Documents sent by Jerry Beades to media

Someone has published the documents Jerry Beades sent to media over the last number of days on Sendspace. The newspapers have been wary of running the full details, I’m told, due to possible legal issues. As far as I know, the docs available at the link are the only online copies…

For context, here’s the latest Irish Times coverage of the issue between Beades, a member of the Fianna Fáil National Executive, and Minister Noel Dempsey. I’d bet there’ll be something more in tomorrow’s papers.

Download link to correspondence sent by Jerry Beades to various members of the media on February 28 2010.

Note: They’re in a .zip file, you’ll need WinZip or WinRar to open, free trials are available online, hit up Google. All Microsoft Word (.doc) files inside.

I can verify these are the correct, unedited, files. Thanks to the person who notified us of their availability.

BIM decommissioning grants

Bord Iascaigh Mhara paid out €5.2m in decommissioning grants to fisherman in 2008, while the EU paid out €15.7m. The total numbers of grants paid was €20,999,998.96, to the owners of 44 vessels. The highest paid out was to Keating Fish Ltd, for the Molly B – a total of €1.7m. The next highest was for the decommissioning of the Joseph S, owned by Alan Scanlan – €1.3m. The full list is here:



Details of inquiry into Irish banking collapse published

The Government has published an amended Private Members’ Motion by Labour on a banking inquiry. Essentially, it outlines how such an enquiry would function.

Labour Private Members’ Motion on banking inquiry and Government amendents

The main reading is from “To delete all the words after “Dáil Éireann” and substitute the following:…” on page two, onwards.

My brief summary upon one reading, updated as I re-read and read elsewhere: the Government proposes to establish a commission of investigation (similar in structure to the Commission into child sex abuse) after two reports are submitted by the Central Bank upon which the Commission’s investigation will be based. Therefore the quality and depth (or lack thereof) of the reports from the Central Bank will be hugely important to the quality, depth and findings of the Commission.

The reports will be submitted no later than May 31 2010. Pretty early if one wants in-depth reports.

The commission will be established no later than June 30.

It will only cover the period up to September 2008. Why?

Commissions of Investigation sit in private, bar in especially exceptional circumstances. It is therefore extremely likely the banking inquiry will sit in private due to the sensitive nature of its operations politically. They do have the power to compell witnesses.

It will be chaired by an ‘internationally respected independent expert’. Interesting, who? Respected by who? With a background in which sides of the banking industry? And from where, and what is their background?

It will lay its findings before the Houses of the Oireachtas no more than six months after it is established. This won’t happen.

Michael Lowry's statement prior to Moriarty report

Michael Lowry just released a statement giving his side of the issues the Moriarty Tribunal has covered. The Tribunal is expected to publish its final report within three weeks. I’m publishing his statement in full here for those interested who may not have received it via email. Any comments will be strictly moderated on this post.

Media lawyers will be pouring over this at the moment. I’ll make no other comment than to note that the Tribunal cannot respond at the moment, obviously. You may remember Denis O’Brien also hit the media a few months ago.

13th January 2010

Statement by Michael Lowry TD:

Regarding the impending publication of the final report of the Moriarty Tribunal of Inquiry

I recently made a request, through my solicitor, to the Moriarty Tribunal to allow me the opportunity at the Tribunal to publicly address all of the evidence given to the Tribunal about the licence process since I last gave my evidence in 2005.   It has always been my belief and understanding that I, as the subject person of the Tribunal’s inquiry, would be the last person to give evidence and to address all of the allegations that were made against me.  It was my understanding that this was accepted by the Tribunal.  However, the Tribunal is now refusing me this right.  After eleven years of being investigated by the Moriarty Tribunal, they refuse to allow me time to defend myself in public on the licence process.  I am both surprised and disappointed by this response given that I have been forced to endure this highly expensive and personally corrosive examination over this period.  You could form the impression that the Moriarty Tribunal is intent on destroying my character, shredding the reputation of the Irish civil servants and damaging the international image of the Irish State.  They are attempting to do this in the absence of any real evidence in support of their outlandish theories.  There are numerous issues which I have not had the opportunity to address including the evidence of Richard Nesbitt SC, which is material to the awarding of the GSM licence.

Grievances with the Licence Process: Continue reading “Michael Lowry's statement prior to Moriarty report”

Whiddy Island Tribunal report

Update: the full version is below, made available by the Oireachtas.

I have started scanning the report of the Tribunal of Inquiry into the accident at Whiddy Island. I will upload it in tranches. It has also been OCRd. This is, I believe, the first time this document has appeared online.T

You can also view this Wikipedia page if you wish to read more about the Whiddy Island incident. It was an explosion of an oil tanker off the coast of Cork in the late 70s that caused the death of 51 people and serious environmental damage.



The Kenny Report

Irish Labour have a scanned version of the Kenny Report online, but in a somewhat difficult to read format. I downloaded their version and subjected it to some OCR processes in Abbyy Reader. The document is not 100% OCRd, but is now largely so (I have not spell checked every word or checked for other errors). I also split most pages so that it is easier to read, and it is now available to search on Scribd.com, or download from there if you wish. This OCR should be considered Beta, I will come back to it and do a better job soon.



I’ve also uploaded a Microsoft Word version of the OCR (you can see the errors and mistakes). If anyone wants to help make a new correct and fully digital version of the Kenny Report, please let me know.

I’ve also uploaded a raw version to Google Docs. If you want to help, seek to become a collaborator.

A Smart Budget for a Smart Economy?

[Cross-posted on Irishelection.com – please appreciate I wrote this at 1.30am after a day spent reading official documents. Mistakes are a possibility, I’m open to discussion in comments section]

It’s about a year since An Taoiseach announced plans to develop ‘The Smart Economy’ (the successor to ‘The Knowledge Economy’, remember that?). In those twelve months we’ve heard constant mention, plugging and referencing of the phrase. It has become a Government mantra, said constantly when the state of the public finances is discussed. On Drivetime today Brian Lenihan spoke about it, on the Nine News Brian Cowen picked up the baton and later he handed it onto Eamon Ryan for Prime Time. You can be guaranteed we’ll heard it mentioned every few hours in the next week too.

“We need to settle the public finances with a view to developing a model for sustainable growth through the Smart Economy, going forward”, don’t say it doesn’t ring a bell.

I can’t find an explicit definition of what the Smart Economy would be constituted of, but if asked, I’d guess a Government representative would describe it as something like; “an economy that has a workforce that is able, educated, competent and competitive in areas and skills which will be needed by companies in growing industries, to attract those companies”. Fair?

Continue reading “A Smart Budget for a Smart Economy?”

Ansbacher Report

I had previously uploaded the entire Ansbacher report to the internet earlier this year. However it was not OCRd, and was difficult to read because the documents were seperate. I have now begun the process of OCRing the report and combining all of its appendices (several thousand pages). If anyone has copies of any other reports that need to be digitised and OCRd, please get in touch.

Ansbacher Report

Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 1 & 2
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 3 (Roger P Ballagh)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 4 (Padraig Collery)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 5 (P Vincent Doyle)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 6 (Denis Foley TD)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 7 (Gerald Hickey)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 8 (Mary Meagher McCarroll)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 9 (Susan Sheridan Mack)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 10 (Maurice Neligan & Dr Patricia Neligan)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 11 (Sonia Rogers)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 12 (Des Traynor)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 13 (Blue Jeans Limited & JB Agencies)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 14 (Harold Murray)
Ansbacher Report, Appendix Volume 15 (James McCarthy)

EU public procurement contracts – Ireland

While I was at Personal Democracy Forum Europe in Barcelona last week, I got talking to someone who had a copy of all EU public procurement contracts for the last several years (70Gb of data). I asked for a copy of all data relating to Ireland, and I have now uploaded a zipped copy of this information for the crowd to use. The data is stored in xml format, and as my programming skills are non-existent, I thought this one might be better given to anyone out there who wants to play with it, and made into a more usable format.

Have fun.

EU public procurement contracts – Ireland (10Mb zipped file)