
Judge shown photos of ‘extensive and horrendous' bruising allegedly inflicted on woman by husband
A man who allegedly inflicted 'extensive and horrendous' bruising on his wife has had a temporary barring order continued against him.
The woman told Dublin District Family Court she had fallen asleep in the afternoon next to their baby and the man woke her by beating her head, grabbing her hair and shaking her.
The man's mother lives with them and, earlier that same day, when the woman had twice asked if she was hungry, the mother had said she was not.
However, she said that when her husband woke her, he said: 'You bitch, you're starving my mother.'
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The woman said he was shouting so much the baby woke up and started crying. His mother then came in to the bedroom and told her she was an 'ignorant woman', started laughing at her and her husband punched her again as she had the baby in her arms, she added.
The woman told Judge Catherine Ghent that photographs taken of her body, which were provided to the court, reflected her injuries.
Her husband also tried to strangle her but her older sons managed to hold him back and she got away from him, she said.
The woman said the man has not been physically violent towards the baby, but on one occasion when the child was crying he shouted: 'Shut up little girl before I bang your head.'
Judge Ghent was told by barrister Ryan Savage, for the woman, that she previously obtained an interim barring order ex parte (one side only represented) and was back in court seeking a full barring order.
The man is in custody on a charge of assault and was served with notice of her barring order application, counsel said.
The judge said she was adjourning the full order application because the man was entitled to an opportunity to seek a production order allowing him to attend court for that hearing.
On foot of the evidence, and the photos showing 'extensive and horrendous bruising', the judge said she was continuing the temporary order until the matter returns to court later this month.
In another case heard at Dolphin House in Dublin, a mother got a three-year barring order against her adult son, aged in his 40s.
During a recent incident, the court heard, he demanded that she give him €20, punched her around the shoulder area and stamped on her feet while she was sitting on the couch.
Her son has used drugs over the years and his veins had collapsed from injecting, the woman said. He had told her he was on methadone and was seeking admission to a residential addiction treatment centre.
Both their names are on the lease for their apartment but he has not contributed to rent or household expenses for years and she has ongoing problems with him demanding money from her, she said.
There were issues with their landlord over her son having people drinking in their apartment and she did not want him there any more as he was 'too much trouble'.
Her counsel said that after the son was served with an interim barring order over the recent incident, he breached it and grabbed her phone from her when she rang gardaí, who were able to hear what was said and came to arrest him.
Counsel said it appeared he had been released on bail, though his mother does not know where he is sleeping, but she has been 'bombarded' with calls and messages from him.
He had been served with the full barring order application and had not turned up in court.
The judge said she was satisfied to grant a three-year barring order and directed gardaí to take steps to locate the man.
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Irish Times
an hour ago
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Annie McCarrick case: Cadaver dogs brought in by gardaí searching site
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However, they have always believed the information they supplied was not properly handled and was not factored into the initial inquiry in any meaningful way. The suspect, who is in his 60s and originally from Dublin, was arrested on Thursday morning and remained in Garda custody early on Friday. He was detained under Section 4 of the Criminal Justice Act, on suspicion of murder, and can be questioned for up to 24 hours, though questioning has been paused to allow breaks for rest. [ Annie McCarrick's best friend is 'overwhelmed with emotion, crying over my coffee' after developments in case Opens in new window ] Gardaí yesterday extended his period of detention to the maximum 24 hours of interviews permitted under law and must either release him without charge, or charge him with an offence, later on Friday. The man has become a successful businessman and now lives outside Dublin. As well as being arrested on Thursday morning, his home was searched. And a house in Clondalkin, west Dublin, that he was linked to was sealed off for searching and excavation, in an operation continuing on Friday morning. Gardaí bring a cadaver dog into the premises, pictured on Friday morning at a house on Monastery Walk, Clondalkin, where gardaí are continueing their search in the investigation into the death of American woman, Annie McCarrick, who disappeared in 1993. Photograph: Colin Keegan, Collins Dublin. The Clondalkin property has been renovated by the current occupants, who bought the house over a decade ago. Gardaí have stressed the current occupants are completely unconnected to Ms McCarrick or the murder inquiry now under way. Some of Ms McCarrick's friends in the United States had remained in close and frequent contact with her when she moved back to Ireland in January, 1993, after first studying here. They said she felt pressured and harassed by an Irishman in her social circle in Dublin and that she told them the man struck her when he had been drinking. They flagged those concerns with gardaí in the initial stages of the investigation when she vanished. [ Annie McCarrick: Gardaí made first arrest in 32-year investigation after receiving new information Opens in new window ] However, at the time Ms McCarrick (26) went missing, there was a series of reported sightings of her getting on a bus bound for Enniskerry, Co Wicklow, and also sightings of her in the village. Other reports placed her 6km away in Johnnie Fox's Pub, Glencullen, Co Dublin. Those sightings, since discounted, all related to Friday, March 26th, the day of the last confirmed sighting of the murdered woman at her flat in Sandymount, South Dublin. Much of the Garda's attention in the first phased of investigation focused on pursuing those sightings in Enniskerry and Glencullen. Ms McCarrick knew the man arrested on Thursday, and was very close to him for a period. However, while her friends told gardaí about that man in 1993 – including Ms McCarrick saying he had harassed her and struck her – they felt their information was not actioned by detectives at the time. When none of the claimed sightings of Ms McCarrick in 1993 led to any breakaway, and her remains were never found, the case remained an unsolved missing person's inquiry until it was upgraded to a murder investigation two years ago. In recent years, after a cold case review and fresh investigation, detectives have come to focus on the arrested man as the main suspect in the case. They also have a particular interest in a close associate of his, who they went abroad to interview earlier this year. 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Michael Griffith has criticised An Garda Síochána over its reluctance to engage with him and others working for the family in the aftermath of her disappearance in March 1993. He suggested then Director of Public Prosecutions Eamonn Barnes had been helpful to the team Mr Griffith had assembled to work on the case on behalf of the McCarrick family but that the Garda was reluctant to share information or engage. 'We met with the Garda. We tried to follow up leads at that time but nothing came of it,' he told RTÉ Radio 1's Morning Ireland programme on Friday. 'In the States here, attorneys tend to share evidence with investigations, with the police, but even though Eamonn Barnes wanted the Garda to open up the file to us, the Garda was quite reclusive about it, and we weren't able to get into the file, although there were a couple of persons of interest, one of whom I'm told may now be in custody.' 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Irish Times
3 hours ago
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Man arrested over Annie McCarrick murder was nominated to Garda as suspect in 1993
The man arrested for questioning on suspicion of the murder of Annie McCarrick was flagged to gardaí as a possible suspect in the case in the immediate aftermath of the New Yorker vanishing from Sandymount , South Dublin, in 1993. Friends of Ms McCarrick were concerned about the man, and the nature of his contacts with the 26-year-old in Dublin. They outlined those concerns, and the specific reasons for them, in fax messages to the Garda investigation team. However, they have always believed the information they supplied was not properly handled and was not factored into the initial inquiry in any meaningful way. The suspect, who is in his 60s and originally from Dublin, was arrested on Thursday morning and remained in Garda custody early on Friday. He was detained under Section 4 of the Criminal Justice Act, on suspicion of murder, and can be questioned for up to 24 hours, though questioning has been paused to allow breaks for rest. 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Some of Ms McCarrick's friends in the United States had remained in close and frequent contact with her when she moved back to Ireland in January, 1993, after first studying here. They said she felt pressured and harassed by an Irishman in her social circle in Dublin and that she told them the man struck her when he had been drinking. They flagged those concerns with gardaí in the initial stages of the investigation when she vanished. [ Annie McCarrick: Gardaí made first arrest in 32-year investigation after receiving new information Opens in new window ] However, at the time Ms McCarrick (26) went missing, there was a series of reported sightings of her getting on a bus bound for Enniskerry, Co Wicklow, and also sightings of her in the village. Other reports placed her 6km away in Johnnie Fox's Pub, Glencullen, Co Dublin. Those sightings, since discounted, all related to Friday, March 26th, the day of the last confirmed sighting of the murdered woman at her flat in Sandymount, South Dublin. Much of the Garda's attention in the first phased of investigation focused on pursuing those sightings in Enniskerry and Glencullen. Ms McCarrick knew the man arrested on Thursday, and was very close to him for a period. However, while her friends told gardaí about that man in 1993 – including Ms McCarrick saying he had harassed her and struck her – they felt their information was not actioned by detectives at the time. When none of the claimed sightings of Ms McCarrick in 1993 led to any breakaway, and her remains were never found, the case remained an unsolved missing person's inquiry until it was upgraded to a murder investigation two years ago. In recent years, after a cold case review and fresh investigation, detectives have come to focus on the arrested man as the main suspect in the case. They also have a particular interest in a close associate of his, who they went abroad to interview earlier this year. They believe the suspect and his close associate were together on the weekend Ms McCarrick vanished and detectives have sought to recheck their accounts of their movements, comparing statements taken in recent years. In March 1993 Ms McCarrick, from Long Island, New York, was living in rented accommodation at St Cathryn's Court, Sandymount, with two friends. They last spoke to her at the property on the morning of Friday, March 26th. . Amid rising concerns for her safety, Ms McCarrick was reported missing to gardaí that Sunday, more than 48 hours after the last confirmed sighting of her. Meanwhile, the US lawyer hired by the father of Annie McCarrick to represent the family in the period after her disappearance has said he is 'delighted' there has been arrest and remains hopeful the case will eventually be resolved with a conviction. Michael Griffith has criticised An Garda Síochána over its reluctance to engage with him and others working for the family in the aftermath of her disappearance in March 1993. He suggested then Director of Public Prosecutions Eamonn Barnes had been helpful to the team Mr Griffith had assembled to work on the case on behalf of the McCarrick family but that the Garda was reluctant to share information or engage. 'We met with the Garda. We tried to follow up leads at that time but nothing came of it,' he told RTÉ Radio 1's Morning Ireland programme on Friday. 'In the States here, attorneys tend to share evidence with investigations, with the police, but even though Eamonn Barnes wanted the Garda to open up the file to us, the Garda was quite reclusive about it, and we weren't able to get into the file, although there were a couple of persons of interest, one of whom I'm told may now be in custody.' He said had a meeting with Jean Kennedy Smith, then US ambassador to Ireland, who assured him the Department of State would do everything it could to assist but said this had no impact on the level of co-operation provided by An Garda Síochána. Mr Griffith said the disappearance of their daughter took a very considerable toll on her parents, John, now deceased, and Nancy. 'Obviously there was a lot of stress that came out of this and the McCarricks got divorced.' He said he would like to know what prompted an arrest in the case after so long but he remains hopeful the case will be resolved for the family. An Garda Síochána said they did not respond on individual cases but have a policy of appointing family liaison officers in major cases.

Irish Times
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‘Behind each figure is a vulnerable child in care': Court kept in dark about 400 without social workers
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