logo
Roads gardaí should not be exposed to ‘excessive danger', says minister

Roads gardaí should not be exposed to ‘excessive danger', says minister

BreakingNews.ie12-05-2025

There is a need to ensure that road-policing gardaí are not exposed to 'excessive levels of danger', the Justice Minister has said following the death of an officer in the unit.
Kevin Flatley died after being hit by a motorcycle as he was recording vehicles' speeds on the R132 at Lanestown on Sunday afternoon.
Advertisement
The scene on the R132 at Lanestown after the fatal crash. Photo: Garrett White/PA.
The 49-year-old had served as a garda for 26 years and had been with the Roads Policing Unit since 2018.
The married father-of-two was the 90th officer to die on duty since the creation of the force in 1922.
President Michael D Higgins, Taoiseach Micheál Martin, Tánaiste Simon Harris and Garda Commissioner Drew Harris extended their sympathies and spoke of the shock at his death.
On Monday, Justice Minister Jim O'Callaghan expressed his sympathies to Mr Flatley's family and colleagues in An Garda Síochána.
Advertisement
He said: 'When Garda Flatley went out to work yesterday morning, he went out in the same way as every guard goes out to work, which is to keep the community safe – and he was doing that in his role within the Roads Policing Unit.
'It was a terrible tragedy that he lost his life in the line of duty, but it emphasises, I suppose, the sacrifices and the danger associated with policing in Ireland.
'Sometimes we take it for granted. We think that it's a job which is the same as other jobs – it's not.
'Every day, members of An Garda Síochána put themselves personally in danger by carrying out their duty on behalf of the people of Ireland and it is a tragedy that Garda Flatley paid the ultimate price yesterday whilst performing his duty.'
Advertisement
Gardaí have appealed to anyone who saw the Yamaha R motorcycle involved in the crash from 12pm on Sunday onwards to contact investigators and aid their inquiries.
An appeal for witnesses and those with relevant dashcam or video footage has also been made.
Mr O'Callaghan said he would encourage anyone with camera footage to bring it to the attention of the active investigation into Mr Flatley's death.
Justice Minister Jim O'Callaghan expressed his sympathies to Kevin Flatley's family and colleagues in An Garda Siochana Photo: Brian Lawless/PA.
Commissioner Harris pointed out that a different garda 'unbelievably' had his leg broken after being struck by a motorcycle on the same day, while another also suffered a broken leg after being hit by a vehicle in a separate incident a week earlier.
Advertisement
Asked about a review into roads policing, Mr O'Callaghan said members of the public need to look at their own behaviour 'in the first instance as opposed to' asking what gardai can do differently.
'We need to slow down. There is too much speed on our roads. There are too many lives being lost on our roads.
'And although An Garda Siochana are out there to enforce the law and to make the roads as safe as possible, primary responsibility rests on all of us to ensure that we're not driving excessively fast – that's something that's within all our control.'
Asked about the dangers of roads policing raised by the Commissioner, Mr O'Callaghan said he will implement 'whatever new measures are required in order to ensure that gardai are kept as safe as possible during their roads policing'.
Advertisement
He told RTÉ's Morning Ireland: 'Obviously, it's an area that's also hugely dependent upon technology – we need to use technology as much as possible.
'A recently approved new contract for the use of more road traffic cameras, that's an area that can be as effective.
'But no matter what technologies we introduce, we're never going to get away from the fact that we want and we will need to have members of An Garda Siochana actively on the ground, policing the law and protecting the community.
'That's what Garda Flatley was doing yesterday. Tragically, he lost his life whilst doing it but his public service is commendable, and it's something that we should all sort of honor and reflect upon.'
Asked what shape a review of roads policing should take in the wake of Garda Flatley's death, the minister said: 'We need to reflect upon: Are gardai being exposed to excessive danger?'
An Garda Síochána block the R132 at Lanestown after officer Kevin Flatley was killed at a checkpoint. Photo: Garrett White/PA.
Earlier, the vice president of the Garda Representative Association told the same programme that it represented a 'dreadful' day for the organisation.
Niall Hodgins said Mr Flatley is remembered as a 'friend, colleague and teammate' who wore his uniform with 'dignity, courage and pride'.
'His colleagues have told me his presence enriched all the stations that he has served in – which I think included Roscommon, Blanchardstown and Pearse Street garda stations – prior to him joining the Roads Policing Unit, and his kindness, I understand, touched everybody that knew him,' he said.
Mr Hodgkins described An Garda Siochana as a 'big family' of current, past and retired members, and added: 'I have been inundated with calls about Kevin's integrity, his values that he held dear, his dignity, his courage, his pride, and about Kevin's character himself.'
He said the incident reminds people of the dangers of being a member of An Garda Síochána.
Mr Flatley was also a member of the O'Dwyers GAA club in Balbriggan, where his daughters play.
Garda Commissioner Drew Harris spoke about other incidents involving roads policing officers. Photo: Garrett White/PA.
Club chairman Dave Rooney passed his condolences on to Mr Flatley's family and said: 'It's a terrible day for our club and the wider community of Balbriggan.'
He said: 'Kevin was very active in the community and very active in the club.
He added: 'He was always positive around the club, a positive influence and always smiling. He had a fantastic way about him within the club, and he was always willing to lend a hand and kind of helped where he could.
'You know, he obviously had significant commitments with the guards and his family, but when he had downtime, he was always there to give a dig out whenever he could.'
Mr Rooney said Mr Flatley was 'very patient and very caring' when he worked as a coach with the club.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Irish-based Australian man released from Iraqi jail after four years
Irish-based Australian man released from Iraqi jail after four years

BreakingNews.ie

time26 minutes ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Irish-based Australian man released from Iraqi jail after four years

Robert Pether has been released on bail in Iraq. The Australian national remains there for the moment as he is under a travel ban and cannot return home, it is understood. Advertisement He lived with his wife and three children in Co Roscommon before travelling to Iraq, where he was arrested and jailed on fraud charges in 2021. The Tánaiste was informed of his release during a call with Foreign Minister Hussein of Iraq on Thursday evening. "I am very pleased to have been informed of the release of Robert Pether, whose imprisonment in Iraq has been a cause of huge, huge concern. This is welcome news, it's been a very long-running, and extraordinary distressing, time for Robert's wife, for his three children, for his wider circle of family and friends in Roscommon," Simon Harris said on Newstalk. Mr Harris welcomed it as a first step to his being allowed to return to his wife and three children in Roscommon. Advertisement "I spoke with Robert's wife, Desree, about this positive development, and I really want to thank our diplomatic officials, people in our embassy network in the region, for their tireless work. I know significant concerns remain about Robert's health, about the outstanding charges, and I'm going to keep working on this until we get a fully positive resolution and Robert back home with his family," the Tánaiste said. The Irish Times reported that Mr Pether worked as an engineer and was helping to design the central bank in Baghdad, and was set to work on three hospitals. However, there was a contract dispute between his employer and the Central Bank of Iraq, which led to him and his Egyptian work colleague Khalid Radwan being imprisoned. The pair were sentenced to five years and fined $12 million by an Iraqi court.

Australian bouncy castle operator acquitted in accident that killed six children
Australian bouncy castle operator acquitted in accident that killed six children

The Independent

timean hour ago

  • The Independent

Australian bouncy castle operator acquitted in accident that killed six children

A bouncy castle operator was cleared of breaching safety laws in a 2021 tragedy that killed six children at a primary school in Australia. Six children died and three others were seriously injured after a gust of wind blew the jumping castle in the air in Tasmania during an end-of-year celebration in December 2021. Rosemary Anne Gamble, who was the owner of Taz-Zorb, which set up the equipment at the school, was accused of not following safety laws and securing the jumping castle. She had pleaded not guilty. On Friday, Ms Gamble was handed a not guilty sentence by Magistrate Robert Webster on charges of breaching workplace safety law. Mr Webster said the incident happened "due to an unprecedented weather system" that was "impossible to predict". "I am not satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of Ms Gamble's guilt to the charge in the complaint," Mr Webster said during the verdict. "In those circumstances, I find the charge is not proved, it is therefore dismissed." "Ms Gamble could have done more or taken further steps, however, given the effects of the unforeseen and unforeseeable dust devil, had she done so, that would sadly have made no difference to the ultimate outcome," the magistrate added. The families of the six victims expressed disbelief and anger over the not guilty verdict, saying their hopes for justice are 'shattered now'. In a statement read in court by Ms Gamble's lawyer, she accepted "how deeply and tragically this incident has impacted so many people and families". "I realise these scars will remain for an extremely long time, likely forever," Ms Gamble said. "There are no words to describe how I have felt ever since the tragic incident took so much away from so many people and left nothing but heartbreak and emptiness in its place." She said as a mother herself, she "can only imagine the pain that other parents are living with each and every day because of this terrible thing that happened". "There is not a moment that goes by where I don't feel so painfully and terribly sorry to every single one of those people that were impacted and continue to grieve for their loved ones." Those killed in the incident were: Chace Harrison, Jalailah Jayne-Maree Jones, Zane Mellor, Addison Stewart, Jye Sheehan and Peter Dodt. Peter's father, Andrew Dodt, who was at the courtroom, said he was broken for a long time and now he is going to remain the same. "I thank you for walking the path with us. It was a very long path … we've still got a long way to go. "Our hopes are just shattered now, at the end of the day all I wanted was an apology for my son not coming home and I'm never going to get it and that kills me." Georgie Burt, mother of Zane, lashed out at Ms Gamble and said she hopes she 'see them every time I miss a birthday, miss a Christmas'. "This outcome does not reflect the weight of our loss, nor the reality we live with every single day." The decision caps a lengthy legal battle four years after the incident happened. It took two years to have Ms Gamble charged in the case and 12 more months before the matter began its 10-day hearing process. During the hearing in November, it was alleged that she only used pegs at four of the castle's eight anchor points, despite the castle manufacturing company's two-page manual that recommended eight. Ms Gamble was let down by the castle's Chinese manufacturer, her lawyer Chris Dockray told the court. He argued that East Inflatable, a Chinese manufacturer of the product, failed to provide any instructions at the time of purchase and supplied only four pegs with the equipment. As a result, Ms Gamble downloaded a brief two-page manual from the company's website, which led her to believe that using four pegs was sufficient.

Australia: Bouncy castle operator cleared in tragedy that killed six children
Australia: Bouncy castle operator cleared in tragedy that killed six children

BBC News

time5 hours ago

  • BBC News

Australia: Bouncy castle operator cleared in tragedy that killed six children

An Australian bouncy castle operator at the centre of a tragedy in 2021 that killed six children and seriously injured three has been cleared of breaching safety laws.A court found Rosemary Anne Gamble, who runs the business Taz-Zorb, not guilty, ruling that the incident was "due to an unprecedented weather system" that was "impossible to predict".The victims, who were on a bouncy castle at a primary school fun day in Devonport, Tasmania, fell about 10m (33ft) after strong winds blew the castle skywards at a school verdict on Friday caused anguish among their families, with some crying out in court in disbelief, ABC News reported. Prosecutors had accused Ms Gamble of failing to anchor the castle adequately, but her defence argued she could not have done more to eliminate or reduce hazards that led to the Robert Webster agreed with the defence and found that the incident happened due to a dust devil - an upward spiralling vortex of air and debris - that was "unforeseen and unforeseeable"."Ms Gamble could have done more or taken further steps, however, given the effects of the unforeseen and unforeseeable dust devil, had she done so, that would sadly have made no difference to the ultimate outcome," the magistrate six children killed in the accident - Addison Stewart, Zane Mellor, Jye Sheehan, Jalailah Jayne-Maree Jones, Peter Dodt and Chace Harrison - were aged between 11 and were all at a Hillcrest Primary School fair when the accident took place on the last day of term before the school holidays in December of the children were on the castle when the gales swept it up and flung it across the school oval. The sixth child, who was waiting in line, died after being struck in the head by the inflatable tragic accident shattered Devonport, a city on the north coast of Tasmania with some 30,000 Gamble was charged nearly two years after, in November 2023. Andrew Dodt, the father of one of the young victims Peter, said after Friday's verdict that "our hopes are just shattered now"."At the end of the day all I wanted was an apology for my son not coming home, and I'm never going to get it, and that kills me," he said in a statement to local media."I've been broken for a long time, and I think I'm going to be broken for a lot more."Ms Gamble's lawyer Bethan Frake spoke on her behalf, acknowledging that the incident has caused "scars that will remain for an extremely long time, likely forever"."I am a mother," she said, quoting Ms Gamble. "I can only imagine the pain that other parents are living with each and every day because of this terrible thing that happened.""Their loss is something I will carry with me for the rest of my life."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store