Irish Daily Star

PRISON DEATH SUSPECTS’ CELL CLOTHES SWAP

Foursome caught on camera changing outfits after inmate beaten to death...and then ‘acting like nothing happened’

- ■■John HAND

“Saying that, any type of death of this kind is simply not acceptable within the prison service.

“There are very strict rules, there are very strict protocols in place within prisons to keep people safe.

“With any type of incident of this kind and of this severity, we have to make sure that any lessons are learned and that anything that we can take from this to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.

“Obviously no situation is without risk, but every effort is made and every protocol is put in place within our prisons to prevent this.”

She said a review will be carried out by the Inspector of Prisons, as well as the Irish Prison Service.

THE suspected killers of inmate Robert O’Connor changed their clothes in a separate cell from where they beat him before calmly walking around the prison.

Sources have told how the four men acted as if “nothing had happened” in the aftermath of last Friday’s attack in Mountjoy Prison.

The investigat­ion is continuing into O’Connor’s murder after his lifesuppor­t machine was switched off in Dublin’s Mater Hospital in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

Directly across the road in the jail, four men remained in isolation yesterday and could be moved to separate jails around the country before they are quizzed by gardai.

The men were identified through CCTV which showed them fleeing the cell where O’Connor was viciously beaten on the C2 landing and going into a separate one.

There, they changed their clothes before emerging and walking around the prison.

In the meantime, prison officers responding to the incident tended to O’Connor before he was rushed to hospital.

A source said: “The men believed to be responsibl­e left the scene of the crime and changed clothes in another cell.

Calm

“But they walked around afterwards as if nothing had happened, that’s how calm they were.”

The man suspected of stamping on O’Connor’s head is an addict and thief.

Another is linked to the

Kinahan cartel and is serving a sentence for firearm possession.

A third is serving a lengthy sentence for an aggravated burglary.

Gardai at Mountjoy Garda Station are probing a number of lines of inquiry, including that the beating was ordered by a well-known hitman, who has worked for the Kinahan cartel and is also in the prison, over an apparent dispute with his own relative and O’Connor outside prison.

Another theory being explored is that O’Connor was targeted in revenge for ordering an assault, but gardai stress they are keeping an open mind. O’Connor — who suffered a severe bleed to his brain — had only been moved to the C wing from the D section of the prison after being targeted in an assault on Wednesday, July 27.

Earlier that day, the 34-year-old was handed down a six-and-a-half year sentence at the Criminal Courts of Justice for the possession of a loaded pistol.

O’Connor, from Darndale in north Dublin, had been in prison custody on remand for that offence since last October, initially in Cloverhill before he was moved to Mountjoy some months later.

System

Meanwhile, former governor of Mountjoy Prison John Lonergan said there is a sense that the system has failed when a prisoner is killed.

Lonergan told how attacks are “common”.

He told RTE’s Morning Ireland: “We have failed to carry out our No1 priority, the safety of prisoners, but unfortunat­ely the reality is that you could never guarantee in a prison environmen­t that this will never happen again.”

 ?? ?? COMMENTS: Minister
KILLED: O’Connor
FAILURE: O’Connor had just been moved to the C wing of Mountjoy Prison before he was viciously attacked
COMMENTS: Minister KILLED: O’Connor FAILURE: O’Connor had just been moved to the C wing of Mountjoy Prison before he was viciously attacked
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland