Internal Contradictions

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Former Justice Minister Alan Shatter

“From a personal perspective, of course, I welcome the commission’s finding that, prior to the then commissioner’s premature retirement I neither received nor had any knowledge of the letter of March 10th, 2014, on the “Garda taping issue” furnished by the then commissioner to Brian Purcell, then secretary general of the Department of Justice.”

I also welcome the finding that it was not until the evening of March 24th, 2014, that I was first properly briefed on the discovery of tapes in various Garda stations and of An Garda Síochána taping of phone conversations for many years. Each of these findings discredits allegations to which I was subjected both by Opposition TDs and some commentators of my being untruthful about these matters.”

Former Justice Minister Alan Shatter in today’s Irish Times reviewing the Fennelly Commission Interim Report.

Justice Niall Fennelly also found the evidence of Mr Shatter and that of Michael Flahive, the Assistant Secretary in charge of the Garda Division in the Department of Justice, completely contradictory.

This concerned their differing recollections of a phone call on the evening of Friday, March 21.

Mr Flahive told the Commission he was absolutely categoric that he “explained the entirety of the substance of the letter from the [Garda] Commissioner” but that he didn’t mention the letter itself. He said:

“I then advised the Minister of the essence of the letter from the Garda Commissioner, namely of the discovery, in the context of the Ian Bailey case, of a general system of recording of phone calls to and from certain Garda stations, that the practice had been stopped by the Garda Commissioner in November 201…that the Commissioner was consulting the Office of the Attorney General and the Office of the Data Protection Commissioner on how best to deal with the recordings which had been retained, that the Attorney General was personally greatly concerned at the emergence of the practice, that the Attorney General was likely to raise this matter at Cabinet, and that Mr O’Daly intended to meet the Secretary General and me on Monday to discuss the matter. I indicated to the Minister that he would be updated on the outcome of that meeting .”

However, in contrast, Mr Shatter told the Commission Flahive ‘did not brief him about the existence of the tapes or the Attorney General’s concerns.’

In a written submission to the Fennelly commission, Mr Shatter said:

“I can categorically state that Michael Flahive did not raise any issue that caused alarm bells to ring with me – which a full account of the contents of the Garda Commissioner’s letter and the Attorney General ‘s level of concern as expressed by Liam O’Daly would certainly have done.”

Meanwhile, Mr Shatter writes in today’s Irish Times:

I also welcome the finding that it was not until the evening of March 24th, 2014, that I was first properly briefed on the discovery of tapes in various Garda stations and of An Garda Síochána taping of phone conversations for many years.

However.

Justice Fennelly also concluded:

The Commission accepts that Mr Flahive had a conversation with the Minister for Justice in which he informed him of the telephone recording issue. For whatever reason, this made no impact on the Minister. It has to also be significant that the Minister had returned overnight on a long flight from Mexico and had worked a full day in the office. According to the Secretary General, Mr Purcell, the Minister told him during the week that he had no recollection of the telephone conversation, but explained that he had travelled through the night, that he had been up for many hours and that by evening of Friday he was “totally whacked”. The Minister did not dispute Mr Purcell’s version of this conversation, but insisted that no tiredness would have prevented him from taking in a conversation in which Mr Flahive told him of the general recording issue. The most likely explanation is that Mr Flahive did tell the Minister of the telephone recording issue but not in any urgent manner and that it did not register with the Minister due to tiredness at the end of a day following an overnight flight.

Previously: Fennelly Report: The Digested Read

Alan Shatter: Fennelly, Cooke reports show claims were untrue (Irish Times)

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11 thoughts on “Internal Contradictions

  1. PaddyJoe

    Poor old Alan was suffering from jet lag. You couldn’t expect him to pay any attention to some boring pen pusher from the Dept moaning about a few old tapes in Garda stations. Alan probably muted him while browsing through his photos from Mexico and occasionally throwing darts at the picture of Leo Varadker on the wall.

    1. classter

      I agree.

      I realise I sound a bit like a conspiracy loon here rather than merely a loon but it seems pretty clear to me that he was taken out because he made the mistake of reforming legal professions & Guards.

      There was a constant drip drip of revelations which mostly related to problems which ocurred under previous FF Ministers of Justice. He could have dealt with some of them better or more cynically.

      Do-nothing Frances comes in & the drip drip stops.

      1. rory

        The departure of Callinan and eventually Shatter was an exercise in P.R.
        The GSOC story was not going away despite Shatter’s guffaws and despite inaction from certain journos heavily dependent on Gardai info.
        They were both forced out to quell ‘calls for blood’, i.e. interest in the GSOC story. To give the superficial impression that something was being done, rather than explain GSOC bugging, or divulge who had a security firm (hired to investigate GSOC bugging) under surveillance.
        Rather than go down that rabbit hole, Callinan and Shatter were forced out. And throughout all this hullabaloo, various representatives of state ideologue (whether ministers or some members of the media) continue to skew the media story’s focus onto (pertinent but) small aspects, such as extended, repetitive focus on whether Enda gave Callinan the heave or not. Meanwhile, GSOC affair is not examined in a deeper fashion.

  2. Anomanomanom

    I really can’t comprehend why stuff like this shocks people. The garda are rotten to core so of course the higher ups are. How many cases have people heard of when descent garda stop cars with people drunk, well over the limit, who turn out to be higher ups in the garda, who then proceed to wreck the descent garda career.

  3. realPolithicks

    “The most likely explanation is that Mr Flahive did tell the Minister of the telephone recording issue but not in any urgent manner and that it did not register with the Minister due to tiredness at the end of a day following an overnight flight.“

    …or that Shatter is being dishonest just like Kenny, Callinan and the rest of this shower of ladyparts.

    1. classter

      The whole issue of when exactly he found out about the recordings is essentially irrelevant.

      It had being going on for years, under the watch of several commissioners & several MoJs.

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