Monthly Archives: March 2011

You know *without having actually read it*.

Joe Duffy: “Ben, you’ve come out of this very badly… [The report] says yourself and Michael Lowry got together to increase the rent on a building you owned, Marlborough house, which was rented by Eircom… which would have benefited you by up to €9m.”

Ben Dunne: “Joe, the only thing – I haven’t read the report but I do know it makes a referral to me as being corrupt.”

Duffy: “Well I don’t know if that’s the actual word. I don’t know if that word actually appears.”

Dunne: “Well from what I’m told, somebody said that the word corrupt was used. Well, I done absolutely nothing wrong in any of my dealings, and I would say this to the chairman: if I done something wrong, I should be put to the place where…”

Duffy: “This is what the chairman Michael Moriarty said about you: ‘What was contemplated and attempted on the part of Mr Dunne and Mr Lowry and was profoundly corrupt’ – “

Dunne: “There you are. I knew…”

Duffy: “Let me finish – ‘to a degree that was nothing short of breathtaking’ … just for listeners.”

…….

Dunne: “Number one Joe, there’s not a shred of evidence there, and number two, there’s an onus on the tribunal and Mr Moriarty in particular before he makes – its an opinion he’s giving – he should make a fully informed opinion. He didn’t read my medical – he may have read them, he took notice of my medical records. He didn’t meet my psychiatrists or any of my medial team. Now if Mr Moriarty believes that is the case he should be pushing to put me behind bars, but he knows that there’s not a shred of evidence that would back up his opinion in a court of law….

“I am not a corrupt person, and if anybody can prove that I done anything corrupt in that Marlborough deal, or in any other deal in fact, put me where I should be: behind bars. I’m not afraid to face justice and I think it’s a bloody disgrace that a man like Mr Moriarty, who knows that I suffer from my own personal tortures, would choose to pick on someone like me, when he hasn’t, he hasn’t got a shred of evidence. It’s an opinion. And really if he believes his report he should be pushing the authorities, the powers to be [sic], to make sure that Ben Dunne is put behind bars. It is a flawed report. And if it’s as much offline as it is about me and my character and my corrupt way of action, Mister chairman is, he is the man, I think, that has got problems.”

Duffy: Are you saying to the tribunal now, ‘send that report to the DPP’?”

Dunne: “I’m saying absolutely yeah. Send it to the gardaí and let’s go into court. Now [laughs] I can tell you if I am corrupt, which I know I’m not, it’s one man’s opinion against all the evidence that I gave. I mean it’s quite interesting that when it came to the guy who gave the opinion on the granting of the licence, Moriarty decided not to take into account his memories. My medical report clearly says that because of my drug abuse, and because of my mental state, that my memory couldn’t be accurate. And he believes, he chooses to believe one person and doesn’t choose to believe another person.”

..…

Duffy: “But Ben, why are you so anxious that the judge should have interviewed your psychiatrist or read your medical reports?”

Dunne: “Because he had to make an informed opinion Joe. And at that stage of my life, everybody knows, I attempted suicide, I was on drugs, I was very unbalanced. I was in a very very dark place…”

“… If you speak to anybody at that stage of my life I was a very disturbed in dark places using drugs… And I still am under psychiatric care and then he decides to publicly attempt to assassinate me by calling me corrupt. Well I challenge Mr Moriarty if he truly believes that, make sure that file is sent to the DPP.”

……

Dunne: “Thanks be to God I’ve crawled out of darker holes. I’m made of better stuff than the type of people who make judgment on me like Mr Moriarty. Thanks be to God that the man above has given me strength. I’ll be walking around my clubs next Monday. We’re opening a new one out on the southside in September. We’re opening one in Germany on the 2nd of April. I’ll get on about my business and people can choose whether I’m the truthful one or Moriarty is the truthful one.”

Seriously.

What must he have been like on the gak?

Listen to full show here

(Photocall Ireland)

[vimeo clip_id=”21294655″ height=”” width=”640″]

Terje Sorgjerd spent a week capturing one of the biggest aurora borealis shows in recent years. Shot in and around Kirkenes and Pas National Park bordering Russia, at 70 degree north and 30 degrees east. Temperatures around -25 Celsius.

A full-screener. Sound up.

Previously: Aurora Borealis Norway and The Most Spectacular Light-Show On Earth

via

Vincent Browne attacked the Seanad last night taking aim at four candidates who represent “rotten boroughs, seats for elites” – the university panels.

Regina O’Connor, advisor to Fianna Fail MEPs, came off worst.

By some distance.

Browne: “Regina what do you stand for?”

O’Connor: “The most important thing at the moment is our future…”

Browne: “Really? Good Lord. When was that not the case? When did anybody running for election to anything say the most important thing at the moment is our past?”

O’Connor: “Well I think more than any time -”

Browne: “Can you think of a more astounding cliché than that?”

O’Connor: “Well I still believe in it.”

Browne: “Really? You think the most important thing is our future?”

O’Connor: “It’s up to us. We are the next generation. We have to stand up to the plate.”

Browne: “Stand up to the plate?”

O’Connor: “And I am willing to come back from Brussels with my expertise as an EU legal and political adviser and to add value to the Seanad.”

Browne: “And your first insight is that the most important thing is our future.”

O’Connor: “Yeah the future of the country.”

Browne: “Oh my God.”

O’Connor: “I think Vincent it’s what everybody is thinking about.”

Browne: “Is that really all you can say? I ask you what you stand for and the first thing out of your mouth is, you come out with this astounding banality: the most important thing is our future.”

O’Connor: “Well I was going to continue. We are the future and we need to stand up to the plate.”

Browne: What is this standing up to the plate?

Later…

O’Connor: “I think there’s an important point here for the Seanad. The Seanad could be a place where you could haul bankers in and have them grilled, to let them sweat, have the media in -”

Browne: “Do you not know that it happened?”

O’Connor: “Well I think it should have happened.”

Browne: “It did happen, not in the Seanad but members of Seanad were present, on the Oireachtas committee on finance…”

O’Connor: “But it should have been open to the public. It should have been open to the public, in terms of, all media should have been allowed in because it was a very important moment.”

Browne: “Regina, not only was it open to the public, it was on television.”

O’Connor: “Well I think this is a really important place where the Seanad can take its place.”

Browne: “But members of the Seanad were there. You didn’t know about that? You didn’t know about that, obviously…  which is a problem running for the senate when you don’t know what happened here.”

O’Connor: “The Seanad should be a place for the best thinkers and experts in the field to help everybody move on form this scenario. And the seat that I want to propose would not be a Regina O’Connor seat, it would be a seat surrounded by stake-holders such as Denis O’Brien and Sean O’Driscoll and Andrew Parrish…”

Browne: “Sean O’Driscoll, this is the fella who was on the board of AIB during all those years that led to its collapse. That isn’t the kind of experts we want, is it? Is this the kind of experts we want is it?”

Later….

O’Connor: “We have an amazing opportunity here and there are American lessons to be learned; for instance if we fund entrepreneurs with EU money and then we create centres of excellence… We can bring jobs but we need in the Seanad to have the best speakers and the best thinkers and creative thinkers to think outside the box, rather than inside the box.”

Browne: “And among the best thinkers are former directors of the banks that collapsed?”

Full show here

Maman Poulet on Regina O’Connor