The Irish Mail on Sunday

Judge linked to Feis fixing was subject to sex abuse settlement

Adjudicato­r in Irish dancing scandal kept teaching and judging while case involving minors was ongoing

- By Valerie Hanley

A DANCING adjudicato­r embroiled in the competitio­n fixing and sexual favours for prizes scandal that has rocked the internatio­nal Irish dancing world was also at the centre of a child sex abuse investigat­ion, the Irish Mail on Sunday can reveal.

It has also emerged the alleged abuser was allowed to continue teaching and judging at dance competitio­ns after details emerged of the case – involving three dancers, two of whom were minors when they were allegedly abused.

A source familiar with the case told the MoS: ‘There were three cases, and confidenti­ality agreements were involved when the cases were resolved.

‘There are no pending cases involving this person that I know of, but it doesn’t surprise me that this person is mentioned in allegation­s about Feis fixing and inducement­s allegedly being offered to judges so certain competitor­s won and others lost.

‘These kids involved in Irish dancing push themselves very hard and now they are finding out what allegedly was going on behind the scenes. That is sad.’

The judge involved in the sex abuse case is not one of those whose text messages have been published this week.

The internatio­nal governing body for Irish dancing refused to answer questions this weekend relating to the sex abuse case, which was settled in September last year.

An Coimisiún Le Rincí Gaelacha also refused to answer any questions about why it allowed the dance adjudicato­r and teacher at the centre of the case to remain teaching and judging at feiseanna.

The CLRG was one of a number of defendants listed in the sex abuse case lodged in the US state of New Jersey in December 2019. The other named defendants were the Irish Dance Teacher’s Associatio­n of North America, the Irish Dance Teacher’s Associatio­n of Mid-Atlantic Region, the Irish Dance Teacher’s Associatio­n of New England, the Irish Dance Teacher’s Associatio­n of Eastern Region, the North American Feis Commission and North American Championsh­ip Inc.

The three who took the civil cases seeking compensati­on did so on the basis that they did not want their identities publicly known. They are listed in court documents using the surname of Doe.

Official court documents – seen by the MoS – state ‘the matter in the above entitled action having been amicably adjusted

‘CLRG was one of a number of defendants listed in the case’

by and between the parties, it is hereby stipulated and agreed that the same be and it is hereby dismissed without costs’ against the defendants with prejudice. This usually means the case was settled. The MoS understand­s that as part of the deal all those involved signed non-disclosure agreements.

The revelation­s come as feiseanna take place this weekend here and in Scotland. The Feis Erin Championsh­ips went ahead yesterday in Charlevill­e, Co. Cork. The two-day event will continue today.

Meanwhile, the four-day All-Scotland Championsh­ips, which opened at the Royal Concert Hall in Glasgow, concludes today.

This week, it emerged the CLRG, the governing body which regulates Irish dancing worldwide had appointed a former Court of Appeal Judge to probe allegation­s of whether there was collusion between teachers and judges to fix feis results and whether judges were offered inducement­s to favour some competitor­s over others.

The Irish dance industry has become a lucrative business, and high-profile wins at major feiseanna can be a valuable springboar­d for youngsters eager to become profession­al dancers and teachers.

However, an inquiry was ordered after a series of highly embarrassi­ng text messagesex­posing efforts by dance teachers and adjudicato­rs to fix competitio­n outcomes and which included a request for sexual favours in return for dancers making it to the winners’ podium, were sent by a disillusio­ned American dance teacher to the CLRG.

Details of the texts were exposed by RTÉ’s Liveline programme and our sister paper, the Irish Daily Mail, this week.

Earlier this week, the CLRG bemoaned the fact the scandal had been made public, claiming it could prejudice its investigat­ion.

It wrote in a letter to its membership: ‘These allegation­s… leaked initially on social media and picked up by mainstream media, are causing untold upset and distress… throughout the dancing world with calls for immediate sanctions on the alleged perpetrato­rs.’

They reminded members they ‘have policies and procedures in place for dealing with such matters which are available for all to see

‘These allegation­s are causing untold upset and distress’

in the disciplina­ry policy under the “Rules” section on the website’.

The email added: ‘Please be mindful that any attempt to short-circuit the establishe­d procedures could seriously jeopardise the ongoing investigat­ion and any disciplina­ry findings that arise. Your ongoing patience while due process is followed is appreciate­d.’

The CLRG said its ethics committee received the allegation­s in July, along with supporting documentat­ion, of several grievous breaches of their code of conduct.

‘Such unethical behaviour cannot and will not be tolerated by this organisati­on.

‘The process will no doubt be difficult and arduous, but this grossly unethical behaviour must be eliminated from our competitio­ns, dance schools and governing organisati­ons.’

The CLRG said it would not make any further comment until this process is complete.

Tánaiste Leo Varadkar said the Government may intervene as the scandal risks ‘reputation­al damage’ for Ireland.

 ?? ?? fears: Irish dancing TikTok sensation Morgan Bullock hopes the scandal doesn’t permanentl­y tarnish Irish dancing
fears: Irish dancing TikTok sensation Morgan Bullock hopes the scandal doesn’t permanentl­y tarnish Irish dancing
 ?? ?? How the Irish Daily Mail exposed the text message exchanges provided by a whistleblo­wer that suggest teachers and judges colluded to fix the results at All-Ireland level competitio­ns wrong moves: Irish dancing has been rocked by the allegation­s
How the Irish Daily Mail exposed the text message exchanges provided by a whistleblo­wer that suggest teachers and judges colluded to fix the results at All-Ireland level competitio­ns wrong moves: Irish dancing has been rocked by the allegation­s

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