 PADDY COONEY'S ARMY ....... Not since the earliest days of the State has the role of the Irish Army   (sic)  been under such intense scrutiny . And not since the war years has it had such a forceful political master as Patrick Mark Cooney .  From  'The Phoenix'  magazine , 3 February 1984 .
PADDY COONEY'S ARMY ....... Not since the earliest days of the State has the role of the Irish Army   (sic)  been under such intense scrutiny . And not since the war years has it had such a forceful political master as Patrick Mark Cooney .  From  'The Phoenix'  magazine , 3 February 1984 . One of the  "cures" which seems to be circulating in 
  Paddy Cooney's   brain-box is some sort of 
  'National (sic) Service'  ;  a "cure" which apparently would be acceptable to 
  Fianna Fail    as well ,  or at least to their 
 Defence Spokesman Sylvie Barrett .   Mr. Cooney   has been thinking about the 
  "...formation of a technical corps  where , in addition to receiving training  in particular skills , the young people concerned would have the benefit of service in a disciplined body with the advantages that that would bring for their personal characters ."  ('1169...'  Comment :  Sounds to us like the first step on the road towards establishing a conscript army , and doing so as cheaply as possible .  Besides , it's a bit rich to hear  any   Leinster House politician talk about  "personal character" .)It remains to be seen how far 
  Generalissimo Paddy Cooney   will develop this particular  "cure"  in the immediate future , but it looks as if the lack of necessary funds is enough to keep it in 
  Cooney's   closet for the time being .  However , out of that same  'closet' has leaped the issue of 
  State neutrality ,   which the man views as 
 "...a matter of expediency........." (MORE LATER).  KERRY GARDA CRISIS .......  There is a crisis among the Gardai in Kerry and it is much deeper than one of morale .  For years the Kerry Detective force has enjoyed a free hand in dealing with Section 30 cases in this heavily Republican county . But the free rein given in these cases has had the inevitably corrupting effect .  Now individual Gardai are being fingered for conduct that most of them had taken for normal : the heat is now on . Only the fall-guys remain to be named .......  From   'The Phoenix'    magazine ,  February 1985 . The Garda Superintendent
KERRY GARDA CRISIS .......  There is a crisis among the Gardai in Kerry and it is much deeper than one of morale .  For years the Kerry Detective force has enjoyed a free hand in dealing with Section 30 cases in this heavily Republican county . But the free rein given in these cases has had the inevitably corrupting effect .  Now individual Gardai are being fingered for conduct that most of them had taken for normal : the heat is now on . Only the fall-guys remain to be named .......  From   'The Phoenix'    magazine ,  February 1985 . The Garda Superintendent   who 
  investigated   the claims made by 
  Emmet Walsh   that he had been 
  beaten in custody   sent his findings to 
  the DPP , and charges against the Gardai were ordered :    furthermore , a charge of assault that 
  the Gardai   brought 
 against  Emmet Walsh   was withdrawn on the instructions of 
  the DPP . Detective Sergeant Tim O' Callaghan  and Detective Garda Con Sullivan  were found guilty in the District Court of assaulting Emmet Walsh and were given suspended sentences : there case is currently on appeal .   SERGEANT REDDINGTON : In an encounter of an entirely different kind , 
  senior Kerry Gardai   initiated a remarkable series of events following 
  internal disciplinary charges brought against Sergeant Reddington from Ballyduff , County Kerry :  in 1982 , Reddington was found guilty on seven different charges   arising out of a bungalow he had constructed in the town .  Later , a series of public meetings in the town heard several residents claim they had been 
   forced by senior Gardai into making false and incriminatory statements against Reddington ,   who was defended at the inquiry by a 
  Sergeant Michael Flanagan from Dublin .  Both 
  'The Kerryman'  newspaper  and 
  'The Irish Times' newspaper   printed statements , allegedly made by 
  Sergeant Michael Flanagan ,   saying that 
 Sergeant Reddington   was the victim of 
  a witch-hunt organised by senior Gardai Officers :   in 
  1984 ,   the two papers' editors ,  
  Douglas Gageby  and  Seamus McConville ,   and a news journalist from each paper , were summoned to appear at another inquiry , this time to hear 
  disciplinary charges against Garda Sergeant Michael Flanagan ;   the journalists were denied permission to bring solicitors with them and , on withdrawing from the inquiry , were summoned 
  under pain of prosecution   to appear at a reconvened session . 
The four then appeared 
  but refused to answer questions that would incriminate anybody   who might have made the 'witch-hunt' allegation .  The inquiry , whose last session was held in 
  October 1984 ,   has yet to reach a verdict on 
  Garda Sergeant Michael Flanagan ....... (MORE LATER). A HARD 'OUL STATION : LIFE ON THE STREETS .From  'NEW HIBERNIA' magazine , March 1987 .
A HARD 'OUL STATION : LIFE ON THE STREETS .From  'NEW HIBERNIA' magazine , March 1987 . The bell over the big steel door rings twice . 
 Gerry Fulham   makes his way over to answer it but , before he gets to it , it rings a third and fourth time .  He opens it to be faced by a weather-worn man in his late sixties but who , by all accounts , is only in his early fifties . The man looks at 
  Gerry   with a rather puzzled expression , and 
  Gerry   knew he had been drinking - he was drunk as a lord . Drunk as ten lords . It is only 6.15 in the evening and it is a sign that another eventful evening in 
  the Simon Community's shelter for the homeless   is about to begin . This scene will be re-enacted several more times as the night progresses . 
As 'Project Leader' in 
 the Shelter on Lower Buckingham Street in Dublin ,   this scene is familiar to 
  Gerry Fulham :   he is a big , burly and bearded man and firmly respected by both the staff and residents of 
  the Simon Shelter .   To some of the more bellicose and intoxicated residents his burly stature seems almost ominous . One of them tells me that he could take on ten 
  Gerry Fulhams   in his day , but would'nt dare do it now . He is far too drunk to even kick the wind out of a paper bag , and is content to shower abuse on some of his fellow residents instead .   
This Simon Shelter   is an old fire-brigade station : from the outside it looks drab , cold and very impersonal .  Inside , it is much the same . As you enter the small re-inforced steel door a stale stench greets you . But you get used to it after a while . A notice-board has a circular to all staff asking them to help  
  Brendan Ryan    in his campaign to get elected to 
  the (State) Seanad* :   ( * '1169....'  Comment - .....a well-known stomping ground for the poor and destitute..)   Ryan  is said to have spent most of his time working for 
  the homeless in the State   over the past decade and , according to some , without him there would be no 
  Simon Community .   Another notice advertises to the residents that there will be bingo on Sunday at 3.00 pm
.......(MORE LATER).