Fennelly Commission

The Fennelly commission, formally the Commission of Investigation (Certain Matters relative to An Garda Síochána and other persons), is a commission of investigation established in April 2014 by the current government of Ireland to investigate several controversies involving the Garda Síochána. The sole member of the commission is Nial Fennelly, a retired justice of the Supreme Court. Fennelly identified three separate strands within the commission's terms of reference:

  1. Garda phone recordings scandal: unauthorised recordings made since the 1980s of conversations to and from some Garda stations (other than 999 emergency telephone number calls, recorded as a matter of course).
  2. Death of Sophie Toscan du Plantier: evidence from phone recordings at Bandon Garda station of misconduct in the investigation
  3. Martin Callinan: circumstances of his retirement as Garda Commissioner in March 2014.

Interim report: Callinan

In November 2014, the Government requested Fennelly to investigate the Martin Callinan issue first and issue an interim report on it before dealing with the other two issues. Callinan's leaving office was described at the time, by himself and the government, as a decision to retire; however it was described by the media as a resignation, and the opposition accused Taoiseach Enda Kenny of having effectively sacked Callinan. The requested interim report was issued in September 2015. Kenny asserted that it vindicated his view of the events, but Fianna Fáil and Sinn Féin claimed the opposite and promised to raise motions of no confidence in the Taoiseach when Dáil Éireann resumed after the summer recess.[1][2]

References

Sources

Citations

  1. Kenny, Enda (September 2015). "Statement by An Taoiseach : Publication of Interim Report of Commission of Investigation". Department of the Taoiseach. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
  2. "FF and SF plan no confidence motions in Taoiseach". RTÉ.ie. 2 September 2015. Retrieved 7 September 2015.
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