More to follow.
Daniel Kinahan (left) and Tyson Fury
“That’s none of your business…I’m just a a stupid boxer”
I asked @Tyson_Fury whether his relationship with Daniel Kinahan was now over, he refused to confirm it was…
(For clarity, there was no blocking of q.s or follow-ups by @trboxing) #FuryWhyte pic.twitter.com/HpaVfWJtd0
— Neil Barker (@Mockneyrebel) April 19, 2022
This afternoon.
Via Irish Mirror:
Fury claims being photographed with Kinahan does not mean he is “a criminal” and he tried to play down his links with him. The Gypsy King said: “A picture doesn’t mean I am a criminal? I can’t control who is in the building. There could be a criminal in this building now. It doesn’t mean I am involved in his criminal activity does it? It’s none of my business. I keep my own business to myself, that’s it.”
Fury also distanced himself from co-promoter Bob Arum’s admission that he paid Kinahan for some of his last fights. Arum, who is not in London this week because he has coronavirus, jointly promotes Fury with Frank Warren and the Traveller claimed who he chose to pay was his business.
“That’s Bob Arum’s own personal business what he does with his own money, he can spend it all on gummy bears if he wants to,” said Fury at Tuesday’s pubic work-put at BoxPark. “What someone does with their money is out of my control.
This afternoon.
The Official Spring Count of people sleeping rough in the Dublin Region was carried out over the week of March 28–April 3.
A total of 91 individuals were confirmed as rough sleeping, a reduction of 34 persons (27%) on the same period last year.
Via Dublin City Council:
Of the 91 people met rough sleeping, 72 had previously been assessed by the DRHE for homeless services, and the remaining 19 persons were being actively engaged with by the Outreach team be assessed by homeless services.
The main characteristics of the group known to the Duiblin Regional Homeless Executive (DRHE) were as follows:
The majority of the people confirmed as rough sleeping were male, Irish and aged between 26-45 years.
79% were linked with one of the four Dublin local authorities.
31% were using tents and 69% were not.
13 individuals were found rough sleeping in both the Winter 2021 and Spring 2022 counts. A number of these are being targeted for a Housing First response, which will provide them with permanent housing and visiting supports to help them sustain their home.
9 individuals (12%) recorded as rough sleeping had an active tenancy.
In the April 2022 count, 20 individuals (28%) accessed Emergency Accommodation during the week. The majority (94%) of rough sleepers had accessed Emergency Accommodation at some stage prior to the count week.
Earlier: Laid Bare
Zelfie
atThis afternoon.
Central Hotel , Dublin 2.
The appearance of a new mural featuring President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
Artist, anyone?
Sasko writes:
Taking the selfie (above) is Ukrainian refugee Kateryna Pozniakov with her daughter Ilia (age 12), who fled from Kiev to Dublin after the Russian invasion. Along with Kateryna’s mother, they are living in a hotel in Dublin. This is the second time the family has been displaced, having fled from Lugansk to Kiev in 2014 when separatists seized governmental buildings in the region and proclaimed the Luhansk People’s Republic.
UPDATE: Artwork by Aches (see comments).
Meanwhile…
Um.
This Saturday is Record Store Day.
Are you free?
Lily Finlay writes:
Hen’s Teeth welcome the seminal German record label, Analog Africa, this Record Store Day at their Blackpitts [Dublin 8] space.
Representing Analog Africa will be Label Manager, dj & digger Volkan Kaya Aka Afreekaya. Joining them for the day will be local selectors and labels, bringing a choice of their own collections and back catalogs for sale.
The event is free admission and will run from Midday until 6pm and followed by a DJ set in Hen’s Teeth HiFi till late…
Laid Bare
atAs of today there are a grand total of 72 rental properties available across 6 counties. That’s all. 72!
This is the Housing Crisis laid bare.
Govt turned a generation into a commodity and sold their ability to access basic human needs to the highest bidder. #HousingCrisis pic.twitter.com/fJ1MlqioMr
— Politics Watch (@PoliticsWatch14) April 19, 2022
Thud.
Roads?
at1981 and 1982.
DeLorean begins and ends production in Northern Ireland.
Good times.
Meanwhile…
The new Delorean EV
The San Antonio City Council is hoping the revamped car brand from the “Back to the Future” movie franchise will bring economic success back to San Antonio in the future.
City council members unanimously approved up to $562,500 worth of grants for DeLorean Motor Company to set up its headquarters at Port San Antonio and also allowed it to apply for $1.25 million worth of tax refunds through the state.
DeLorean, which is not related to the original car company from the 1980s, is relaunching the iconic brand as an electric vehicle company…
City of San Antonio gives DeLorean up to $563k in grants to establish headquarters at Port SA (KSAT)
From top: The Making Of ‘Where is George Gibney?’ at the NCH tomorrow evening; irvin Muchnick
“[T]here are no other proceedings before the Irish courts relating to Gibney.[…] The more I learn about what went on in Irish swimming, the more inclined I am to believe that there was a pedophile ring in operation. As I say in the book, this did not operate a membership list and monthly meetings but worked on a nod-and-wink basis with coaches recognising each other’s abusive instincts and tipping each other off in coded language about vulnerable prey.”
– Justine McCarthy author of Deep Deception: Ireland’s Swimming Scandals, in an interview, “Irish Sex Abuse Chronicler Justine McCarthy: Concern That Swim Officials Who Participated in Cover-Up Remain in Power,” October 31, 2012.
“it was not natural to have come from there yes write about it if I like or anything if I like but not there, there is no there there.”
– Gertrude Stein
In 2020, the sports media company Second Captains, in association with the BBC, released a lengthy podcast series entitled ‘Where Is George Gibney?’
This production pleased the crowd and it won awards. Its most salient feature was giving victims of the most notorious at-large sex criminal in the history of global sports the catharsis of an open-ended platform. After decades of their isolation and marginalisation, the concept had value, no matter what reservations some of us harbored with respect to the execution.
Two years later, the question ‘Where Is George Gibney?’ has morphed, and in my opinion, not for the better. As we’ll see, it was a peculiar question in the first place, giving way to a misleading title and contrived drama. But anyway, the question today is more like “Where is Where Is George Gibney?”
By this I mean: Have series creator Mark Horgan and crew told the story most centrally in the public interest – one of heinous official cronyism and corruption? Fully and in the round? Or have they just pulled off something flabbier and oh so postmodern – infotainment as a seemingly never-ending promotional feedback loop?
Tomorrow, Second Captains will be staging an event at Dublin’s National Concert Hall called ‘The Making of Where Is George Gibney?’ The designated beneficiary for “all proceeds” is One in Four, an anti-abuse group.
So, more consciousness-raising is at hand. Also, we can be sure, gardai, will be standing by their phones for fresh Gibney tips. Of course, they’ve been doing that ever since Charles Haughey was the prime minister – seven “taoisigh ago. In Irish: Ná coinnigh do anáil. In English: Don’t hold your breath.
I can’t make it across the pond to attend the National Concert Hall event. But in case the panelists for The Making of, etc. will be fielding real questions, instead of simply glad-handing, I have a few.
What drove the decision to take down a couple of small fish with “gotcha” segments – while demonstrating no appetite for confronting officials of sport bodies and governments on two continents?
Where Is George Gibney? was replete with warnings that the material we were about to hear about sexual abuse might be disturbing. They should have added another disclaimer: “No institution or powerful figure was discomfited in the making of this podcast.”
Specifically:
* Was there an interview with the current head of Swim Ireland (per Justine McCarthy’s observation, in other parts of the 2012 interview linked above, to the effect that the former Irish Amateur Swimming Association, the IASA, merely rearranged the chairs on the deck of the Titanic)? No. Rather, the podcasters settled for throwing under the bus a single hapless board member who was caught having explicitly and wrongly supported Gibney back in the day. They didn’t lay a glove on any of Gibney’s other many enablers, who were fluent at turning the page, lessons unlearned.
* How about Ireland’s Director of Public Prosecutions? That office has made more starts and stops on a Gibney bust do-over than a sputtering turbine. Has the DPP ever even shared the accumulated evidence – which includes sworn affidavits – with the state attorney of Hillsborough County, Florida, the jurisdiction of Gibney’s rape and impregnation of a teen swimmer during a 1991 training trip?
* In 1998 Justice Roderick Murphy got tapped to author a government report on the widespread problem of coach abuse in Irish youth swimming programs. Seven years earlier Murphy had been on the governing board of a club in the Leinster branch of the IASA, center of the era’s scandals, and hence a decision maker at the time of that club’s coach’s dismissal in the wake of abuse allegations. Journalist McCarthy wrote that Murphy’s choice to lead the government commission despite his own “extensive involvement in swimming” was “a conundrum which is still puzzling many lawyers.” The Murphy Commission would conclude that Gibney’s accusers were “vindicated,” four years after Gibney fled the country following the Supreme Court’s ruling, in turn leading to the vacating of his prosecution on technical grounds – a classic in the annals of closing the barn door once the horses had already escaped. Where Is George Gibney? was silent on both the conflicted backdrop and the milquetoast output of the Murphy Commission.
* Oh, and about that Supreme Court decision … Broadsheet remains the one and only Irish media outlet, pre- or post-podcast, with the temerity to point out that a sitting justice for that fateful argument, Susan Denham, is the sister of Patrick Gageby, Gibney’s barrister.
* Then there’s USA Swimming, which allowed Gibney to briefly resume his coaching career in America, before the local community caught wind of his Irish past. (“Sounds like an Irish – is he an Irish coach? Yeah, I think I’ve heard the name.” That’s what the late, disgraced CEO of USA Swimming, Chuck Wielgus, testified in one of his organisation’s own scores of abuse lawsuits.)
* And the American Swimming Coaches Association. In 2016 a U.S. federal court judge, Charles R. Breyer, noted that ASCA – which has actively advertised visa trouble-shooting for its members – was suspected of having “greased the wheels for Gibney’s relocation.” In one of the podcast’s best moments, Horgan cornered Gibney’s one-time assistant coach Peter Banks, whose career has been a shuttle between Ireland and the U.S., into all but admitting that he had helped engineer a coaching job offer letter to support Gibney’s diversity lottery visa application in the early 1990s. But Horgan, curiously, just landed that single personal punch on Banks and moved on. The podcasters didn’t share that Banks was, at the time of the visa issuance, the top staff assistant to long-time ASCA chief John Leonard. Nor did they follow up with ASCA.
* A federal grand jury in New York has been investigating USA Swimming for insurance fraud, asset hiding, and abuse cover-up, and as an offshoot, an official named Jane Khodarkovsky, the human trafficking finance specialist for the Justice Department’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section, has been investigating Gibney. Did Where Is George Gibney? go there? Dream on.
What about the crucial Gibney angles in Colorado and Peru?
The state of Colorado, Gibney’s first U.S. stop, was the belt buckle of the nomadic American part of his story. Published reports by two separate local police departments there ensued. Where Is George Gibney? miserably failed on informing its listeners about both of them.
In the first, police in the Denver suburb of Arvada probed an allegation that Gibney had, at minimum, sexually harassed a girl swimmer on the pool deck. Gibney was quietly separated from the North Jeffco swim team coaching staff, but there were no consequences for his visa and green card. The podcast withheld the known detail that officers of the Arvada police, who investigated the incident and issued a vague report after Gibney was disappeared from the premises, were conflicted by virtue of the fact that some of their own kids were on the team.
Several years later Gibney was still in the Greater Denver area but employed outside the swimming industry, when his employer learned about the old Irish criminal charges against him and informed on him to the police of another suburb, Wheat Ridge. (And this generated what was actually the second police report on him in that town.)
A spokesperson for the BBC has admitted that Where Is George Gibney? did interview Lila Adams, a local child therapist who, as Wheat Ridge police detective Lila Cohen back in 2000, had written the report flowing from the informant’s information. For reasons Mark Horgan has not shared either on or off the podcast, that interview was left on the cutting-room floor.
Unequivocally, the public needs to know why Wheat Ridge failed to follow up on information about Gibney’s travel to Peru, with a contingent from his area Catholic parish, for a children’s medical mission of the “International Peru Eye Clinic Foundation,” which he claimed to chair.
That mission occurred during the same period as the Denver archdiocese’s new welcome of a Peruvian sect, Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (“Fellowship of Christian Life”), whose founders were accused of violence, abuse, and kidnapping. (The original leader eventually would flee to haven in Rome, and the Sodalitium would issue a report confirming the veracity of the allegations and compelling the group to write the founders out of their official history.)
The way Horgan handled all this was to broadcast exactly nothing about it.
Finally, what gives with the title?
Using the magic of audio post-production, which manipulated listeners’ sense of timeline; plus a music soundtrack hovering between ominous and maudlin; plus a dash of innuendo, the podcast parceled out hours of pointless ear candy telling of a search and a stakeout. Without presenting bald untruths, Mark Horgan hyped his shoe leather in tracking down George Gibney and pouncing on him.
Nonsense on stilts. Sophomoric. Embarrassing.
Gibney’s whereabouts have been no secret. He has been living with “Brother Pedro” (probably a fellow traveler of the Knights of Columbus, known in Ireland as the Knights of Saint Columbanus) at 882 Breakwater Drive, Altamonte Springs, Florida.
In 2006, with the camera rolling, Clare Murphy of RTÉ television’s Prime Time had confronted Gibney at a parking lot in California and stuck a microphone in his face. She was rewarded with a powerful visual and no comment, as Gibney drove off. Before long, he was moving yet again, to Florida.
With neither credit to nor mention of his more substantive forerunner in Irish broadcast journalism, Horgan sought to replicate the Clare Murphy moment. Toward this end, he consulted Evin Daly, the Irish native who runs the Florida-based group One Child International – and in that capacity has himself, at intervals, sought to talk to Gibney.
Daly advised Horgan that if he and his sound technician wanted to spy on Gibney’s house from an alien van parked on a residential street late at night, then they should notify the local police and explain their project. The podcasters rejected Daly’s advice. The upshot was that a bewildered neighbour, quite understandably, went up to the van to ask them what the hell they were doing. On the podcast, Horgan would spin this exchange as part of a broader insinuation that well-placed Florida civilians seemed to be mysteriously protecting Gibney.
After a bunch of meandering audio – which added up to shadowing a reclusive old man doing mundane things in plain sight – Horgan one day summoned the moxie to approach Gibney while he was out shopping. For listeners, the entirety of the aural payoff from this serial exercise in smoke and mirrors was a report of the intrepid interviewer’s own sweaty palms and heavy breathing. As expected, Gibney again said nothing. But the podcasters assured us the target’s face had flashed anguish and the encounter had been profound. Enough so, evidently, for a ten-episode drumroll.
***
Thanks to Where Is George Gibney? (why, he’s right here!), more and mostly younger Irish news consumers have been educated in certain sensational details of one of the country’s many historical sagas of abuse in high places.
Unfortunately, once again, they also have been mesmerised into doing nothing about it, except gawk and cluck.
Since my first conversation with Justine McCarthy ten years ago, and the beginnings of my own intensive Gibney investigations seven years ago, I’ve had the pleasure of making many new friends on the Emerald Isle. One thing friends do for friends is to check them when they lapse into blarney.
In my country, we have a different word. It, too, starts with the letter “b.”
Irvin writes at Concussion Inc.
Previously: Irvin Muchnick on Broadsheet
This morning.
GAA Museum, Croke Park.
Top from left: Event manager Eamon O’Boyle, Superintendent Martin Mooney and Head of Croke Park Operations & Events Tony McGuinness briefing media on the safety and security arrangements along with the Garda Traffic Management Plan for the Ed Sheeran concerts at Croke Park next Saturday and Sunday.
Professor Luke O’Neill, Chair of Biochemistry at Trinity College
This morning.
“It’s like a deck of cards and it keeps getting reshuffled.
“You know an immune system can recognise the same cards, basically. So far the worry would be a new deck of cards might emerge, or a different kind of suit of cards … might emerge, and then we might be in more trouble, but for the moment as I say it’s the same deck of cards being reshuffled basically.”
Professor Luke O’ Neill on ‘Today with Philip Boucher Hayes’ on RTÉ Radio One
Vaccines effective against new Omicron variant – O’Neill (RTE)
Meanwhile…
via Threads Irish:
Within the last few months a lot has been happening to Ireland’s scaremonger supremo Prof Luke O Neill.
On 25th March O Neill penned an article for the WEF entitled: Deltacron: What scientists know so far about this new hybrid coronavirus
O Neill is now an official agenda contributor to the World Economic Forum.
Surely it’s just a coincidence that O’Neill has also been named named as a leading member of the Government’s new Covid-19 Advisory Group…[more at link below]
Did You Know Prof Luke O Neill Is Now A Member Of The World Economic Forum? (ThreadsIrish, Substack)





























