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Teenager who died in fall at lake in Co Kerry named as Darragh Byrne (16)

Teenager who died in fall at lake in Co Kerry named as Darragh Byrne (16)

Irish Times3 days ago
A teenager who died in a fall at a lake at the Conor Pass in Co Kerry, has been named as 16-year-old Darragh Byrne from Charleville in Co Cork.
He was a student at CBS Charleville and an only child, it is understood.
He had been visiting the waterfall alongside the road at the pass with his parents. The teenager had set off to climb in the direction of Pedlar's lake, also known as Doon lake, a 15-minute climb overhead.
When he did not return his parents Siobhán and James raised the alarm at around 3.30pm on Tuesday.
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Rescue services were quickly on the scene in an operation coordinated by Valentia Marine Rescue Station. The
Coast Guard
helicopter located the teenager.
Emergency medical assistance was administered at the scene and a doctor attended, but he was pronounced dead shortly afterwards.
Gerry Christie, an experienced member of Kerry Mountain Rescue, said that while it is not known exactly what occurred, the scramble up to the lake was not particularly dangerous and the boy's injuries were consistent with a considerable fall.
Darragh's body was removed to University Hospital Kerry, where a postmortem examination will be conducted.
Darragh Byrne, who died in a fall at the Conor Pass in Co Kerry. Photograph: Charleville CBS/Facebook
It is understood Darragh was a keen rock climber, cyclist and a popular student. Friends and classmates gathered at the CBS in Charleville on Wednesday to open a book of condolences for him.
In a statement on social media, the school said: 'Darragh was a bright and uplifting presence in our school community – a gentle, kind-hearted, and considerate young person who radiated warmth and positivity. Whether in the classroom, walking our corridors, or spending time with his friends, he left a meaningful and lasting impact. His generous nature, intelligence and talent inspired all who knew him.'
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The couple had been trying to adopt Jessica, but the process had been delayed, due to information gleaned by the adoption agency that McCann, president of the IASA Leinster Branch and a swimming coach, had fathered a child with a 17-year-old student. McCann is currently serving a life sentence in Arbour Hill Prison. It would take more than another decade but Ger Doyle, a successor to both Gibney and O'Rourke as national coach, would also find himself in the dock. In 2012, the 51-year-old from Wexford pleaded not guilty to one charge of sexual assault and 34 charges of indecent assault at New Ross Swimming Pool between January 1981 and December 1993. The jury returned unanimous guilty verdicts on all charges. He was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in prison and released in 2015. To many people it beggared belief how so many figures involved at the higher levels of Irish swimming chimed so closely with allegations of child sexual abuse, how the recurring themes overlapped. 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Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill The big reaction to the 2018 piece pointed to real interest in the Gibney case and prompted them to consider a greater interrogation of the story. When Dylan Haskins, the commissioning executive for podcasts with BBC Sounds, was sold the idea for something more extensive and investigative, Horgan and Ciaran Cassidy hit the road. On and off for two-and-a-half years the pair travelled across the US, where they tracked down people who had previously stayed silent. They discovered new information on Gibney's past and the path to where he resided in Florida's Seminole county. During one of their visits to Florida, Horgan and Cassidy confronted Gibney outside his home. But he wouldn't talk to them, wouldn't listen, and awkwardly got into his car and drove away. 'You couldn't shut him up,' said Horgan. 'That was, until the day he decided he'd never speak publicly again.' 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