 LOTTERIES AND OTHER HOLD-UPS .  From 'New Hibernia' magazine , April 1987. No , no regrets .
LOTTERIES AND OTHER HOLD-UPS .  From 'New Hibernia' magazine , April 1987. No , no regrets .   Nor none belonging to me . No anniversaries . 
  Ireland has had more than her fair share of the past .   No expecting her to think of the future . Let her catch up with the present . Happenings , not dates , are important in life . 
Whenever anybody asked Aunt Molly to buy 
  a Sweepstakes ticket ,   she'd cluck her tongue and look reproachfully at Uncle Jack , or in his general direction .  Mention some fella like the adenoidal compere , 
  Bart Bastable ,   or tell a story about a winning ticket being flogged by 
  Lucky Coady's ,  and me poor uncle's name was taken in vain .  Lost mass , he did .  Always lost mass . Uncle Jack must have lost more mass than 
  Martin Luther!    Aunt Molly used to say 
 -   " Don't talk to me about your Uncle Jack !  He's as useful as a hole in a bucket . He'd take a sieve to a well . Like Larry McHale's dog he'd walk a step of the road with anyone . And he never meets anybody but beggars .  If he went out with a gypsy he'd come back with a tinker . Never knew anybody but dossers and tramps .  'Molly' , he'd say to me , ' I was in a fella's company tonight and honest to God , how he's not on the stage !  Such gas ! You'd have paid to hear him . An honour to buy him a drink .'  "    And of course Uncle Jack did .  Buy the drink , that is
.......  (MORE LATER). THE HEAVY HAND OF THE LAW .......Allegations of Garda brutality only hit the headlines intermittently .  But the problem may be much more widespread than most people imagine . Last year out-of-court settlements of cases involving members of the Garda cost the taxpayer over €1 million . What's going on ?  From  'MAGILL'  magazine , April 2003 . By Mairead Carey. Dublin North-Central
THE HEAVY HAND OF THE LAW .......Allegations of Garda brutality only hit the headlines intermittently .  But the problem may be much more widespread than most people imagine . Last year out-of-court settlements of cases involving members of the Garda cost the taxpayer over €1 million . What's going on ?  From  'MAGILL'  magazine , April 2003 . By Mairead Carey. Dublin North-Central   competes for its place at the top of the complaints league with  
  Dublin South Central ,   which includes 
  Pearse Street , Kevin Street and Donnybrook Garda Stations .   Until this year  
 (ie 2003)    the Garda Complaints Board   compiled statistics to show complaints per head of population .  The two 
  Dublin   central divisions 
  'won'   hands down !  In 2000 , 
  Dublin North Central   had 
  27.6 complaints per 10,000 people compared to 1.5 in Waterford/Kilkenny .   Less than one per cent of all complaints to 
  the Garda Complaints Board ,   according to its last report , resulted in a 
  criminal prosecution ,   although the figures will show an increase this year as a result of 
  the May Day riots: seven gardai are facing charges as a result of clashes with protesters .   In 
  2001 , almost 200 complaints were passed on to the   (State)   Director of Public Prosecutions  (DPP)   but because of delays in processing the complaints 
  the vast majority were never acted upon .    Summary prosecutions must commence within six months of the date of the offence .  Even 
  the Garda Complaints Board   itself admits that increasingly it is failing to provide completed investigation files to 
  the DPP   within the time limit . In its latest report it acknowledged that 
  "...in these circumstances the right of the DPP to consider whether a member of the Garda Siochana should be prosecuted arising from a complaint has effectively been removed .  The situation cannot be regarded as satisfactory....... " (MORE LATER). THE STRANGE STATE KILLING OF MAURICE O'NEILL ....... James Gogartys Tribunal reminiscences about the shooting dead of a Garda colleague have resurrected a long-lost story of justice miscarried .From  'MAGILL' magazine , March 1999 . By ANTON McCABE . Harry White dived through a window into the night and shot his way through a garda cordon : hit twice in the leg , he collapsed in a clump of whins
THE STRANGE STATE KILLING OF MAURICE O'NEILL ....... James Gogartys Tribunal reminiscences about the shooting dead of a Garda colleague have resurrected a long-lost story of justice miscarried .From  'MAGILL' magazine , March 1999 . By ANTON McCABE . Harry White dived through a window into the night and shot his way through a garda cordon : hit twice in the leg , he collapsed in a clump of whins   half-a-mile from the house . For two cold October nights he lay wounded under the stars . 
 (Free State)   Soldiers scoured the area ;   a sympathrtic soldier found him , fed him , got him to shelter and finally escorted him by bicycle to 
  Dublin . It was 
  October 1946  before 
  Harry White was finally captured on a lonely mountain farm on the Derry side of the Sperrins .   Four days later , he was 'released' from 
  Crumlin Road Jail ,   bundled into an RUC car and driven to a bridge on the Armagh-Monaghan road :  a Garda car stopped on the other side , and he was bundled across the border without the slightest pretence of judicial process .   Six weeks later , at 
  the Special Criminal Court in Dublin ,  he was sentenced to death .   Sean McBride was defence counsel .   Under cross-examination , a detective admitted he and his companions  
   had fired on three men in the passageway .  Of thirty to forty bullets fired in the lane ,   only two were ever produced - neither of those was the bullet that 
  killed  State Detective Mordaunt .   Instead , a pathologist claimed that the hole in 
  Mordaunt's   skull was too small to have been made by a shot from any of the Gardai's 
  .45 revolvers , despite the fact there was evidence some had weapons of smaller calibre .  Evidence was produced that Garda fire had hit targets well away from the lane.......  (MORE LATER).