Death of Michael J. Reynolds

Michael J. Reynolds (1945 – 11 September 1975) was a member of the Garda Síochána, who was posthumously awarded the Scott Medal for bravery in 1976.

Incident at St. Anne's Park

A native of Kilconnell, Ballinasloe, Reynolds was a member of the Garda Síochána (the police force of the Republic of Ireland), who, following an armed robbery at the Bank of Ireland, Killester, Dublin, on the afternoon of 11 September 1975 gave chase to the raiders who made off with £7,000 in a getaway car, narrowly avoiding a collision with Reynolds' own private car in the process. Reynolds who was off duty at the time was accompanied by his wife Vera and their two-year-old daughter.

"Believing the car to have been stolen, Reynolds went in pursuit, the chase eventually reaching speeds of sixty miles per hour through a maze of Dublin suburbs. The four raiders abandoned the car at St. Anne's Park, Raheny, and attempted to continue their flight on foot still hotly pursued by Garda Reynolds who had driven into the Park almost immediately behind them. Reynolds, who was unarmed, seized and dragged to the ground the nearest of the robbers who, burdened with their loot, were now beginning to tire. On seeing their comrade in Reynolds' hands one of the robbers called in vain for the Garda to release the man, and, when he did not do so, the robber shot Reynolds in the head."

Aftermath

Reynolds died in hospital under two hours later. Two of the raiders, initially sentenced to death, were sentenced to life.[1] Vera Reynolds, his widow, accepted her husband's Scott Gold Medal at Templemore on 16 July 1976.

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