‘The Internal Garda Situation Is Probably Worse’

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Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald and Garda Commissioner Nóirín O’Sullivan

On yesterday’s RTÉ Radio One This Week show, journalist John Burke reported on allegations of wrongdoing made by two Garda whistleblowers.

Grab a tay.

John Burke: “This relates to serious allegations of wrongdoing within the force that have been made by two young gardai. Essentially their complaints are different though they relate to the same senior garda. Both have made allegations. On the one hand, by one Garda whisteblower that there was serious impropriety in relation to the pursuit of drugs investigations. The other whistleblower has made again, quite serious allegations, in relation to what happened him when he arrested a garda for drink driving. They both say their careers have essentially been ruined in effect by bringing their concerns forward and they did so around the time that there was a great deal of publicity in relation to the Maurice McCabe case and the John Wilson case, where they brought their concerns forward. So that, it seems, emboldened them to bring their cases forward. They went into the process and made their complaints known to senior officers. And they claim, after that, that they suffered as a consequence.

“In the case of the first whistleblower, he went to the interim garda confidential recipient as it was at the time last May, Judge Patrick McMahon and, arising from that, in the summer of last year, approximately one year ago, a senior garda officer was appointed to examine his allegations. They met and at that meeting, the garda whistleblower was represented by a junior solicitor, not his normal solicitor in fact, as far as I understand they wouldn’t have even been known to each other before that meeting. Very shortly, after that meeting, the junior solicitor noticed that their LinkedIn page had been checked out, their profile had been checked out, by the accused Garda. That raised a big red flag for them in terms of whether that meeting with the investigating senior garda, which was supposed to be entirely confidential, whether there was a leak of information and, if that leaked, perhaps what else had leaked? So, at that time, this is the summer of 2014, they wrote to the Garda Commissioner Noirin O’Sullivan and they wrote the the Minister for Justice Frances Fitzgerald and they said they had serious concerns in relation to the potential that information had leaked from this confidential process, back to the accused garda and that they then felt they couldn’t rely on it any further. The Garda Commissioner’s office wrote back to the first whistleblower in this case and whilst, as I understand it, they didn’t deal directly with the allegations made, in terms of whether they accepted them or not, they said that if the Garda whistleblower waited, he could engage then with a new process which was coming in at the time which is in now, the Protected Disclosures Procedure whereby one goes to GSOC as opposed to the Confidential Recipient. So we’ll park that for one moment. That’s the first Garda whistleblower who raised those concerns about information leaking out from his investigation that was overseen by this senior investigating Garda.”

“Exactly one year later, there’s an internal Garda inquiry now which has been launched, in relation to this accused Garda, arising from the serious allegations made by the second whistleblower. This is in relation to the pursuit of drugs investigations. It’s a very high level internal inquiry but what we’ve learned is that the guard who has been appointed to oversee that internal investigation is in fact the senior garda who headed up the internal examination into the first whistleblower’s complaint about whom, or about that process which the first whistleblower’s solicitors wrote to say that they were concerned about information leaking out. So essentially, what you have is, two senior gardai, 12 months ago, the first senior garda was examining the claims by the first whistleblower into the accused and the first whistleblower was not happy with the way information seemed to leak out from that process. We know see, in relation to the second whistleblower that that same senior garda has been appointed to head up the internal inquiry in relation to that second senior garda and our understanding is that both whistleblowers have now written to both the Garda Commissioner and to the Minister for Justice, expressing their concern as to whether they can have any faith in this process, in light of the concerns that were raised one year ago. We put these questions to the Garda Press Office and they said that they cannot comment on either operational or internal disciplinary measures.”

During the show, Mr Burke spoke to United Left Alliance TD, Clare Daly about the situation.

Clare Daly: “What it’s saying is that the old boy network, even though there are two girls at the helm, is absolutely alive and well and the same hierarchy is there defending itself and all of the demands that were very alive a year ago – that we needed to transform An Garda Siochana into a modern police service – are even more valid now because I would actually say the situation internally now is probably worse than when it was under former Commissioner [Martin] Callinan and Minister [Alan] Shatter… For 15 months now [the two whistlelblowers] have been put through hell, and their families have been put through this hell, isolated from their peers. They’re very vulnerable, they’ve been seriously harassed and intimidated and it’s just not good enough.”

Separately, readers may wish to recall how, in December 2014, Independent TD Mick Wallace, at a Banter event in Twister Pepper, Dublin, claimed some senior gardaí were benefitting from the drugs trade in Ireland.

He said:

There’s a number of cases where guards take, they capture drugs. We know of a case where drugs were coming in, maybe five suitcases of cocaine might come in and it would be organised to let four through, the guards would catch one suitcase with some chaps that would be heading off in one direction with the suitcase. Their leader was never caught. And the suitcase they would catch, they would bring it and there’d be a big show and the media would be brought down to show, ‘oh, there was a big drugs find yesterday and here’s all the stuff’. The stuff goes back in a box and fellas have come to us and told us that they were dealing in drugs, they were caught by the cops, they weren’t turned in and the cop says, ‘we’ll be back to ya’. They come back two weeks later and say, ‘here, sell this for us and bring us back the money’.

Listen back to This Week in full here

Garda led inquiry into colleague despite warning (RTE)

Previously:  The Wrong Side Of The Thin Blue Line

Meanwhile In The Dáil

Meanwhile In The Dáil

The Thin Blue Timeline [Updated]

Eamonn Farrell/Rollingnews.ie

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21 thoughts on “‘The Internal Garda Situation Is Probably Worse’

  1. Mr. T.

    It’s the stuff of 1950s Ireland where the Garda/Priest/Headmaster triumvirate decided the fates of people’s lives.

    The Garda Siochana needs to upended, disbanded, torn asunder and replaced with regional municipal forces for general policing and one national force for serious crime investigations.

  2. steve white

    so this is all based on Linkedin profile check notifications, ya think a senior gardai wouldn’t be checking out people while logged in.

    1. Lordblessusandsaveus

      Let me explain that for you.

      The Garda being investigated checked the LinkedIn profile of a solicitor acting on behalf of the complainant. He could not have known the name of that solicitor unless her name was passed to him following what was supposed to be a confident meeting between the complainant, his solicitor and the senior Garda in charge of the investigation.

      1. meadowlark

        That clarifies things. I was a bit confused by the LinkedIn thing. Its not made dreadfully clear when reading the article

        1. Lordblessusandsaveus

          It was reported that she was a female junior solicitor. Her name wasn’t given. This was after the fact that her profile was viewed by the Garda under investigation.

  3. Cup of tea anyone

    This country has been corrupt at the core since that Patrick lad won the contract for eliminating all the snakes in Ireland. It doesn’t matter that there were no snakes anyway but he got his Gold staff and nice hat and was praised like a saint for all his hard work. He has been riding that wave for too long.

    1. Lordblessusandsaveus

      You’re not far off the mark there. The church tells us there’s no bad people left in Ireland (except for the mere mortals). So the plebs defer to their masters without question.

  4. Anne

    “Very shortly, after that meeting, the junior solicitor noticed that their LinkedIn page had been checked out, their profile had been checked out, by the accused Garda. That raised a big red flag for them in terms of whether that meeting with the investigating senior garda, which was supposed to be entirely confidential”

    Thick fupping sh*tes… caught rotten. Rotten to the core. Not fit for purpose.

  5. Punches Pilot

    That last paragraph is very interesting. I remember being in the company of a guard many many moons ago who told me a not too dissimilar story. Essentially he said that every time one of the large halting sites around Dublin was being raided a phone call would go in to one of the head bucks on the site. Despite the fact that they were dawn raids there would be very little found. He then laughed as he said “did you ever notice the way there’s always a few car radios and a firearm found and one arrest but never anything else” He claimed it was essentially a ruse. It was all set up. The guards had to be seen to be fighting blatant criminality but didn’t fancy getting the snot knocked outta themselves so they’d give the advance notice only to be repaid with a sacrificial lamb and their eyeballs remaining in their skulls. Rotten country.

  6. Clampers Outside!

    “their LinkedIn page had been checked out, their profile had been checked out, by the accused Garda.”

    Stealth Garda work there… even a social media intern would’ve had the cop to turn on the private / secret browsing function….
    I know the faculty of law has been hit for decades with an irreversible brain drain because of the devil system, but there’s no excuse for the Gardaí !

  7. Kevin M

    What now? They let more slide? They let the small stuff slide and then someone is murdered and it’s covered up, a massive drug haul is “lost” and it’s covered up, some scumbag gangster starts paying cops off to turn away.

    Fine Gael was always a party that ran on strong anti-crime/justice policies. It has always had strong links with the Gardaí. These revelations along with the political policing of peaceful protesters show that the enitre force must be changed from the ground up – Starting with Templemore.

    What is not being published by our puppet media is the fact that gardaí are leaving the force in numbers. Demoralised by scandal after scandal, with no hope while the ‘old guard’ stays in positions at the top of the force, good cops are leaving – many finding work in Australia, Canada, the UK , the states.

    An Garda Síochána is a relic of civil war politics and it must be reformed now, while there is still time.

    1. Frilly Keane

      Ha
      As if they’d
      All of ’em
      From Templemore up to Noirin’s level
      Whistleblowers n’all
      Would walk away from those pension entitlements

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