Simplicity; brief and to the point. No longer is this the case in Ireland. Tribunals are about power and money for all concerned. A lot can be learned from the case below. On X this morning a man who was sexually abused as a young child wrote; why all the attention on the “bike sheds for 32 ple” at Oireachtas. Nobody seems to care about so many abused children; is it that the State hopes they will die off soon or be bound by ill-health without the ability to proceed? The Smyth Tribunal was set up to achieve a sense of justice for victims of Shine. What happens? The Supreme Court decide to keep the findings off the table … why? Example of first tribunal by Irish Free State followed by latter, protracted, bureaucratic, paternalistic, lucrative financial deals and cover-ups. An Taoiseach. Intervene. Release details of the Smyth Tribunal before you instigate another.

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1900–1940

The Irish Free State was established as, in all but name, an independent state in 1922. In the 1920s, politicians were even expected to reimburse the cost of meals, and some slept in their offices due to gunfire outside.[9]

One major case of corruption in Ireland happened in County Wicklow; dubbed the Wicklow Gold Inquiry, it involved the distribution of mining licenses in 1935. The Minister for Industry and Commerce at the time, Seán Lemass, granted a mining licence to the politicians Michael Comyn and Bob Briscoe. These licenses covered an area of 2,982 acres in Wicklow. They both leased the land to a British mining company in exchange for £12,000 and royalties on any gold found. An inquiry was launched due to Patrick McGilligan of Cumann na nGaedheal accusing Lemass of favouring members of the Fianna Fáil political party. The inquiry cleared Lemass of any wrongdoing due to the fact that he did not benefit financially.[9]

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Supreme Court overturns ruling on release of FoI records

Case concerns a review by a judge of sexual abuse allegations against Dr Michael Shine

Retired surgeon Dr Michael Shine is serving a four year jail term for the sexual abuse of seven male patients

Mary Carolan

Mon May 27 2019 – 12:42

The Supreme Court has overturned the Information Commissioner’s decision requiring the Minister for Health to give a man a record of his meeting with a retired judge who reviewed allegations of sexual abuse against retired surgeon Michael Shine.

The court’s unanimous judgment involved it addressing, for the first time, the meaning of the phrase “any record held by a public body” in Section 6.1 of the Freedom of Information Act.

The appeal arose after the then minister in 2009 asked a retired judge, Thomas C Smyth, to review whether a further investigation into procedures and practices at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Drogheda, between 1964-1995 to protect patients from sexual abuse while undergoing treatment there, and to deal with certain allegations of abuse against Dr Shine, would be likely to provide additional information and insights of benefit to patients and the public.

Shine (86), of Ballsbridge, Dublin, was jailed for four years last February for sexual abuse of seven male patients.

The judge’s review was non-statutory and the reviewer met with various persons, including a man who cannot be named by court order.

Written transcripts of those meetings were prepared and later stored with other documents and records delivered by the reviewer in sealed boxes to the Department in 2010 with instructions those may not be disclosed or opened except by a court order for discovery.

Confidential

The reviewer said the records contained information given to him on foot of his assuring each interviewee their communications with him would be treated as confidential.

Without such assurances, he was satisfied many individuals would not have participated in the review.

The man later sought access to the transcript of his interview and, when the Minister refused, he appealed to the Commissioner who in 2013 directed the minister to provide the record.

The minister went to the High Court which decided in 2014 the record was not one “held” by the minister within the meaning of Section 6 and quashed the Commissioner’s decision.

Giving the five judge Supreme Court’s judgment on Monday dismissing the Commissioner’s appeal against the High Court decision, Ms Justice Mary Finlay Geoghegan said the appeal raised difficult questions of interpretation of Section 6.

Section 6.1 provides for the right of access to “any record held by a public body” but section 6.7 expressly provides that nothing in Section 6 shall be construed as applying the right of access to an exempt record, she said.

In deciding whether to release the record, the decision maker has to decide if it is “held” by a public body and whether the applicant has a right of access to it. The word “held” is not defined for the purposes of the Act, she noted.

Lawful physical possession of a record is not enough, the record must also lawfully be held in connection with or for the purpose of the business and functions of the department.

In this case, there was a dispute whether the department had access to or control over the record.

The meaning of “held” in Section 6.1 requires that the public body is entitled to access the record in question in the sense of being entitled to access the information in the record, she said.

Error of law

The commissioner’s decision that, because the department physically had possession of the document, then it was “held” within the meaning of Section 6.1 involved an error of law concerning the true meaning of “held”, she found.

The department had told the commissioner the reviewer had said the transcripts were his property, for his exclusive use only and were not to be made available to those whom he met or anyone else, she said.

The commissioner erred in considering the department was entitled to access the record on grounds the reviewer had no statutory entitlement to withhold access to the department, she said.

The reviewer was conducting a non-statutory review and was entitled to settle the terms upon which he would get co-operation from persons who contributed to the review, she said.

The evidence constituted “objective justification” that the Department, in the absence of a court order, did not have the right to access the information contained in the sealed box, she ruled.

Issues such as confidentiality to the department or disclosure by it to third parties involved consideration of separate and distinct questions of whether or not the record is exempt from disclosure, she stressed.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times

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