KERSPLAT! wrote: » Can you fire up a link to the story?
Deleted User wrote: » Lack of Gardaí response is pretty normal in these places.
Anti Anorak wrote: » If it was 1935 I could understand but 1985 wasn't that long ago.
somefeen wrote: » Carna is still a bit of wild place. The people that know what happened are probably still there. Gairda station got petrol bombed there to a few years back. All the locals know who did it
Rumpy Pumpy wrote: » Connies are extremely strange and superstitious people.
etselbbuns wrote: » Drugs packages regularly floating undetected from the magic sea to shorehttp://connachttribune.ie/no-arrests-after-70-thousand-euro-worth-of-cocaine-is-washed-up-on-ballyconneely-beach-090/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/ireland-used-as-drugs-gateway-to-britain-1581182.html
mahamageehad wrote: » Crazy story, my first time hearing it! That her sibling was told it was a "domestic affair" and the husband never referred to her again sounds ominous, but that could well just be the author injecting in some drama. I hope they find out what happened to her.
Ipso wrote: » For those of us who can't see it, could someone give a run down.
mrsdewinter wrote: » To follow on from the Irish Times' stories linked above, Prime Time interviewed the daughters and brother of the missing woman. One of the daughters spoke about the night her mother disappeared in 1985. There was a bit of a party in the house (really, just tea and sandwiches after the pub), and mother Barbara brought a female friend into the girls' room to 'show' her the new baby, a 9-month-old daughter. The older girls remember their mother cooing over the baby. Then, very early the following day, one of the daughters happened to get out of bed. She found her mother asleep on a settee and so she brought her a pillow and blanket, to make her more comfortable. That was the last time she saw her mother. It was desperately sad. The daughters noted that their father did a great job bringing them up, and would get upset at Christmastime and around the time of his wife's birthday. Primetime also noted that a man who lived nearby/in Connemara was later charged with a sex offence against a woman. One garda who was interviewed (who had no involvement in the original case) said there was little point judging the 1985 investigation by today's standards. The programme noted that the 1980s investigation was conducted in English, and raised the possibility that, given the lingua franca in the area was Gaeilge, something may have been lost in translation. I'd recommend looking it up on the Player, if you can.
etselbbuns wrote: » Of course our current garda commissioner is from the area too ...