logo
Oberstown staff member ‘punched in face in unprovoked attack' by young person, union says

Oberstown staff member ‘punched in face in unprovoked attack' by young person, union says

Irish Times08-07-2025
A member of staff at
Oberstown Children Detention Campus
was hospitalised at the weekend following an assault by a young person, according to the
Forsa
trade union.
The alleged incident on Sunday afternoon occurred in the exercise yard of one of the campus's units.
The staff member was 'punched in the face several times in an unprovoked attack' and 'had to be taken to hospital where he was X-rayed for a suspected facial fracture', said a union source.
The staff source said there were insufficient staffing levels in the yard at the time of Sunday's incident.
READ MORE
'This young person has been involved in previous violent incidents on the campus ... They come from a very troubled, traumatic background and to be honest should have had far more intensive interventions far earlier in their life.
'They are probably in the wrong placement now.'
The alleged assault comes less than a month after
nine staff were injured in an incident involving a young person
. That incident, during which improvised weapons were used, resulted in four staff being brought to hospital and a number being signed off work for up to a month, said Forsa.
The union source, who works at Oberstown, queried assertions by Minister for Children
Norma Foley
, whose department oversees the campus, in a written answer to Social Democrats TD Gary Gannon last week, where she said the facility was 'not experiencing 'dangerously low staffing levels''.
A staff survey conducted by Forsa in the last three months, seen by The Irish Times, found 69 per cent of staff members felt morale was 'low' or 'very low', while 54 per cent said morale had worsened in the previous 12 months.
The survey, completed by 120 out of about 175 staff, found 80 per cent felt their workload had increased in the previous 12 months, with 74 per cent saying stress levels had worsened.
A separate workplace culture report, commissioned by the Oberstown board of management and published on Friday, found just half of staff felt 'valued as an employee', while 'decision making in the interests of the young people could be improved'.
The report, by accountancy firm Forvis Mazars, said 'substantial progress is still required' if the campus is to achieve its 'agreed target culture'.
Oberstown's principal objective is 'to provide appropriate care, education, training and other programmes to young people between 12 and 18 years with a view to reintegrating them successfully back into their communities and society', the report noted.
However, the centre's 'mission statement lacks clarity regarding the organisation's mandate in returning young people successfully to society' it said.
'While 76 per cent of survey respondents agreed Oberstown is a campus they enjoy working in, just half of staff agreed that they felt valued as an employee,' said the report.
'Cross-campus decision making in the interests of the young people could be improved as observed through focus group discussions.
'In the survey, just 47 per cent of respondents agreed that collaboration was actively encouraged.'
On the issue of people development, the report found: 'There is no performance management system in Oberstown, as observed through focus group discussion, documentation review, and the survey where 71 per cent of staff agreed they had never been involved in a performance management process.'
Authors found staff felt induction and onboarding systems could be strengthened 'to fully prepare them for their roles'.
Just half of respondents agreed they were provided with the necessary information when they joined Oberstown.
'Only 25 per cent of survey respondents believed good performance is recognised at Oberstown and focus group discussions indicated there would be appreciation among staff for more acknowledgment of a 'job well done'.'
A Department of Children spokesman said: 'The Department offers its full support to any member of staff who has been injured during the course of their work. As with all circumstances of this nature, these matters will be the subject of internal review. The Department does not comment on operational matters relating to Oberstown Children Detention Campus.'
A spokesman for Oberstown said he could not comment on an individual incident, but that the campus 'offers its full support to any member of staff who has been injured during the course of their work'.
He said management acknowledged the findings of the culture review, took the findings 'seriously' and were 'committed to acting on them'.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Torture of woman by group of men in Dublin flat involved ‘truly barbaric' violence, says judge
Torture of woman by group of men in Dublin flat involved ‘truly barbaric' violence, says judge

Irish Times

time3 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Torture of woman by group of men in Dublin flat involved ‘truly barbaric' violence, says judge

The torture of one woman by a group of men who falsely imprisoned and assaulted her in a Dublin city flat involved 'truly barbaric' violence, a judge has said. When jailing five men who admitted those offences against Natalie Ennis for terms between 8½ and 14 years, Judge Pauline Codd said on Wednesday: 'There has to be general deterrence to this type of torture.' The 'brutal, violent and sadistic' offending shows the 'evil associated with drug dealing and extensive criminality which underpins the drug trade', the judge said. During a three-hour ordeal last September at Henrietta House, Dublin 7, Ms Ennis (38) was beaten on the head and body with poles, punched, burned on the skin with a heated hammer and a makeshift blowtorch, cut with knives and subject to the 'almost ritualistic, medieval' punishment of having her hair cut off, the judge said. READ MORE Ms Ennis was taken to the flat after a false accusation about cocaine going missing from another apartment. Judge Codd said it was 'significant' Ms Ennis's ordeal ended only when gardaí arrived at the flat. Ms Ennis had said she believed she would be 'dead' if they had not arrived. Ms Ennis spent three weeks in hospital after the assaults. Her injuries included a broken eye socket, broken cheekbone, broken nasal bone, broken elbow, laceration, burns and dislocated teeth. She required skin grafts, staples to her scalp, and later surgery to remove a disc in her back. Her ability to live her daily life normally is affected, she is frightened when she sees young men and is 'always looking over her shoulder'. At Dublin Circuit Criminal Court on Wednesday, the judge jailed Mark McMahon (55), his son Mark Keogh (33), and Braxton Rice (21), all of Henrietta House, Henrietta Place, Dublin 7, along with Sean Conroy (21), of Sillogue Road, Ballymun, and Kian Walshe (22), of Constitution Hill, Dublin 7, who had all pleaded guilty to false imprisonment and assault causing harm to Ms Ennis. Other counts against each, relating to the production of articles in the course of an offence, were taken into consideration. All of the men were on bail at the time of the offence. In deciding the jail terms, the judge balanced aggravating factors, including the serious nature of the assaults, against mitigatory factors, particularly the men's guilty pleas, apologies to Ms Ennis and expressions of remorse. All five were involved in drug use, four from an early age, of whom two, Rice and Conroy, were born into addiction, the court heard. Of the five, only Walshe had a stable family background. The judge jailed Rice, described as 'the ringleader', for 14 years. Ms Ennis had said he had questioned her about the allegedly missing cocaine, hit her with a pole across her head and body and burnt her with a heated hammer and a makeshift blow torch. Conroy, who the judge described as one of the 'main movers' in what happened in the flat, was jailed for 12 years. A 12-year-term was imposed on McMahon for reasons including it was his flat and he held a hatchet up to Ms Ennis's face. McMahon had said he believed a 'mob mentality' took over and he was ashamed to be associated with violence against a woman. Jailing Keogh for nine years, the judge noted he was the only one to make admissions. He said he was in the flat for the last 30 to 60 minutes before gardaí arrived, was part of the group that assaulted Ms Ennis but he remembered very little. Walshe was jailed for an effective 8½ years. His main role was to drive Ms Ennis to the flat, which placed his offending in the upper range, the judge said. He was on bail at the time for an offence that was later dismissed.

Social media and responsibility
Social media and responsibility

Irish Times

time8 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Social media and responsibility

Sir – The random stabbing of a young member of An Garda Síochána on Capel Street in Dublin has been properly condemned. What also needs to be condemned is the fact that hours after the Garda clarified that the suspected attacker was an Irish man, social media such as X was still carrying comments claiming that the attacker was a 'foreigner'. Surely social media companies have a responsibility to take down comments which are clearly inaccurate and harmful? We should all be mindful of the vulnerability of immigrants to violent behaviour by people likely to have been motivated by false and malicious social media comments. – Yours, etc, PETER FEENEY, READ MORE (Former press ombudsman), Donnybrook, Dublin 4.

Capel Street attack: Gardaí study CCTV to determine how suspect obtained weapon
Capel Street attack: Gardaí study CCTV to determine how suspect obtained weapon

Irish Times

time10 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Capel Street attack: Gardaí study CCTV to determine how suspect obtained weapon

Detectives investigating a stabbing attack on a garda on Capel Street are studying CCTV footage in a bid to determine how the suspect armed himself with a large knife. The man in his 20s has no known criminal background of note and the motive for the attack remains unclear. The injured garda, who was a probationer gaining frontline policing experience, is expected to make a full recovery, though sources said he had sustained a number of knife injuries and had endured a serious ordeal. The suspect was arrested at the scene of the attack, in the north inner city at about 6pm, after being overpowered by uniform members of the force. Investigating gardaí must charge him with a crime, or release him without charge, by Thursday morning. READ MORE He is in his early 20s and spent most of his life living in the Midlands. In more recent years has lived at an address close to the Dublin-Meath county boundary. Gardaí have dismissed claims on social media, from far right agitators, that the suspect was an international protection applicant, or asylum seeker. The injured garda, who was conducting a routine high-visibility patrol with colleagues when they were attacked, suffered a stab wound to his upper arm. Gardaí believed he would have been much more seriously injured but for his stab-proof vest. The incident occurred when two gardaí responded to reports of a man armed with a large blade, believed to be a kitchen knife. The suspect was overpowered at the scene by uniformed gardaí, after he lashed out at them with the knife. The man was detained under Section 4 of the Criminal Justice Act. That allowed for him to be questioned for up to 24 hours without charge. However, the suspect, an Irish national, availed of his right to sleep overnight at the Dublin Garda station where he was being questioned. That extended his period of detention, as his maximum 24 hours of interview time was suspended for eight hours overnight. A decision on whether to charge or release him was imminent on Wednesday night, following several interview sessions during the day. In the immediate aftermath of the attack, Garda headquarters stressed there was no ongoing threat to the public as the suspect for the attack had been arrested. Welfare services were also put in place by the Garda authorities for the injured garda and his colleagues. Assistant Commissioner Paul Cleary, who is in charge of policing for the Dublin Metropolitan Region, said disinformation had been spread online about the attack, and the suspect. He urged people to get their information from credible sources and not to amplify false claims. 'Very inaccurate misinformation and disinformation went out online after this incident very quickly. So it is concerning,' he told RTÉ Radio 1. He added disinformation was being published and spread on a daily basis by 'people with their own agenda trying to use incidents like this to inflame situations for their own ends.' Mr Cleary commended both members of the force involved in the incident for their courage and professionalism 'in the face of such an unprovoked attack'. A senior investigating officer had been appointed and that assaults on members of the force would never be accepted or tolerated.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store