Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi there,
There is an issue with role permissions that is being worked on at the moment.
If you are having trouble with access or permissions on regional forums please post here to get access: https://www.boards.ie/discussion/2058365403/you-do-not-have-permission-for-that#latest

Our public officials don't spend enough time in jail

  • 07-03-2004 11:22pm
    #1
    Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 78,574 ✭✭✭✭


    Over a long time span, I've firmly come to the conclusion that our public officials don't spend enough time in jail. Saps like the one below will get a few years for taking a few hundred thousand or a few million, but nothing real, no hard time. For all the amounts of money that have been subject to the tribunals and other investigations, how many prosecutions? 1? (Redmond)

    http://www.rte.ie/news/2004/0305/harfordc.html
    Traffic warden jailed over theft

    (14:10) A traffic warden who stole €300,000 from Dunnes Stores has been jailed for three years for theft and larceny at Kilrush Circuit Criminal Court.

    Christopher Harford, who is 33 and who lives in Kilmaley in Co Clare, admitted stealing the money from parking meters over a two-year period while employed by Ennis Town Council.

    Judge Carroll Moran said it was extraordinary that the theft of so much money had gone undetected.

    The maximum penalty that could have been imposed was ten years in prison on both counts.

    However Judge Moran noted that Mr Harford had admitted to the crime at an early stage, that he had no previous convictions and that a report from a psychologist stated that prison would be extremely difficult for him.

    He sentenced him to three years in prison on both charges to run concurrently.

    Mr Harford had accounted for €100,000 of the money but Judge Moran said that he had not accounted for the remainder of the money and that Mr Harford was emphatic that none of it was hidden away.

    Mr Harford was granted legal aid.
    http://home.eircom.net/content/irelandcom/breaking/2680482?view=Eircomnet
    Traffic warden jailed over theft of €300,000
    From:ireland.com
    Friday, 5th March, 2004

    A former traffic warden who frittered away €300,000 he stole in coins from Ennis Town Council was today jailed for three years.

    At Ennis Circuit Court today, Judge Carroll Moran said that it was "extraordinary" that former Ennis Town Council traffic warden, Christopher Harford (33) of Cluain Ard, Kilmaley, Co Clare could steal such a huge sum undetected.

    He said: "It is best I don't pass anymore comment on it."

    Judge Moran said that Harford was in a position of responsibility being a Supervisor Traffic Warden and had broken trust with his employer by stealing a huge amount of money.

    In his favour, Judge Moran said that Harford had pleaded guilty at an early stage in the District Court, has no previous convictions and that the coverage of the case in some sections of the press had been "fairly humiliating" for the man.

    Judge Moran said that he also took into account the psychological report lodged on Mr Harford's behalf, which said that prison will be extremely difficult for him.

    At a previous hearing, Judge Moran requested Harford to account for a missing €200,000 of the €300,000 and in response, Harford provided a schedule of expenditure accounting for €263,825 of the money without receipts.

    Judge Moran said yesterday: "He cannot account for every penny and is quite emphatic that there is no stash. I don't know if it is true or not true, but the law obliges me to give him the benefit of the doubt."

    Judge Moran said if Harford had pleaded not guilty to the stealing which took place between August 1999 and September 2002 and was convicted by a jury, he would have sentenced him for five years.

    Judge Moran said: "Because, he pleaded guilty and other factors I mentioned in his favour, I am imposing a sentence of three years on each charge to run concurrently."

    When asked leave to appeal against severity by Michael Fitzgibbon BL, Judge Moran refused, stating: "I don't think the sentence is severe."

    The court heard that when asked to account for the missing money, Harford admitted that he was a compulsive spender. He said: "It was part of my compulsion, I had a spending problem. "

    The court heard that Harford had frittered away the money on foreign holidays, weekends away around Ireland and spent €185,000 on trying to develop an ill-fated taxi-business.

    The court heard that Harford made various improvements to his home, including €5,000 on flowerbeds, €4,500 on his driveway and an undisclosed sum to court on a bed with a PC desk underneath.

    The court also heard that he spent €6,000 on mobile phones, including €1,000 each on two phones.

    Mr Harford was finally detected on the 30th September 2002, when Gardai mounted a surveillance operation at Dunnes Stores car park in Ennis where Mr Harford was seen driving his 2001 registered Mercedes into the carpark and emptying the parking metres before later that day being spotted by Gardai making coin lodgements to a bank in Ennis.


Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 88,972 ✭✭✭✭mike65


    I was amused that Dunnes spent so little effort to
    look after thier income from the car park (nice little earner). He wasnt really a public servant as he worked for Dunnes and was payed by Dunnes. Basicly he was sub-contracted. Which is a strange carry-on in itself.

    If every public offcial/employee who transgresed was sent to jail there'd be no room for the population of Moyross.

    Mike.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,992 ✭✭✭✭gurramok


    Over a long time span, I've firmly come to the conclusion that our public officials don't spend enough time in jail

    Join the club. :)
    Only 1 public official so far has seen jail time ?

    Hardly a vote of confidence in the country when viewed around the world considering the level of corruption that has taken place and will take place.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 15,956 ✭✭✭✭Villain


    1 rule for our elected and another rule for us who pay their wages


Advertisement