Irish Times and Colm Keena Lose Case to Protect Sources
Read more about: Bertiegate, Democracy, Election Results, Fianna Fail, Irish Politics, Tribunals
The High Court today ruled in favour of the Mahon Tribunal and against the Irish Times in the Bertiegate case. The tribunal is seeking to have the paper and its journalist, Colm Keena, reveal the source of the material which sparked Bertiegate earlier this year in September 2006.
The planning tribunal sought the order against Irish Times editor Geraldine Kennedy and public affairs correspondent Colm Keena under Section 4 of the Tribunal of Inquiry (Evidence) (Amendment) Act 1997, which requires them to answer questions at the inquiry.
The tribunal is trying to find the source of the information about payments to Mr Ahern when he was minister for finance in 1993.
The NUJ are understandably disappointed with the decision since they would justifiably feel those leaks were in the public interest (say what you like about the outcome, but that information was better off in the public sphere before the election rather than after it). It it should be interesting to see what tack the Tribunal take here. It seems they are duty bound to find the source of the leak but Kennedy admitted to destroying documents that might have proven the source’s identity. There is precedent here of course where the Morris Tribunal won a similar order against Howlin and Higgins to reveal the sources of allegations made against Gardai.
There has been no mention of further appealing the decision, as a lay man I must assume that the Tribunal has some sort of standing such that one cannot appeal? Or are they likely to take that option? It seems that if the Tribunal wants to further investigate the allegations of cash payment it will be forced into investigating the sources of the leaks so as to avoide perceptions of bias and the likely rancour that will pour down from a variety of columnists and interviews to the Sunday Independent.
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Our journalists are the last bastion against the Fianna Fail Mafia.They can thank themselves lucky that we dont have Russian style suppression of speech here yet. Better court orders than a bullet in the brain.!
Att.Colm Keena
Could you make contact re my grandfather Michael Keena from Athlone
Regards Frances
Colm Keena
ref your piece on the Fás audit in today’s Irish Times
It is pretty remarkable that in all the talk about the Fás debacle nobody has focused on the presence on the Board of four civil servants. Did they know nothing about what was going on? Did they do anything? Did they say anything, anything at all, to the boys and girls back in the Department? To the Minister(s)? Was there a conflict of interest that paralysed them?
Did they also go on the jollies?
I would guess that the presence of these civil servants on the Board is a reason why the inquiries into the goings on have been so slow and so woolly. The PAC seems to be stymied. Leo veradkar complains of lack of information. Well: they are looking for civil servants to report on civil servants so what do they expect. Dog doesn’t eat dog.
Dear Colm,
Please contact me in relation to your book on Bertie Ahern as i may have some interesting information on the subject. You just may have to add another chapter!! Contact me by email and i can then send you my phone number.
Thanks Colm,
Leo