Author Archives: Bodger

New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern

Last night/this morning.

New Zealand has  abandoned its long-standing strategy of eliminating coronavirus amid a persistent Delta outbreak, and will instead look to live with the virus and control its spread as its vaccination rate rises.

The Pacific nation was among just a handful of countries to bring COVID-19 cases down to zero last year and largely stayed virus-free until an outbreak of the highly infectious Delta variant in mid-August frustrated efforts to stamp out transmission.

“With this outbreak and Delta the return to zero is incredibly difficult,” Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told a news conference in a major policy shift.

“This is a change in approach we were always going to make over time. Our Delta outbreak has accelerated this transition. Vaccines will support it,” she said.

New Zealand drops COVID-19 elimination strategy under pressure from Delta (Reuters)

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Meanwhile, in Australia…

The second domino.

FIGHT!

Friday: Gladys All Over

Last night.

Dame Street, Dublin 2

A cyclist in her 30’s was injured in a crash between a car and her bike at around 11:30pm on Dame Street last night. The woman was taken to St James’ Hospital for treatment and her injuries are not thought to be life threatening.

Dublin road chaos as cyclist injured in city centre crash and driver collides with J6 barrier (Dublin Live)

Pics: Przemyslaw Zbieron

RTÉ Crime Correspondent Paul Reynolds

Earlier today.

During RTE’s News at One.

…RTE’s Crime Correspondent Paul Reynolds spoke to presenter Bryan Dobson about the recent arrest and questioning of a former senior guard.

Paul Reynolds: “The senior officer is still being detained this lunchtime. He was arrested under legislation targeting organised and serious crime in relation to what the officers from the National Bureau of Criminal Investigation are doing is they are looking at the activities of a specific organised crime group that works out of the north inner city. They’ve had a massive seizure of drugs, over €600,000 worth of cannabis and they’ve also seized a substantial amount of cash. And they’re looking at not only the activities of this gang but the tentacles or the links of that gang.

“And this has led them to arrest this former senior officer. Now he’s been detained under legislation targeting organised crime, anti-gang legislation, Section 50, which is some of the most draconian detention periods in the country, up to seven days. His period of detention has already been extended twice. Once by a superintendent for 18 hours, and then subsequently by a chief superintendent for a further 24 hours.

“So detectives have been questioning this man since Wednesday, for the past two days. If they want to question him any further, they have to apply to the courts, they have to go before a judge and present their case for a further detention of 72 hours. And the 48-hour period is coming to an end and is due to end at some stage this afternoon, so we’ll know later this afternoon if this man is to be, if his detention is to be extended further, for further questioning. If he’s to be released without charge, of a file sent to the DPP, or if he’s to be charged with a serious offence in connection with organised crime, and brought before the courts this afternoon.”

Bryan Dobson: “Paul, so far as is possible to judge, what’s been the reaction within the gardai to this, this arrest and the investigation?”

Reynolds: “Well to be honest with your Bryan, the reaction has been seismic. This has caused major shock, anger and bewilderment as people all over An Garda Siochana, and indeed in the wider justice area, just wondering what is going on. And that’s for a number of reasons: first of all because of who this man is. He’s well known across the gardai and the justice system, he worked in An Garda Siochana for 30 years. Also because of his former role. He was a senior officer in An Garda Siochana. He had managerial control in positions not just in Dublin but in other parts of the country, there’s also the issue of the size of the drugs found: €600,000 worth, 30kilos of cannabis, that’s not an amount for personal use, that’s a wholesale quantity being moved by an organised crime group, that the gardai are questioning a former senior garda about.

“Also the fact that this man, like many other people who have retired from their employment, like many retirees, he maintained friendships and contacts with people who he worked with in his old job and, in this case, that’s serving members of An Garda Siochana. Now this is normal in all forms of employment, contacts are maintained for normal social interaction, functions, funerals, society or sporting outings, those sort of occasions. However, the Garda National Bureau of Criminal Investigation, who are investigating this matter, now have to examine those contacts. And as part of this investigation, so far, the phones of two serving members of the gardai have been seized.

“And while my understanding is that nothing untoward so far has been found, no one else has been arrested or indeed suspended as part of this investigation. But, of course, the real fear is, as well, it’s not what has happened here and suggested links between a retired garda and organised crime groups, there is the fear of reputational damage to the work of An Garda Siochana.”

Their shock.

Can you imagine it?

Me too neither.

Listen back here

Yesterday: Round Up The Unusual Suspects

RollingNews

Update:

 

This Saturday’s Irish Lotto has a history-making jackpot of €19,060,800.

It could be your county.

Rachel Kane writes:

Bookies Paddy Power reckon there’s a 35% chance the winner will be a Dub (15/8).

The Rebel County are next in the betting (8/1) meaning there is an 11% chance the winner is from the People’s Republic of Cork.

A winner from Galway (14/1) or Donegal (14/1) are both 7% chances, followed by Louth (16/1) which is a 6% chance.

There’s a 4% chance (25/1) that Waterford is the home of yet another slice of Lotto history.

Meanwhile, lotto players in Monaghan, Offaly, Roscommon, Laois, Longford and Leitrim look like no hopers, will each of these counties rated as having a chance of 1% or less of winning the epic jackpot tomorrow night.

Hon Mayo.

From top: a flat white coffee; Loylap, founders Conor O’Toole (left) and Patrick Garry

This morning.

How do you like your Joe?

Emma writes:

LoyLap, an Irish company specialising in digital payments and customer engagement software for businesses, has today revealed that ‘flat white’ coffee is Ireland’s favourite cup of brew, based on new research data.

To mark World Coffee Day (October 1st), LoyLap dug deep into a quarter of a million of payments transactions to reveal the ‘flat white’ is a firm favourite among Irish consumers.

The popularity of flat whites was highest in Leinster, while ‘macchiato’ was found to be the least popular beverage in Ireland, where it accounted for just 0.5% of all coffees purchased.

Following closely behind is ‘cappuccino’, with ‘latte’ and ‘americano’ rounding off the list. Interestingly, according to the data, latte is regarded as 24% less favourable than ‘cappuccino’ with ‘americano’ 19% less popular than ‘latte’.

The payments data was analysed across 250,000 transactions between January 1st – September 20th of this year.

*jitter*

LoyLap

Thanks Alan Bracken

Professor Martin Cormican, Professor of Bacteriology at NUI Galway

This morning.

Third vaccine shots for the immunocompromised are being administered while booster shots will be offered to everyone over 80, and people over 65 in residential settings from next week.

Via RTE News:

Speaking on RTÉ’s Morning Ireland, HSE lead for infection control Professor Martin Cormican said the programmes should run smoothly and there is currently a “very good supply” of the vaccine in Ireland.

The additional dose for the immunocompromised will include anyone over the age of 12, but in the first instance it will be offered to those aged 16 and over, he added.

“There will be a little delay for those between the ages 12 and 15,” he said.

He explained that the reason for this is because they were vaccinated later and there is a need to wait two months.

That is where you get the most benefit if you allow the interval of two months to go by.”

Prof Cormican said for this third dose or booster vaccine the HSE will make contact with people.

Extra Covid-19 vaccine, booster dose roll-out to get under way (RTÉ)

Meanwhile…

Um.

RollingNews

Gladys Berejiklian, who became premier of New South Wales in 2017, had fronted the media on an almost daily basis to announce COVID-19 infection rates

This morning.

Via Reuters:

The premier of Australia’s biggest state economy New South Wales (NSW), Gladys Berejiklian, resigned on Friday after a corruption watchdog said it was investigating whether she was involved in conduct that “constituted or involved a breach of public trust”.

Berejiklian said the issues being investigated were “historical matters” but she felt compelled to resign because of the long time frames likely to be involved in the investigation. She also said the state needed certainty over its leadership amid the coronavirus pandemic.

“I state categorically I have always acted with the highest level of integrity” she said at a news conference.

Berejiklian, who became premier in 2017, had fronted the media on an almost daily basis to announce COVID-19 infection rates, deaths and restrictions on businesses, schools and households as the state battles an outbreak of the Delta variant that began in June.

Australia’s NSW state premier resigns over corruption probe amid COVID-19 battle (Reuters)

Getty

Meanwhile…

From top: Anthony Flynn; Oonagh Smyth and ‘John’

Last night.

On RTÉ One’s Prime Time.

John, not his real name, told reporter Oonagh Smyth (top) that he was raped by the late CEO of Inner City Helping Homeless Anthony Flynn.

John’s identity was protected and his words were spoken by an actor. Before John told his story, Ms Smyth explained that many people across Dublin don’t believe him or the three other people who have claimed they were assaulted by Mr Flynn.

She reported that the situation has led to negative commentary towards the survivors and, in one case, one man had to be moved from their homeless accommodation.

John told the programme that he first approached Mr Flynn when he was facing eviction. At the time he had just lost his job, before the pandemic, and was in significant arrears.

He told Prime Time:

“I was in a bad way when I met Anthony. I was in a bad state after losing my job. I was on antidepressants. I was vulnerable. I wasn’t myself at the time. When I contacted him, I thought he was a saviour. I thought he was a person who was going to help me out, like. I actually sent him a message on Facebook messenger and explained my situation at the time. He told me, ‘I’ll meet ya’.

“So I asked him, like, ‘can I come to your office?’. He said, ‘no, no, no, I’ll send you a message after work’. Yeah, that’s when he sent me a message and told me I should go to his house and that he was going to send me a taxi from my home to his place which he did send me a taxi that night.

“And I went straight to his house. And then he offered me a drink. And then, I just don’t know what happened after the drink. I woke up in the middle of the night as well and he came over and yeah, he did what he did when I was there, still when I was alert, it just happened all night.

“That first night, he sexually molested me.”

Ms Smyth told the programme:

“John says he was held against his will at Anthony’s home over two nights. He says he felt the effect of a drug and was out of it. On the second night, he alleges he and another man were assaulted.”

John continued:

“He just raped me that night again, with the young guy as well who was there and we were locked there again, me and that young guy. He did hit me and I remember he did hit me. In the end I just became submissive and did whatever he wanted me to do.”

Ms Smyth reported that John returned to Mr Flynn’s home two more times – once when he was sexually assaulted again and another time when Mr Flynn took his phone from him.

She added:

“Asked what made him return, John says it was a combination of desperation and fear. Yet the effects of the assaults were profound.”

John said:

“Since then I ended up in a bad situation myself. My mental health, I just had a mental breakdown. I remember I stayed in my house for nearly three months and I never came out. I just stayed in the dark, switched off the lights, pulled down the blinds. It’s something I’m still struggling with you know.”

Ms Smyth reported that John said Mr Flynn told him he knew “numerous” gardai and felt that if he reported what happened, he would not be believed.

But John reported what happened weeks after Mr Flynn’s death by suicide in August.

John said:

“It’s a fear of people knowing it’s me; that was the biggest fear until now. Even when I went to do the statement, that time with the guards, it took me a lot of courage, a lot of courage to go there. I remember when I walked out of Store Street Garda Station, I looked around me, to see if anyone had seen me going in there.”

John has tried to take his life twice. He told the programme:

“I just crashed, I swear to God. Yeah, it’s just the fear. I don’t know what is going to happen, like.”

“My motive [to speaking out now] is kind of hoping to help other victims out there get the courage and also it’s about creating awareness about what happened. The biggest thing for myself is getting the support from it all as well because my mental health is not that great. It crashes on a daily basis, that’s the main thing.”

In regards to negative comments about John and the other three people who have come forward, John said:

“There is no understanding because they knew Anthony in a different way. I don’t blame them because that’s not what they knew. Anthony portrayed himself as a saviour or a fighter for the deprived in this society, I saw the dark side.”

Watch back in full here.

Previously: Dissolution

RollingNews

Meanwhile…





Last night.

Temple Bar, Dublin 2.

A pilot nightclub event at the Button Factory where 450 revellers were asked to take an antigen test and produce a Digital Covid Cert before entering.

RollingNews

Meanwhile…

Um

Meanwhile…