Tag Archives: Irish Independent

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verrimuss

[Paul Williams, top, and british security firm Verrimus]

 

Further to the GSOC bugging brouhaha.

The Irish Independent’s Paul Williams went on RTE Radio One’s Today with Sean O’Rourke this morning to offer alternative explanations for the three security threats discovered by security firm Verrimus in the offices of the Garda Ombudsman’s Commission.

Paul Williams: “There was a wifi device which was located in the Commission’s conference room, it was found to have connected to an external wifi network. Now, our understanding is that a report was subsequently done by the security company to state that, in the first instance they didn’t know which external network it was, that was hitting off their system. They then later established that it was bitbuzz wifi network which was then traced to an insomnia coffee shop on the ground floor of the GSOC building.
We did some further enquiries. We discovered, significantly, that the bitbuzz network was, I understand, introduced to that premises in August of last year. If you walk in, you’re offered, it’s advertised, bitbuzz, you know, you’re given a number to hook into it while you’re in the Insomnia and in the Spar shop – they’re on the corner of Middle Abbey Street and Capel Street. So our understanding is that, and this is based on sources from very close, shall we say, to GSOC, that it was subsequently, this was subsequently discovered, it was reported back and it was reported on paper.
Now, for some reason, neither the Minister (for Justice) nor the Dail committee that met with the GSOC Commissioners last week were informed of this. Also, in relation to the phones, the third anomaly was the use of the UK 3G mobile network, it’s understood that the experts from the security company found this and said this could, and traced it to a much bigger threat. That somebody had an IMSI, it’s a technical term for, it’s like a sting, it’s called a stingray in the business but it’s an IMSI catcher – they believe that this equipment was in existence in the area, based on the fact that they detected a UK 3G network.
Now, in last week’s meeting with the Dáil committee on oversight, the chairman Simon O’Brien told the Oireachtas that he did not have a UK mobile but confirmed that we had UK operatives who were operating [inaudible] and now we asked GSOC yesterday to maybe further elaborate on that, they responded that no GSOC staff member uses a UK phone for official use but when asked to confirm who these UK operatives were they said they were the UK security specialists undertaking the sweep. So, in the confusion, it appears that perhaps they detected the existence of their own English mobile phones while that sweep was going on.”

Sean O’Rourke: “But how does this explain, Paul, this suggestion where the IMSI catcher as you call it, the briefing note said that the specialist firm Verrimus indicated that this level of technology is only available to government agencies and that’s what an awful lot of the concern arose from.”

Williams: “Well there’s another extraordinary sort of twist in this whole story. And this is my colleague Tom Brady yesterday in the Irish Independent revealed that Verrimus company, which was brought in to do this stress assessment actually met with senior gardaí while they were here on that trip and offered them this IMSI catcher for sale. And Verrimus yesterday confirmed this.”

O’Rourke: “Did the gardaí know why Verrimuss were in town? And what the main purpose of their visit was at that stage?”

Williams: “Well, I don’t think so. I don’t know. In that business you don’t tell your left hand what your right hand is doing.”

[Later]

Williams: “There is an element in our own profession and in particularly in the Opposition, this is being used as an opportunity to, another opportunity to whip the Commissioner, or the Commissioner, and the Minister.”

O’Rourke: “Yes, but equally, it could be suggested that there are elements in your own newspaper who are basically blind to the possibility that Gardaí may have done anything wrong because the line taken by the Irish Independent group has been largely very supportive of the Gardaí and fairly sceptical of GSOC and people who say there’s something afoot here.”

Williams: “I wouldn’t say it’s supportive. I would say, purely from the point of view, you take the story and look at it from a distance and you say, well, on the face of it, this is extraordinary…but when you start breaking it down, it is what if. This, if, for example Sean, you come along and you say that something really seismic had happened in an organisation or in somebody’s life, the first thing people ask is where is the proof and the evidence. The point about it was that we were looking at this and thinking ‘well hang on, there is no, no evidence has been proffered in relation to this.”

Listen Here

Alternatively, from Verrimus:

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Previously: Catchers And The Spies

Earlier: Garda Confidential

rea1gemmatalbot(Stephen Rae, editor-in-chief of the Irish Independent, Sunday Independent and Evening Herald and, above, Gemma O’Doherty and a protest outside INM ,Talbot Street, Dublin following her sacking)

Penalty points were wiped after they were accrued by a car registered to an Independent News and Media editor.
Stephen Rae was involved in the decision to make leading journalist Gemma O’Doherty redundant in the weeks after she approached the Garda commissioner to check if he had penalty points removed from his licence.
A vehicle registered to Rae, editor-in-chief of the Irish Independent and other INM titles, accrued penalty points at 6.37am on November 5, 2009 at the N11, Belfield, Dublin before the points were terminated.

….Her forcing out has brought condemnation from journalists at top British and international publications but has so far been ignored by Ireland’s leading newspapers and RTE.

 

Wiped penalty points linked to editor involved in Gemma O’Doherty redundancy (Robert Mulhern, Irish Post)

Previously:
Did The Editor Have His Points Quashed?

Going Rogue

Dear Mr Rae

(Photocall Ireland)

gemma:talbot
callinanrea(From top: Protest at INM and journalist Gemma O’Doherty, Irish Independent report from April and Stephen Rae, group editor of the Independent titles)

You may recall a post concerning the recent dismissal from the Irish Independent of journalist Gemma O’Doherty.

The Senior Features writer and Travel Editor was usually in receipt of high praise from her editors.

But this changed after she discovered in April that Garda Commissioner Martin Callinan was caught speeding while driving his private car, and his penalty points subsequently quashed.

Her then boss Rae reportedly called O’Doherty a ‘rogue reporter’ for calling to Callinan’s house to confirm details in the story.

Some weeks after the story appeared managing director Declan Carlyle informed O’Doherty that her job was gone.

It has since emerged that among a list of high-profile names who have had points quashed is a Stephen Rae, who was reportedly caught speeding in Belfield, Dublin on the morning of November 5, 2009, and whose two points were subsequently terminated by gardai with no reason given.

[We have contacted Stephen Rea to clarify if this was indeed him. He has not responded and we offer him a right of reply]

The cancellation of fixed charge notices,and subsequently penalty points – other than for fire brigade drivers, ambulance drivers, on-duty Gardaí or people driving a car under the direction of a Garda – is not provided for in Irish law.

Gardaí have been using an ‘ad-hoc’ policy of discretion in relation to terminating penalty points which has no statutory basis.

Meanwhile, separately, O’Doherty was also investigating examples of summonses not being served on high-profile people from political, media, sports and legal circles when she got fired.

On May 9, she wrote how three summonses for three different motoring offences were not served on Westmeath Fianna Fáil TD Robert Troy.

And she was compiling a story in relation to the case of summonses not being served against two high-profile people in legal circles when she was dismissed by INM.

(Photocall Ireland)

sun

 

The father of singer Sinead O’Connor has said he admires and loves his daughter and as far as he’s concerned “she can do nothing wrong.”

The 75-year-old said he hadn’t seen his daughter’s latest tattoos which are reportedly on her cheeks. “I admire and love my daughter and as far as I’m concerned she can do nothing wrong,” he said. He added that wherever the tattoos are placed is “okay” with him.

Proud dad in proud dad shocker.

Financially secure independent woman makes own decision.

More as we get it.

‘I love my daughter and she can do no wrong’ – Sinead O’Connor’s dad defends singer (Fiona Ellis, Irish Independent)

Pic: The Irish Sun

21

This lunchtime.

William Martin Murphy out of picture.

Peter Prunty writes:

A small protest outside the Irish Independent offices. Signs point to dispute over [Irish Independent journalist] Gemma O’Doherty being forced out…

Anyone?

Update: it may relate to this interview on RTE R1’s Drivetime on August 22, regarding the death of Fr Niall Molloy, and a doorstepping of the Garda commissioner apparently.

indo1

indo3indo5

indo4It was the breast of times.

Paul Quigley writes:

In an old cottage in an island off Mayo I found a copy of the Irish Independent, dated November 1, 1979. Was great fun to thumb through and see what was making the news then.

And of course the funniest thing is how little things have changed.

Of course the front page story is about a financial crisis, and we have the headline inside that AIB’s profits fell a full (shock, horror) 2 million pounds.

There’s an editorial on the skills gap – not enough people to work with computers, which are “the in-thing at the moment.” The editorial deplores inadequate second level education in computers. This is 33 years ago, and computing education in Irish schools remains poor. I wonder if we’ll still be deploring the state of IT education in another 33 years?

Another unchanging crisis – the WHO [World Health Organisation] were in town 33 years ago warning Ireland about its low levels of breastfeeding. Today, Ireland still has one of the lowest rates of breastfeeding in Europe, which has been linked to many health problems.Then-Minister for Health Charles Haughey didn’t get that one sorted then.

How many of the WHO recommendations have been implemented? Could they come to town with the same wish list again?