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Teen (19) was driving with eight people on car during Donegal rally weekend, court hears

Teen (19) was driving with eight people on car during Donegal rally weekend, court hears

BreakingNews.ie6 hours ago

A young man who had eight people on the roof and bonnet of his car while he was driving in Co Donegal has been ordered to make a €750 donation to charity.
Brian Mordaunt appeared at Letterkenny District Court charged with dangerous driving during the weekend of the Donegal International Rally on June 21st, 2024.
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Garda Sergeant Jim Collins told the court that a number of videos emerged on Snapchat of the bizarre incident.
Gardaí became aware of the incident and stopped Mordaunt in his car at a later stage.
The 19-year-old, who has no previous convictions, made full admissions and was apologetic to gardaí, the court was told.
Pictures of the car with the eight people hanging out of it were handed into court.
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Solicitor for the accused, Mr Patsy Gallagher, said his client's family are 'distraught' after the incident.
Mordaunt, who is from Clerihan, Clonmel in Co Tipperary, is an apprentice electrician.
He was in Co Donegal for the Donegal International Rally when the incident occurred at Pearse Road on June 21st last year.
Mr Gallagher said he had viewed the videos and said it was difficult to know if Mordaunt's car was actually moving or not and it certainly was not driving at any speed.
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He suggested the case was at the lower end of the dangerous driving levels and that his client does realise that what he did was stupid and that he had had full and frank conversations with his family about the matter.
The solicitor added that the accused man's family are distraught at what has happened and said it was inexcusable.
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"It is certainly not a situation where the family are taking this lightly," added Mr Gallagher.
Replying, Sergeant Collins said the evidence was that the car was certainly moving but not at any great speed.
Judge Ciaran Liddy said he would adjourn the case until September 15th to allow Mordaunt to make a donation of €750 to Cara House and pay a fine of €250.
If that is done, he said he will consider reducing the charge to one of careless driving and will also consider not disqualifying the accused.

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EXCLUSIVE My life was ruined by Tattle Life: Trolls lied about my business and claimed they were stalking me in person - so I exposed the site's gossip king
EXCLUSIVE My life was ruined by Tattle Life: Trolls lied about my business and claimed they were stalking me in person - so I exposed the site's gossip king

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EXCLUSIVE My life was ruined by Tattle Life: Trolls lied about my business and claimed they were stalking me in person - so I exposed the site's gossip king

A couple whose lives were ruined by ruthless trolls on a viral gossip site have laid bare the nightmare they endured - after 'menacing' anonymous posters would leave nasty comments, stalk them, and drive back and forth past their home. Neil and Donna Sands from Northern Ireland have fought back and were awarded £300,000 at the High Court of Justice in Northern Ireland in 2023 - after successfully suing the 'toxic' platform Tattle Life; whose founder was revealed to be a male vegan influencer who had penned a cookbook. Speaking to MailOnline, the pair explained that the past four years have been marred by the 'lonely' legal endeavour, and left them riddled with panic over what would be said online. Donna, who runs fashion label Sylkie, revealed how the online harassment started in 2021. She had briefly known that Tattle existed, but coming from a small village 'was never going to be on it or anything of the sort'. One afternoon, a friend called her and warned that people in her office were 'laughing' at a post on the message boards. 'It was horrible,' she continued, on discovering the 45-page thread. 'I've been working in fashion since I was 16, I started on the shop floor and really built a community. 'To watch a reputation just fall apart... I was just so upset.' Speaking on GMB this week, the pair detailed how defamatory comments about their enterprises 'completely misrepresented' everything they do and accused Donna of selling 'poor quality' clothes and 'over-representing' her prices. Neil said the trolls even went down to the 'molecular level' of finding information about their finances on Companies House and posting them on the site. 'It got more menacing overtime and eventually it got into stalking,' he added. 'There was lots of commentary about where we were, who we were in restaurants with, "we are watching you" stuff like that.' Some even turned to in person, and would tell the couple: 'We we can see you in this restaurant, we are looking at you right now.' Obsessive 'Tattlers' even started driving back and forth past their home and posted details of their house on Tattle Life threads dedicated to abusing them. 'It's just that most businesses need to have a social media presence these days,' Donna told MailOnline. 'And with these threads, it almost gets competitive with who can have the nastiest comment about it.' Overwhelmed, Donna and Neil reached out to the site and asked them to take the comments down, with the fashion founder's husband sending 'at least' five emails with the request. 'We begged him at one point,' Donna added. 'Eventually we had to take legal action.' The defamation case proved to be a 'lengthy' and technical process, as the couple had to prove that the remarks were indeed - defamatory. On another level, they were faced with the daunting task of digging into the site itself, which eventually led them to the 41-year-old British businessman behind the forum - Sebastian Bond. The website publisher, who also goes by alias Bastian Durward, used the fake name 'Helen McDougal' on Tattle Life. 'I was surprised and not surprised that it was a man pretending to be a woman,' Donna explained. 'Not to be mean to men of course, but I was just not surprised that it was a man portending to be a woman and pinning these women against each other - driving them to their darkest places.' Neil - who works in AI - explained how Tattle's mastermind was found following lengthy research on his digital footprints and any 'chinks in his armour'. 'It's tough,' he admitted. 'Even if you're just visiting the site, you're paying this guy money.' Elsewhere, investigation firm Nardello & Co has also spoken of their involvement , which included 'the piecing together of countless, disparate fragments of the operator's multiple online identities, aliases, and personas, amassed over the course of two decades'. 'Despite their sophistication, traces were left in the public record across the UK, including in the operator's online digital footprint,' said Alan Kennedy of the firm. 'Cases of anonymous harassment and online defamation of this nature are becoming increasingly common, complex and damaging.' Although the couple won their defamation case, Bond - whose legal team has in a letter to court confirmed he runs Tattle Life, but claimed they weren't aware of litigation (something Donna and Neil's team has disputed) - they admit their work is far from done. The couple are still waiting for the case review later this month, and want to highlight the severity of what the site has driven people to do - as well as the duress they're put under. 'We got married amid all this,' Donna - who has privately also dealt with health issues during this period - said. 'It's all been in the background when we should have been getting on with our lives. It breaks my heart.' 'Our story pales in comparison,' Neil added. 'Some of the messages we've gotten have been horrific, with the self harm and mental health issues people have grappled with because of the site. 'It's been really, really dark. People have had to completely shut down their businesses.' They specifically highlighted the case of Lisa Davies, who lost her husband Richard to Stage 4 stomach cancer, aged 37, in 2022. The Irish couple who unmasked him as Tattle Life, have shared the names of his alises on their social media - stating that he was masking under the false name as a site moderator, Helen McDougal To this day, the widow is receiving awful trolling on Tattle life from people who are convinced he did not pass away - and demanding to see a death certificate. Some people have even had child protective services come around after getting calls from anonymous online users - a tactic Neil says is often 'weaponised' by tattlers. 'That's the level of depravity you're looking at,' he added. However, the couple say the reaction to Bond's un-masking has been 'phenomenal' - with their Instagram post about the situation, shared over the weekend, being viewed more than 8.3 million times. 'We never wanted or expected to undertake this work, however when we discovered the hate site we were forced to take action,' they wrote. 'We are very grateful for your support, and hope that this serves as a reminder to those who want to attack others from behind a screen - that the internet is not an anonymous place. 'We will share more soon, but for today, we hope that this news will provide some peace to those affected by online hate and harassment, and that the internet can be a safer space for us all.' The pair are also taking their case to higher places, adding that they've been in touch with Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy about the matter. The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) - a public body sponsored by the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology - is also amid their goals, as is search engine Google. And what's more, Neil is working on a software that helps unmask trolls ethically. 'If you want to sat something, put your name on it,' he said. 'As we say, everyone has a right to free speech, but it's not free of consequences.' Speaking on ITV earlier this morning, Donna also revealed how popular British influencer Mrs Hinch reached out to her on the weekend and told the couple how she had been 'actively targeted' on Tattle Life. She added there may be a lot of 'big personalities' who have been abused on the gossip site but highlighted the 'small business owners' and lesser known micro-influencers who have also fallen victim. 'I have a modest following of 20,000 which was a community I curated for years,' she said. 'We all thought we were anonymous and that you could write whatever you want, but maybe now we can move forward positively and know that that's not the case.' For nearly a decade, since the site was set up in 2017, no one knew who ran Tattle Life, with the site's operator going under the fake name Helen McDougal. Many will be now surprised to learn the creator is in fact a man, who is the author and foodie behind plant-based recipe Instagram page Nest and Glow, which boasts 135,000 followers. For the past eight years, the vegan cookbook author he has secretly presided over the site, which makes an estimated £276,770 in Google Ad revenue every six months, according to figures from 2021. Following the court case, Neil and Donna got £150,000 each in damages, and the Court granted an injunctive relief to prevent Tattle Life from posting about the couple again. It was also ordered that the Sands' legal costs be paid, with 'further costs and third-party compliance expenses' amounting to £1.8 million. The thread about them was removed in May this year, but thousands and thousands of others remain. Awarding damages to the couple in December 2023, Mr Justice McAlinden hit out at Tattle Life, stating there was 'clearly a case of peddling untruths for profit'. 'It is the exercise of extreme cynicism - the calculated exercise of extreme cynicism,' he continued. 'Which in reality constitutes behaviour solely aimed at making profit out of people's misery. People facilitating this are making money out of it… protecting their income streams by protecting the identity of the individual posters.' Bond also had his assets frozen and must pay a cessation figure of £1,077,173 to have this order lifted. It's likely that deeply popular Tattle Life racked up a decent amount of money for Bond. As reported by The Guardian in 2021, the blog had 43.2 million visits in just six months of that year. The figures are still in the millions this year. In May, as per Similarweb, there were 11.5 million visits on the site, mostly from British users. It is also understood that Sebastian uses different names online - one of them being Bastian Durward - and owns a number of businesses across the world. Two of them, Mr Justice Colton confirmed, include UK-registered Yuzu Zest Limited and Hong Kong-registered Kumquat Tree Limited. According to Companies House information, the former is currently in liquidation but alleged to offer 'media representation services'. At a hearing last Thursday, the court saw a letter from Sebastian's legal team, sent to one of the plaintiffs, claiming he was the Tattle Life founder but was 'unaware of any legal proceedings against him'. The Sands legal representatives disputed that he was unaware. Tattle Life states on its site that it has a 'zero-tolerance policy to any content that is abusive, hateful, harmful and a team of moderators online 24/7 to remove any content that breaks our strict rules - often in minutes'. However, it adds that 'influencer marketing is insidious' and 'revolves around people that occupy the space between celebrity and friend to stealthy sell when in reality it's a parasocial relationship. 'It's an important part of a healthy, free and fair society for members of the public to have an opinion on those in a position of power and influence; that is why tattle exists. 'We allow people to express their views on businesses away from an influencers feed on a site where they would have to go out of their way to read, this is not trolling.' As reported per The Journal, Neil also said: 'We undertook this case not just for ourselves but for the many people who have suffered serious personal and professional harm through anonymous online attacks on this and other websites. 'We believe in free speech, but not consequence-free speech – particularly where it is intended to, and succeeds in, causing real-world damage to people's lives, livelihoods and mental health. We were in the fortunate position to be able to take the fight to these faceless operators, and it took a lot of time, effort and expense.'

Woman who killed baby in crash outside hospital has sentence reduced
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Woman who killed baby in crash outside hospital has sentence reduced

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Man (20) is one of the leading instigators in violent Limerick feud, court hears

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