The Irish Mail on Sunday

Spot the difference

■ In Ireland, it took 10 years for gardaí to admit they botched an investigat­ion of horrif ic abuse at a victim’s former foster home, leaving other children in peril ■ In the UK, just 10 months have passed but already police have a corroborat­ing witness

- By Michael O’Farrell INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR michaelofa­rrell@newsscoops.org

Gardaí shelved the case without investigat­ing

AN HORRIFIC child abuse saga has exposed the vast difference between the approach taken by the UK child protection authoritie­s and those in Ireland.

The case of Saoirse, first exposed by the Irish Mail on Sunday last year, revealed how gardaí and child protection authoritie­s here failed to investigat­e horrific child abuse allegation­s at a Midlands foster home for a decade.

The injustice, for which childcare agency Tusla has unreserved­ly apologised, involved a shocking series of failures by State agencies here including:

■ A Garda criminal case file that mysterious­ly vanished after the victim made a formal complaint of child abuse;

■ The repeated failure by a succession of HSE and Tusla officials to deal appropriat­ely with child-abuse concerns raised by the victim;

■ The failure of the authoritie­s here to act to ensure that other children were not also put in danger.

But another heretofore undisclose­d failure involves the manner in which the Irish authoritie­s never warned their UK counterpar­ts of abuse concerns in their jurisdicti­on.

Such a warning would have allowed the UK authoritie­s to establish whether other children in their jurisdicti­on had been abused or put in danger.

Before being placed in foster care in Ireland, Saoirse, whose real identity the Irish Mail on Sunday is protecting, had been living in the UK where she and her siblings were allegedly abused by her father.

This abuse is the reason Saoirse and her family were first placed into foster care – where tragically they went on to be further abused by third parties.

Saoirse’s sister first disclosed the abuse she and her siblings suffered in the UK in 1987 to the Irish authoritie­s when she was 18. Then in 1998 Saoirse disclosed the abuse to gardaí and HSE medical staff to no avail.

Later again, in 2009, Saoirse made a formal criminal complaint to gardaí.

But gardaí shelved the case without ever investigat­ing – and without informing the UK authoritie­s – although they continued to indicate to Saoirse that an investigat­ion was still in train.

Following an investigat­ion by the Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission, Saoirse received a written Garda apology in February 2019.

But this only apologised for a ‘systems failure’ that resulted in her case being mislaid. It did not address the manner in which Saoirse was led to believe for years that her case was being investigat­ed – when it had been shelved.

And it did not address continuing concerns about how Saoirse’s medical files – which an investigat­ing garda claims to have destroyed – were subsequent­ly found.

The Garda failure to investigat­e Saoirse’s allegation­s in 2009 meant she had to make a fresh statement in 2018. An investigat­ion since has recently concluded but due to the passage of time and a lack of willing witnesses, the DPP has decided not to prosecute.

In preparing her 2018 statement for gardaí, Saoirse contacted school authoritie­s in Cheshire seeking details to include in her statement.

The ensuing reaction of the UK authoritie­s was far different to what Saoirse faced here. Immediatel­y upon hearing of alleged abuse in their jurisdicti­on, the school authoritie­s in Cheshire referred Saoirse to the Truth Project – one arm of the UK’s Independen­t Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse.

In April last year Saoirse detailed her experience­s to a team from the Truth Project, who immediatel­y referred her case to the Cheshire constabula­ry for investigat­ion.

Without delay, the police in Cheshire assigned a detective who sought Saoirse’s file from gardaí in Ireland via Interpol and requested her medical records.

The detective also sought advice from the UK’s Crown Prosecutio­n Service about the possibilit­y of extraditin­g her father – who is now living back in Ireland – to face prosecutio­n in the UK.

Cheshire police also tracked down

‘Time and time again children were failed’

and found a corroborat­ing witness in the UK who was willing to testify and arranged to formally interview Saoirse and her siblings.

In a few short months the UK authoritie­s put more effort into the case than gardaí here had done in decades. But 10 months on, the authoritie­s here have failed to give Saoirse’s file to UK police.

‘The Garda have still not supplied their case files despite our attempts,’ a Cheshire detective wrote to Saoirse on January 12 this year. In response, Saoirse asked Cheshire police to follow up with the appropriat­e authoritie­s in Ireland to ensure gardaí will in future co-operate with such requests.

‘I would like to request your policing service to ask the Irish Interpol service to ensure that their reporting of crimes internatio­nally is robust,’ she wrote on January 14.

‘The only justice I feel I will get now is exposing the serious failures of how, time and time again, children were failed in Ireland.’

Saoirse added that abuse survivors were not only being failed ‘in the first instance’ but were then being ‘repeatedly failed by systems designed to protect them’.

‘This is something that will stay with me forever,’ she wrote.

 ??  ?? UNJUST: Saoirse’s case exposes failings
UNJUST: Saoirse’s case exposes failings

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