
Jozef Puska ‘not in a good mood' on day of Ashling Murphy murder, court told
Earlier on the day that Jozef Puska murdered
Ashling Murphy
, he was 'a bit sad' and seemed like he had a 'problem he didn't want to share with anyone', the
Central Criminal Court
has heard.
Lubomir Puska jnr (38) told gardaí two days after the murder that his brother, Jozef Puska, was 'not in a good mood' and the family became concerned when he left that afternoon and didn't return. He said he didn't see his brother again that day.
Two days after that first statement, Lubomir jnr returned to Tullamore Garda Station and apologised for lying. He said he had, in fact, seen Jozef again that night, soon after 9pm. He said Jozef arrived at the house they shared in Lynally Grove, Mucklagh, just outside Tullamore, looking like he had been beaten up.
The trial previously heard that Jozef Puska has been convicted of murdering Ms Murphy, a 23-year-old schoolteacher, on the afternoon of January 12th, 2022. Ms Murphy was exercising by the canal near Tullamore when Jozef Puska stabbed her repeatedly in the neck.
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Jozef, Lubomir jnr and another brother, Marek (36), lived at the house in Lynally Grove with their wives Viera Gaziova (38) and Jozefina Grundzova (31) and 14 children.
Lubomir jnr and Marek are accused of withholding information that was crucial to the investigation into Ms Murphy's murder in January 2022. Ms Grundzova and Ms Gaziova, are accused of impeding Jozef's apprehension or prosecution by burning the clothes he wore when he murdered Ms Murphy.
Each accused has pleaded not guilty.
Det Gda Joanne O'Sullivan on Tuesday told prosecution senior counsel Sean Gillane that Lubomir jnr made voluntary statements at Tullamore Garda Station on January 14th and 16th, 2022.
In his first statement, Lubomir jnr said he first saw his brother in the early afternoon that day. He seemed 'a bit sad, not in a good mood', Lubomir jnr said.
He added: 'He seemed to me like a person who doesn't want anyone to know what is biting him inside. Some kind of problem he didn't want to share with anyone.'
In his second statement, after Lubomir jnr apologised for lying, he said that when Jozef arrived home on the night of the 12th, it looked like he had been struck on the forehead. When Jozef complained of a pain in the stomach, Lubomir jnr said he looked and saw three lacerations on his brother's abdomen.
Jozef insisted that nothing had happened, Lubomir jnr said, and didn't say where he had been.
He said their parents arrived a short time later and took Jozef to their home in Dublin.
When gardaí asked why he had not told the truth in his previous statement, he said: 'It felt strange to tell on my brother. I never had to do it before.' He said he came back to tell the truth, adding: 'I feel better now that I told the truth. I feel better now.'
The trial continues before Ms Justice Caroline Biggs and a jury of seven men and five women.
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Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
Letters to the Editor, June 5th: On immigration, trade union dues and red squirrels
Sir, – Michael McDowell (' EU cannot ignore what's happening in Poland and the Netherlands ,' Opinion, June 4th) presents a cynical view of so called 'EU fragility' in the face of populism. The real threat to European stability is not migration, but far-right nationalism and the failure of democrats to sufficiently oppose it. EU immigration policy is being misrepresented by people like Mr McDowell. According to Eurostat, more than 72 per cent of non-EU immigrants of working age in the EU are employed, a figure that exceeds employment rates in many native-born populations. These individuals are not a burden; they are essential to keeping European economies functioning, particularly in care, construction, and the service and transport industries. READ MORE Instead of platforming opposition to immigration, European leaders should be articulating an opposition to fascist ideologies now resurgent across the world. The lesson of the 1930s was that appeasement emboldens extremists. Migration scapegoating is nothing less than cowardice in the face of this new fascism. The EU faces a demographic crisis. Eurostat projects that by 2050 the EU's working-age population will shrink by nearly 50 million. Without inward migration, welfare systems will become unsustainable. The only viable path forward is a managed migration system that upholds European values while addressing real economic needs. Poland and the Netherlands may be warning signs, but not for the reasons Mr McDowell suggests. The real crisis is not federalism, but the failure to confront the anti-democratic forces undermining it from within. – Yours, etc, DECLAN DOYLE, Kilkenny. Whither the weather? Sir, – In this time of world chaos and such turmoil, I was comforted in my bed early this morning listening to the weather forecast to hear that the showers heading in our direction in the Northwest were organised as opposed to scattered as predicted elsewhere in the country. We always knew we were different up here in Donegal and as regards the weather can we speak urgently with the organiser? – Yours, etc, JOHN O'CONNELL, Letterkenny, Co Donegal. Paying trade union dues Sir, – The trade union Fórsa has called on the Government to 'require workers who benefit from salary deals . . . to pay dues or subscriptions [to trade unions] even if they are not members' in order to prevent them from 'free-riding' on the benefits of those deals (' Public sector union calls for non-members benefiting from salary deals to be forced to pay dues ,' June 2nd). The obvious question is, if the Government was to effectively force workers to join trade unions, then why stop there? Should people also be forced to donate to Fine Gael and Fianna Fáil, to prevent them from 'free-riding' on government decisions which they benefit from? Or what about forcing people to join a church and contribute to it, to prevent them from 'free-riding' on the prayers of others? The possibilities are endless. Would Fórsa also support these outcomes? Thankfully, we have a Constitution which protects freedom of association and prevents the State from forcing anyone to join or contribute directly to any private organisation. The general secretary of Fórsa is paid €186,000 per annum, three times the average salary of the public sector workers who they want to force to fund its operations. The suggestion that the Oireachtas should enforce some form of 'closed shop' to pay for this harks back to a time decades ago when trade unions expected, as of right, a 'cut' of any benefits gained by workers. – Yours etc BARRY WALSH, Clontarf, Dublin 3. Miracle required Sir, – Stephen O'Sullivan reflects on the unhappy fate of 'people who have borne the title of 'tsar' in its myriad linguistic variations' (Letters, June 3rd). Among those he lists is Karl I of Austria-Hungary. While his fate at the end of the first World War was indeed unfortunate, it seems that he enjoys the very best of what the afterlife has to offer, having been beatified by Pope John Paul II in 2004 – and the cause for his canonisation is active. Another miracle is required for his canonisation. Maybe we should pray to him to solve the housing crisis in Ireland. Interceding with him for that miracle would likely be more efficacious than appointing a 'housing tsar'. – Yours, etc, FELIX M LARKIN, Cabinteely, Dublin 18. Funding the arts Sir, – The recent controversy surrounding the Arts Council's €6.6 million spend on a failed IT project invites a deeper conversation – not only about financial oversight, but about how arts funding is structured in this country. Too often, when additional money flows into the sector, it's accompanied by a parallel growth in consultancy, compliance, and oversight roles. These positions are not always filled by those with lived artistic experience, and are rarely held to the performance standards expected in sectors like tech or finance. The result? Those around the arts often prosper more reliably than those who actually make it. While artists are frequently required to demonstrate tangible outcomes or community impact – sometimes before the work even exists – those in administrative or consultancy roles tend to operate with far less visible scrutiny. Much of the current funding model treats art as product, not provocation or inquiry. The application process is often invasive, time-consuming, and artistically irrelevant – better designed to reward those fluent in institutional language than those pushing creative boundaries. The hoops increasingly serve funders more than artists. One wonders whether Joyce or Stravinsky would have made it through. If we are serious about supporting artistic excellence, we must start by trusting artists – with funding, time, space, and mentorship – and by acknowledging that not all valuable outcomes can be measured in neat reports or footfall figures. If a growing share of arts funding is funnelled into administrative structures and underperforming consultancy contracts, while artists continue to struggle for basic support, then we're not just failing artists – we're failing taxpayers too. Public investment in the arts should enable creation, not bureaucracy. – Yours etc, YVONNE O'REILLY, Terenure, Dublin. Killings in Gaza Sir, – Just when we thought it could not get any worse, it does. Killing people who are desperate to secure food for themselves and their families is absolutely appalling and inhuman. One can only assume that this is the plan of the Israeli government, regardless of how they try to justify their behaviour. There is no justification for what they are doing and the international community needs to demand they stop and then hold the Israeli government to account. I suspect that the vast majority of the Israeli people would not support what is happening in Gaza. Unfortunately, they do not see what we see on a daily basis. Of course, we all condemn what happened on October 7th 2023 and we want all the remaining hostages to be released. However, what happened does not and cannot justify what the Israeli government is doing. The US also needs to step up in defence of innocent children, women and men. Their silence is deafening and it is giving the Israeli government the support they need to keep doing these terrible and inhuman acts. – Yours, etc, PAULA MOLLOY, Dublin 13. Use of word 'mongrels' Sir, – I would like to respond to your online headline of Saturday, May 31st, which quotes Prof Bríona Nic Dhiarmada – 'We Irish were never homogeneous. Always hybrids, always mongrels'. The first settlers of Ireland, Western European hunter-gatherers from approximately 8000 BC, were few and were eventually absorbed by Neolithic farmers arriving from 6000 years ago. That small population was in turn replaced by Bronze Age settlement starting around 2500 BC. There is genetic evidence to suggest the farmers were overwhelmed by the metallurgists. Around 80-85 per cent of Irish males carry the R1b-M269 haplogroup from this Bronze Age settlement. This is a simplified example from the hugely complex area of study on genetic variation in Ireland, but nonetheless it is true. Later invasions by Vikings, Anglo-Normans, the English plantations, and normal migration have had modest effects on genetic continuity from the 4500-year-old Bronze Age settlements of Ireland. Distinct ancestral genetic contributions noted among the Japanese population, or the Egyptian population, as random examples, would not lead, I hope, to their people ever being described as mongrels. A wholly homogeneous tribe would be extremely rare on earth, but that doesn't stop us recognising and respecting other people's tribal ethnicities. While the Irish have happily welcomed many to our land, it must be noted that geographical placement and low ancestral mobility has meant that, contrary to the rather startling descriptors used in your headline, we have been for at least four millennia a relatively homogenous, indigenous people. – Yours, etc, DEIRDRE CALLERY, Blacklion, Co Cavan. Sir, – As an Irish woman, I am deeply offended and appalled by the use of the derogatory term 'mongrels' in reference to the Irish people. This language is not only disrespectful but entirely inaccurate. The author of the article in question appears to have a misguided understanding of Irish history. Attempting to portray the Irish as 'mongrelised' – whether as a verb or adjective – is an unacceptable distortion of our heritage. This kind of narrative constitutes a form of historical revisionism that seeks to manipulate public perception and undermine national identity. I strongly urge you to retract this article and replace it with an accurate and respectful representation of Irish history. Our people deserve to have their past told truthfully and with dignity. – Yours, etc, NIAMH HEVERIN, Co Mayo. Forensics and fires Sir, – Your article on the tragic deaths in a Connemara house fire ('Former US death row inmate dies in Connemara House Fire ', June 4th), refers to 'a forensic examination being carried out'. Also included is 'the results of the postmortems, along with the findings of the technical examination, will determine the course of the Garda investigation'. This would appear to relate to a possible criminal investigation. But what if there was no criminality involved? Will the public ever be informed of the cause of the fire so that preventive measures can be taken to avoid any recurrence? Many house fires involving fatalities take place in our country each year, but helpful information gleaned from follow-up investigations rarely finds its way into the public domain. Yours, etc, EAMON O'FLYNN, Merrion Road, Dublin 4 Walkway economics Sir, – It has been calculated that the estimated economic impact on Bray and Greystones of the closure of the 7km cliff walk is an annual reduction in spending of ¤18.4 million. Does this mean our failure to open a 250km coastal walkway from Carlingford to Rosslare is causing a ¤657 million reduction in spending, That would be a total ¤2.6 billion spending reduction over four years. I suspect this idea of a new walkway will be like my new theory of inertia, it just won't gain momentum. – Yours, etc, DERMOT O'ROURKE, Lucan, Dublin. Tomb of Mary O'Connell Sir, I refer to the piece by Justine McCarthy on the tomb of Mary O'Connell on Abbey Island, Derrynane (Opinion, May 30th). As a member of the O'Connell family, we fully agree that the tomb needs restoration and are actively engaged in this task. Work was commissioned over a year ago before being halted in consultation with the OPW on the technical details on the best way to approach such restoration. Indeed, we are in the process of taking advice from various experts who are experienced in this type of project, including advice from the Glasnevin Trust. Funding is not the issue. We would wish this process to go much faster and I take responsibility for its tardiness. Unfortunately, it is turning out to be more complex than a bike shed! This is both a historic monument and a family resting place for my parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and other members of my family through the ages. Indeed, my wife and I hope to join them in the (hopefully) distant future. We are inordinately proud of the women in the family, including both Mary and The Liberator's grand mother, Mháire Ní Dhuibh O'Donoghue, and their own contributions to Irish history as well as my mother, Dr Una O'Connell, who was an early pioneer as a female consultant in the NHS. I have a great deal of respect for Justine's journalism and her many excellent articles. However, it would have been preferable not to use a family grave for an article about respect of women, however commendable such an objective. I was also surprised that the Liberator's active promotion of women's rights was not mentioned but that is for another (soon) day. – Yours, etc, DANIEL O'CONNELL, Great, great, great grandson of the Liberator, Co Kerry. Squirrel spotting Sir, – Noting recent correspondence about red squirrels, one place where they may be found is the churchyard of St Luke's in Formby, near Liverpool, which is also the burial place of Percy French. Visiting his grave, I have often sat quietly on a bench and watched them - far more appealing than their ubiquitous grey relatives. – Yours, etc , PAUL GRIFFIN, Liverpool.


Irish Times
3 hours ago
- Irish Times
Suggestions for solving the housing crisis
Sir, – Building on Pat Leahy's excellent observation that the Government's response to the housing crisis is barely at the mildly urgent level ( 'Housing emergency? Ireland is not even acting at the level of mildly urgent' , June 2nd), may I suggest a suitable response that addresses the supply side issues currently faced? 1) All Ministers, civil servants, planners, and local authority heads involved in the planning process and the delivery of critical infrastructure such as water and electricity – as well as TDs, Senators and local councillors who make representations on behalf of objectors in their constituency, members of the judiciary who make planning decisions, serial objectors and owners of derelict properties – to be made homeless and put on the housing waiting list. 2) Keep the above on the waiting list until the housing crisis is marked as 'solved'. Perhaps this might focus minds accordingly. All without the need to offer someone ¤450,000 per annum. – Yours, etc, READ MORE RORY J WHELAN, Drogheda, Co Meath.


Irish Times
4 hours ago
- Irish Times
Two bunches of flowers lie outside Fairgreen Shopping Centre following ‘terrible' fatal shooting
The marks of a concentrated number of shots can be seen in the 'o' of the Tesco sign at Fairgreen Shopping Centre in Co Carlow. Outside the premises, two bunches of flowers have been laid close to where gunman Evan Fitzgerald died on Sunday evening. The busy centre was the scene of chaos and fear, when at 6.15pm, as shoppers filled their trolleys for the week ahead, the 22-year-old, from Kiltegan, Co Wicklow, entered carrying a shotgun. He discharged shots into the air a number of times, causing shoppers to flea. Outside the building, he fatally wounded himself after being challenged by gardaí. No one else was shot during the incident. On Wednesday, Geraldine Nolan (64), who regularly shops at the Tesco, sat in a coffee shop in the centre with her five-month-old grandson on her lap. READ MORE [ Carlow gunman Evan Fitzgerald had bail conditions relaxed prior to trial date Opens in new window ] She was 'shocked' by the 'terrible' events that occurred here days earlier, she says. She is mindful of the effect witnessing the shooting will have on people working in the centre at the time and glad workers and customers were not seriously injured. Her thoughts too are with the deceased, she said, : 'It's hard on his family too.' Her daughter Vanessa (33) is also coming to terms with the shock what occurred in their locality. 'You don't expect something like that to happen in a small town. It's not something that's normalised,' she says. John Brophy, manager of the centre, says uncertainty pervaded in the aftermath of the shooting and it was 'very hard to know what was going on'. However, gardaí, fire services and bomb squad were 'exemplary in the way they conducted themselves over the couple of days', he says. At the time of the incident, Tesco was the only shop still open in the centre, he says. [ Carlow gunman Evan Fitzgerald (22) had 'a fascination with firearms' Opens in new window ] He is mindful that security staff, Tesco employees and customers witnessed the shooting. The deceased young man and his family are also in his thoughts, and he is keen that they are 'respected', he says. Counselling is being provided to the Tesco employees and the centre's security staff. In Carlow town's Primary Care Centre, the Health Service (HSE) has implemented a counselling service for the public to avail of in the aftermath of the event. A HSE representative said the service has been 'busy'.