logo
Two gardaí facing corruption-related charges appear in midlands court

Two gardaí facing corruption-related charges appear in midlands court

Irish Timesa day ago
Two
gardaí
who appeared in court in the midlands are being sent forward for trial at the Circuit Criminal Court on a number of corruption-related charges.
Sgt James Muldowney of Greenville, Caltra, Ballinasloe, Co Galway, and Garda Brian Carroll of Ballinaboy, Kilteevan, Co Roscommon, are serving members in the Mayo-Roscommon-Longford Garda division.
The two accused appeared at Longford District Court on Monday before Judge Michael Connellan. Neither spoke during the brief preliminary hearing.
Det Sgt Paul Dowling of the Garda Anti-Corruption Unit (GACU) gave evidence of arresting and charging the defendants on July 28th last.
READ MORE
Garda Carroll (42) has been charged with disclosing confidential information on September 9th, 2021, to another individual at Esquires Coffee, N4 Axis Centre, Longford, and attempting to obstruct the course of justice, contrary to Section 62 (1) and (2) of the Garda Síochána Act.
The charge stipulates that he obtained information 'in the course of carrying out duties in this office, employment contract or business or other arrangements, knowing the disclosure of said information was likely to have a harmful effect'.
Garda Carroll is also accused of perverting the course of justice, where it is alleged he 'damaged his mobile phone before a Garda search of his home' at Ballinaboy, Kilteevan, on March 16th, 2022.
Sgt Muldowney has been charged with stealing a sum of cash at a property at Palace Drive, Ardnacassa, Longford, on September 29th, 2021.
The more senior officer is also charged with allegedly using harm, threatening, menacing, intimidating or putting fear in another person 'with the intention of causing the investigation or the course of justice to be obstructed or interfered with' on January 17th, 2024, contrary to Section 41 of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999.
Det Sgt Dowling said Garda Carroll was arrested at Granard Garda station on July 28th last shortly after 10am and he was charged with the two counts.
He stated Garda Carroll was cautioned and made no reply when the charges were put to him.
Dt Sgt Dowling said Sgt Muldowney was also arrested at Granard Garda station shortly after 10am on July 28th, and he also made no reply when cautioned after the charges were put to him.
Det Sgt Dowling told Judge Connellan that the
Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP)
had directed trial by indictment in respect of both men.
The DPP has agreed both accused could be sent forward on a 'signed plea, should this arise'.
Det Sgt Dowling told Judge Connellan the book of evidence may be completed and ready within eight weeks.
Niall Flynn, BL, defending, said his client, Garda Carroll, was protesting his innocence and 'anxious to clear his name'.
Judge Connellan remanded Garda Carroll on continuing bail to appear again at Longford District Court on October 14th next.
Solicitor Diarmuid Quinn, for Sgt Muldowney, said his client had requested he be excused from attending court on the next occasion if the book of evidence was not yet ready.
Judge Connellan agreed to the request and directed Sgt Muldowney not to make contact, directly or indirectly, with the witnesses in the case.
He remanded Sgt Muldowney on continuing bail until October 14th next at Longford District Court.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Murdered railway worker Ian Walsh is remembered at funeral service
Murdered railway worker Ian Walsh is remembered at funeral service

Irish Times

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Murdered railway worker Ian Walsh is remembered at funeral service

The family of murdered Irish Rail employee Ian Walsh, who was found stabbed to death in his Tipperary home, gathered on Tuesday at a simple cremation service. A signaller based at Kent Station in Cork city, Mr Walsh was a railway enthusiast who also helped organise tours for others keenly interested in trains. Friends he had made while promoting Ireland's railway heritage were among dozens of mourners. The cremation took place to some of Mr Walsh's favourite songs including recordings of Christy Moore's Lisdoonvarna, the Saw Doctors' N17 and Queen's Breakthru, the video for which featured the band performing on a speeding train and open-top carriage. READ MORE A native of Co Waterford, Mr Walsh is survived by his mother Breda Forristal, brother Paul, uncle Mick Forristal and extended family. The cremation service took place at the Island Crematorium in Ringaskiddy near Cork Harbour. Mr Walsh was found with stab wounds to the torso in a downstairs room of his home at Ravenswood Estate in Carrick-on-Suir by gardaí and family members when they called to check on him at around 3.30am on August 4th. Gardaí launched a murder investigation after a postmortem examination by State Pathologist Dr Yvonne McCartney at University Hospital Waterford. An incident room was established in Clonmel following the postmortem results. So far gardaí have taken more than 100 witness statements, including ones from friends and neighbours, in an attempt to piece together Mr Walsh's last known movements. Gardaí are also continuing to trawl through hundreds of hours of CCTV footage from homes and commercial premises throughout Carrick-on Suir, including the Ravenwood and Cregg Road area as well as the town centre and approach roads. Officers are examining social media platforms for posts that may shed light on who would have wanted to kill Mr Walsh, who lived alone in a semidetached house a kilometre from the town centre. Divers from the Garda Water Unit were continuing to search the river Suir, about 1.5km from the crime scene, for a possible murder weapon. So far they have covered more than a kilometre of riverbed. Investigators are tight-lipped about progress, but are understood to be keeping an open mind on a motive for the murder of Mr Walsh, who was a familiar figure cycling around Carrick-on-Suir including along the popular Blueway connecting the town with Clonmel. They have renewed their appeal for anyone with information to come forward, including any road users who were in the area of Cregg Road, Carrick-On-Suir, between 8pm on August 1st and 3.30am on August 4th. Additionally, anyone who may have camera or dashcam footage and was travelling in the area at the time is asked to make it available to gardaí at Clonmel station on 052 617-7640, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111 or any station.

President condemns ‘despicable attacks' on Indian people as extra Garda patrols deployed in parts of Dublin
President condemns ‘despicable attacks' on Indian people as extra Garda patrols deployed in parts of Dublin

Irish Times

time12 hours ago

  • Irish Times

President condemns ‘despicable attacks' on Indian people as extra Garda patrols deployed in parts of Dublin

President Michael D Higgins has condemned recent attacks on Indian people living in Ireland as a 'stark contradiction' to the values the Irish public hold dear. Mr Higgins said any person who has been 'drawn into such behaviour through manipulation or provocation is to be unequivocally condemned', as he noted that many of the alleged perpetrators of the assaults were under the age of 18. 'Whether such provocation stems from ignorance or from malice, it is essential to acknowledge the harm that it is causing,' he said. His statement came on Tuesday as An Garda Síochána began deploying additional patrols in parts of Dublin in response to the recent rise in reports of attacks on Indian nationals. READ MORE In addition to the patrols in Dublin, senior officers have been assigned to investigate the incidents reported to the force, some of which are being investigated as potential hate crimes . Garda juvenile liaison officers have also started engaging with youth and other groups in an attempt to discourage future incidents and offer support. Garda headquarters announced the measures in a statement on Tuesday. It said it 'is co-ordinating activity across the country to support the Indian community' which 'includes proactive engagement with the community, representative groups, and the Indian embassy'. Garda management is also engaging with social media companies regarding the posting of videos targeting members of the Indian community and other minorities. Mr Higgins said such attacks 'diminish all of us and obscure the immeasurable benefits the people of India have brought to the life of this country'. Of the Indian community, he said 'their presence, their work, their culture, have [all] been a source of enrichment and generosity to our shared life'. He said the people of Ireland 'are all mindful of the immense contribution this community has made, and continues to make, to so many aspects of Irish life, in medicine, nursing, the caring professions, in cultural life, in business and enterprise'. There were 78,000 Indian nationals living in the State in 2023, according to population estimates from the Central Statistics Office . Indian nurses accounted for a fifth of all registered nurses in Ireland last year, despite the community amounting to less than 2 per cent of the total population. The President said he wishes 'to express the deep sense of gratitude we all in Ireland owe to the Indian community here'. He said when he met India's minister of external affairs earlier this year and they 'discussed how much our histories share the experience of paths towards independence'. He named Irish-Indian suffragist Margaret Cousins, who established the All India Women's Conference in 1927, and 'the exchange of expertise' as Ireland and India drafted post-independence constitutions in the early 20th century as proof that 'Ireland's connections with India are neither recent nor superficial'. 'Ireland has long been shaped by migration, both outward and inward,' he said. 'Those who left our shores carried our culture and values into faraway lands, often depending on the generosity of strangers.' Mr Higgins said public spaces, including the internet, 'should never be poisoned from messages of hate or incitement to violence' which 'damage and corrode the most fundamental and enduring instincts of Irishness' such as friendship and care. 'That shared human experience should remain at the heart of how we treat those who have come to make their lives here. To forget that is to lose a part of ourselves.'

Two gardaí accused of a number of charges to stand trial
Two gardaí accused of a number of charges to stand trial

Sunday World

time14 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Two gardaí accused of a number of charges to stand trial

Garda Brian Carroll (42) and Sergeant James Muldowney (47) have a number of charges against them. The two gardai appeared before a sitting of Longford District Court. Two gardaí are to stand trial in the Circuit Criminal Court accused of a number of charges in the midlands. Garda Brian Carroll (42) of Ballinaboy, Kilteevan, Co Roscommon, and Sergeant James Muldowney (47) of Greenville, Caltra, Ballinasloe, Co Galway, appeared at a sitting of Longford District Court before Judge Michael Connellan on Monday Garda Carroll was charged with disclosing confidential information to a named male at Esquires Coffee, N4 Axis Centre, Longford on September 12, 2021 while knowing the release of such was 'likely to have a harmful effect' under Section 62 of the Garda Síochána Act 2005. He was further charged with attempting to pervert the course of justice by damaging his mobile phone prior to the lawful search of his home on March 16, 2022. His garda colleague, Sgt Muldowney's charges related to allegations of theft and attempting to obstruct the course of justice. The two gardai appeared before a sitting of Longford District Court. News in 90 Seconds - August 12th The first of those is alleged to have occurred on September 29, 2021 at Palace Drive, Ardnacassa, Longford, where the accused is alleged to have stolen a sum of cash. The more recent and second charge alleges that Sgt Muldowney did 'harm, threaten, menace, intimidate, put in fear' a named male witness at Lanesboro Street, Roscommon, on January 17, 2024 with the intention of causing an investigation to be 'obstructed, perverted or interfered' with contrary to Section 41 of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999. The gardaí are both serving officers attached to the Mayo/Roscommon/Longford Garda Division. Detective Sergeant Paul Dowling gave evidence of having arrested the two men by appointment at Granard Garda Station on July 28. He said both officers made no reply when the charges were put to them before giving the pair true copies of each charge sheet linked to the investigation. He said directions from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) had been received, instructions which had paved the way for both cases to go before the Circuit Criminal Court. Det Sgt Dowling also revealed the DPP would be consenting to one or both officers going forward on a signed guilty plea 'should that arise' in due course. He consequently applied for an eight-week adjournment to allow for the preparation and servicing of a book of evidence. Defence counsel for Garda Carroll, Niall Flynn BL, said his client remained anxious for that exercise to be expedited as swiftly as possible in light of the fact he had 'professed his innocence' from the outset and was very much eager to 'clear his name'. Diarmuid Quinn, defence solicitor for Sgt Muldowney, said his client was likewise consenting to an eight-week remand. In doing so, he asked for the accused to be excused on its return date should there be any hold-up in the servicing of a book of evidence. Judge Connellan approved that request and sanctioned the State's application compelling Sgt Muldowney to refrain from contacting any prosecution witnesses in relation to the case either directly or indirectly. Both officers were consequently remanded on bail to a sitting of Longford District Court on October 14.

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