as the targeted diplomat, named as Mr Paul Holmer, the deputy British Ambassador to NATO.

Fr. Ryan has confirmed that the real IRA target, back in March 1979, was Mr Paul Holmer latter a Brussels-based senior British diplomat at NATO. In early 1979 senior British officials in Brussels were put on high alert following a warning that the IRA were plotting to kill a senior UK representative in the city. Among those warned was former British Home Secretary Mr Roy Jenkins, who was then President of the European Commission.

Ms O’Leary first spoke to Fr. Ryan in 2019 for the landmark BBC NI series ‘Spotlight’ on the ‘Troubles — A Secret History’ in which he admitted securing explosives for the IRA from Libya and confessed to his role in the Hyde Park and Brighton bombings.

In her book Ms O’Leary delves into more detail with Fr. Ryan regarding his activities and his role in assisting an IRA unit in Europe.

On March 22nd, 1979, Sir Richard Sykes, aged 58, the British Ambassador to Holland, and married father of 3, was shot dead by the IRA. Sir Richard was seated in his Rolls Royce outside his residence in the Hague. His 19-year-old footman, Mr Karel Straub, was also murdered in the attack.
Just hours later two IRA gunmen ambushed Brussels banker Mr Michaux in his car, mistaking him for the NATO diplomat Holmer.

At this time Fr. Ryan often stayed at the home of well-connected art historian Ms Lucie Ninane in Brussels and was there on the day of Sir Richard Sykes assassination. Fr. Ryan met regularly at the Ninane residence with a companion named Maurice, who passed on information to the IRA, and here Fr. Ryan also obtained information from the art historian’s well-placed associates.

Fr. Ryan heard of Mr Michaux’s true identity the following day while listening to a radio news report and fearing his own arrest, he fled Brussels in the back of an ambulance, before taking refuge at a monastery. The monks were expecting him, however he never disclosed the business he was involved in or why he required somewhere to hold-up.

During a lunch hosted by a friend of Lucie Ninane at her home in a wealthy suburb, Fr. Ryan’s host mentioned that a British diplomat lived nearby at the end of the cul-de-sac.

Fr. Ryan claims he made sketches of the area noting car registrations coming and going from different houses, before passing same to his intermediary Maurice, who in turn passed this information to the IRA so that the hit team on the continent got the details.

At 6.15pm on March 22nd, 1979 two IRA gunmen approached a car close to Mr Holmer’s residence and fired eight bullets in three bursts from just a few yards. The sole occupant was hit in the head and arms and later died in hospital.