Category Archives: Misc

18806-robert-black-the-serial-killer-is-due-to-be-sentenced-on-thursdaymaryboyle

Robert Black and Mary Boyle

Robert Black, who was serving 12 life sentences for the murders of four schoolgirls in the Eighties – three in Britain and one in Northern Ireland – has died in Maghaberry Prison in Co Antrim.

In reports about his death today, several Irish media outlets have linked Black to the unsolved case of Mary Boyle – who was six years old when she vanished on her grandparents’ farm near Ballyshannon, Co Donegal on March 18, 1977.

Journalist Gemma O’Doherty – who has previously reported on Broadsheet that Mary’s twin sister Ann Doherty believes she knows Mary’s killer, a person who is still alive and living in Ireland; and that there was political interference in the case – spoke to Jonathan Healy on Newstalk’s Lunchtime about this reported link.

Ms O’Doherty’s interview comes a month after Ann wrote to and asked the Garda Commissioner Nóirín O’ Sullivan to search particular sites that she believes may contain her sister’s remains. Ann’s requests have gone unanswered to date.

Jonathan Healy: “Have you any idea Gemma, how Robert Black and his name became linked to the disappearance of Mary Boyle?”

Gemma O’Doherty: “I don’t actually and it’s a very sinister, has been very sinister through the years, that his name was linked to the case. And certainly Ann Doherty, Mary’s identical twin is very disturbed, yet again, by these allegations being made by certain quarters that he had anything to do with the murder of her six-year-old sister. It is the case that Ann believes, and more importantly a number of very senior officers who were working on the case at the time, that Mary was murdered by somebody known to her. Mary Boyle did not know Robert Black.”

Healy: “And this crept in over the years because let’s face it, Robert Black was a particularly nasty individual, he was jailed for a number of crimes, and was linked to a number of other disappearances and suspicious deaths in and around the British Isles. Could it just be the case that because he was nasty and because Mary’s case was unsolved people put two and two together and came up with five?”

O’Doherty: “Well they certainly did come up with five but I think we need to bring your listeners back to 1977 when Mary was visiting her grandparents’ extremely remote farm outside Ballyshannon. Just four miles from the border with Fermanagh, this part of the country was one of the most heavily policed at the time, there were at least three permanent Garda checkpoints operating 24/7 because this was the height of the Troubles in northern Ireland and on the northern side, the RUC and the British Army had a number of units there which were operating permanently. The possibility of, I believe this individual drove a van, the possibility of him coming through the border when there was such a heavy police presence, it’s actually laughable if it wasn’t so serious. Really people need to know the landscape that we’re talking about. The nearest wrote was a long distance away and it’s just inconceivable had anything to do with it. There were three cars accounted for on the day, that were in that immediate area and they have been ruled out. The evidence points in a very clear direction and it’s certainly doesn’t, and never did, point in the direction of Robert Black and it is very disturbing.”

Healy: “You have spoken to Ann today, on the back of these reports, how has she reacted to this name being linked with the disappearance of her sister?”

Doherty: “Well, Ann, through the years, you know it’s almost been 40 years and she’s been trying to find her little sister, her identical twin. She has suffered hugely through the years, she has taken on very serious forces in this State and stood up against them and she’s suffered hugely and I would ask, on behalf of my profession, that they think about her today before they make allegations that they cannot possibly support. But it’s not only Ann we should be talking about today, we should be thinking about Mary Boyle who is our youngest missing citizen. I believe, and so does Ann and so does a number of officers, that she was brutally raped before her murder and we also believe that her rapist and murderer is still at large in this country and is a danger to other children and that is what is key about this case.”

Healy: “You have been involved in this campaign for a while, you’ve been working with Ann and Margo O’Donnell who has also made statements to the gardaí, they’ve met with the Taoiseach as well, they’ve tried to progress this, they have had I suppose, in getting through doors, some success, but are they confident today that the authorities are taking a fresh look and a serious look into Mary’s case?”

Doherty: “Well there’s no evidence to suggest that. It’s almost a month since Ann and her lawyers requested that two new sites in the immediate vicinity of Ballyshannon be searched and their requests have been dismissed, they’ve been ignored, they haven’t received any sort of reply. Ann is pushing forward for an inquest, Mary Boyle deserves and inquest and it is hoped that the truth will come out in an inquest because, certainly, she and other officers who are close to the case and who worked on it at the time have no faith in An Garda Síochána in relation to this case.”

Listen back in full here

Related: Convicted child killer Robert Black dies in prison (RTE)

Previously: Mary Boyle And Political Interference

Pic: STV

Thanks Paddy

cloudpicker

Launched in austerity.

Currently roasting.

Frank, co founder of Cloud Picker Coffee writes:

Set up in 2013 on Sheriff Street in the heart of Dublin City – micro coffee roastery, Cloud Picker, was the first of it’s kind in the city. We hand roast speciality grade coffees on our 15kg roaster and supply cafés and restaurants nationwide.

What started out as two guys is now a team of 8 and growing! To celebrate our 3rd year we commissioned this little video by the super creative guys in Taca Works. We hope you like it!

Cloudpicker Coffee

2016-01-13

This morning.

University College, Cork Student Centre.

Keelan Meade  writes:

Sexism with your morning coffee? The coffee shop in the UCC student centre is running a smart card discount campaign with the tag line ‘What’s your cup size?’. This is accompanied by an image of a bikini, where cups of coffee represent the bikini top/breasts (see above). I’m not sure what moron thought that was acceptable…

CYmMitTWAAAzBpR

This morning.

Sarah McInerney tweetz:

And the negative campaigning starts. Fianna Fáil launches its ad campaign.

FIGHT!

Original ad here

Update:

9040502690405027

The dirty trucks brigade.

From top: Fianna Fáil’s director of elections Billy Kelleher (top) and (above) left to right: Catherine Ardagh, FF candidate for Dublin South Central, Michael martin, party leader, Lorraine Clifford, candidate for Dublin Fingal and Jack Chambers candidate for Dublin West.

Jack.

Rarr.

Sam Boal/Rollingnews

nicky

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N5Pbnb7Y6AU

Nicky Byrne – Sunlight

Eurovision watcher Fluffybiscuits writes:

Ireland has chosen its Eurovision entry and its Nicky Byrne. The song is great – its a catchy upbeat happy soft rock song. It fits in to the whole Eurovision genre of catchy songs. That is not where the problem lies, the problem lies with Nicky’s vocals. Personally I have always considered him the weakest singer in Westlife, Im hoping he does well live. It has the ability to do very well. I predict it qualifying from the semi final….

Fight!

*croak*

Previously: Why Me?

CDOX8dRWAAApV_Q

Photoshopped image created last year by Jimmy Reynolds

Niamh Ní Mhaoileoin, on Open Democracy, writes:

This spring, Irish voters will return to the polls to vote in a General Election and the current government partners — centrist Fine Gael and putatively centre-left Labour — will need to defend the last five years of deep austerity policies. The timing of this election suggests that pinkwashing will be one of the country’s hottest trends for 2016.

Simply defined, pinkwashing is the practice of projecting a state or organisation as gay-friendly in order to soften or downplay its more negative characteristics…

“In Ireland, the government coalition that has established Ireland as the golden child of Europe’s austerity states — gladly imposing vicious cuts across society and lapping up the approbation of the troika — will now attempt to rinse all of that away with the success of a single political campaign, in which they demonstrate support for a single, narrow, neoliberal form of equality. This is textbook pinkwashing.

The process has already begun. The recently-launched campaign invites young emigrants to come #hometowork, appropriating the #hometovote movement, which saw thousands of young people travel home to vote ‘Yes’ in the referendum. The posters fail to explain exactly what work these returning emigrants (numbering nearly half a million since the 2008 crash, 85% of them under 35) are expected to do, in the context of extreme generational inequality and a continuing youth unemployment rate of 19.7%.

Similarly, a government minister described the opportunity to reform Direct Provision, Ireland’s controversial accommodation system for asylum seekers, as another “Yes Equality moment” (referencing the most popular slogan of the referendum campaign).

Whatever warm glow he was attempting to transmit will hardly reach those asylum seekers who have spent as much as seven years in Direct Provision centres where, as they await court judgments on their cases, they receive an independent allowance of €19.10 per week, have no entitlement to work, live with little to no privacy, and in extremely restrictive conditions.”

“The other major political event of the year, the celebration of the centenary of the 1916 Rising, will also be pink-tinged. In the course of the referendum campaign, Yes activists repeatedly invoked the promise contained in the Proclamation of the Irish Republic that the state would guarantee “religious and civil liberty, equal rights and equal opportunities to all its citizens”, pursuing “the happiness and prosperity of the whole nation and all of its parts, cherishing all the children of the nation equally”.

“No reference, of course, to the reality of a virulently Catholic rebellion (launched at Easter to represent the resurrection of the Irish people) that ultimately gave rise to a violently Catholic state. Or to the fact that when a high-profile campaign sought clemency for Roger Casement, convicted of treason and sentenced to death for his part in the Rising, British authorities had only to leak diaries revealing his homosexuality to ensure that Irish support for him crumbled.”

Is Ireland about to become the pinkwashing capital of the world? (Open Democracy)


What you may need to know:

1. Following a bad tip, Kyle Budwell (Jack O’Connell) loses his life savings, and takes financial analyst Lee Gates (Gorgeous George Clooney) hostage on live TV.

2. It’s a Jodie Foster joint. Foster has directed episodes of Orange is the New Black and House of Cards after trying (and failing) to rescue Mel Gibson’s career with The Beaver (2011).

3. My millions are tied up in pork bellies and frozen orange juice, so it’s all good.

4. Although Today with Maura and Dáithí incites some dark thoughts.

5. Broadsheet prognosis: Mo Money Mo Problems.

Release Date: May 27

Screenshot from 2014-04-28 16-34-29

I can only agree with Gerard Bennett (January 11th) that Eircode was a huge waste of money. I was awaiting a package from Hong Kong. Using internet tracking I watched it make its way to Cork, from where it was quickly returned to Hong Kong.

The reason An Post gave was that it could not tell where to deliver the package as the address was incomplete. I consulted the company with whom I had placed the order, and they had left a line out of the postal address. However, it did have my name and the Eircode right. I contacted An Post to ask why that could not have been used? The answer was that it did not have the technology to look up the Eircode.

Matthew Lyons,
Charleville,
Co Cork.

FIGHT!

Getting used to Eircode (Irish Times letters page)

Previously: In Defence Of Eircode