Sunday, 21 August 2016

22nd Wedding Anniversary

WROTE THIS ON 16TH AUGUST 2016 FOR MY WEDDING ANNIVERSARY
DEDICATION:
Tomorrow is my 22nd wedding anniversary, to my wonderful husband Simon, we have been together 29 years. This song has always reminded me of our relationship because Simon is the strong steady loyal man that keeps me going and keeps me afloat as I have battled for justice for 23 years of the 29 we have been together.
He has never once asked me in all those years to "think of him" or to give up my battle for justice, instead he stands with me and drives me on and gives me the room and the space to do what I need to do.
When he is asked as he often is, "how do you cope?" he always answers "I cope with the legal challenge because I know it is the right and proper thing to do, to fight for justice for Sindy, and her children and her siblings". He really is the wind beneath my wings.
Next Tuesday is my sister Theresa's 45th birthday, she ended her life aged 33, to escape the torment and torture she suffered all her life because of the abuse my father and brother inflicted on her, because no one saved her or stopped the abuse when she was a child, she tried to end her life aged just 9, to end her nightmare that others in my family could have ended for her but choose not to.
This song is also dedicated to Theresa, and the video in the song reminds me of our love and how some days despite both of us living a real nightmare we could get away from that house and spend time together, Theresa was also the wind beneath my wings, and my love for her keeps me fighting and keeps me keeping on.
I would not be who I am today, or where I am today without Simon and Theresa, the wind beneath my wings.

Saturday, 2 April 2016

Background information on my case

This blog was set up with the intention of getting my story out to the world, about my daughter Noleen who was born and died on 4th April 1973, murdered by my own mother, conceived by either my father, or two older brothers, or any member of a local pedophile ring, made up of 13 men.

These men were friends of my fathers, that consisted of 3 serving police officers, two who worked on the murder case of my daughter Noleen, who covered up her death, and murder and those guilty of sexually abusing me and my siblings.

Three of my siblings ended their lives due to the abuse. And I went on to give birth to a second child through the abuse that was stillborn, my son John was buried in the garden of my family home.

Noleens body was found in Dunlaoghaire in April 1973, her murder case was investigated for six weeks, then downgraded to infanticide, without the permission of a court. Her inquest was opened then adjourned, and never held again until I came forward and lobbied to have the inquest heard.

She was buried just 5 days after her body was found, in a mass grave, with other babies, who all died of natural causes. However, as a murder victim she should have been buried alone.

Forty years later no one has even spent a day in prison, 6 men are still alive belonging to the local pedophile ring, called the "Sorrento Six" and my two brothers are still alive, but despite a 19 year campaign for justice, they are still alive and free.

From September 1973, to April 1995, a time period of 22 years, her case was never looked at again, or investigated, despite the fact she was stabbed 40 times, no blood samples were taken from her, or tissue samples, making it impossible for DNA in later years, she couldn't be exhumed because of the other parents distress and the graveyard strongly opposed the exhumation, no files were kept, along with the bag, her body was found in, which according to records was wiped clean when handed to the doctor who carried out the postmortem, so it had to be a member of the police who had cleaned the bag, the last known police to have possession of the bag according to the file, was the officer who sexually abused me, his signature is on witness statements from 1973, which clearly shows he worked on the case, several items in the bag, have disappeared, along with the bag and placenta.

When I came forward in 1995, only two photos of Noleen could be found, and a few pages of the police file. When I came forward, it started a 19 year legal battle, the DPP would look at the case 7 times, but no prosecutions would ever come of it, those who covered up her murder had done too good a job.

The murder file is still open, and recently a new team were working on the cae, but when the Chief Superintendent over the case retired they just stopped working on it. When it was opened again in 1995, it went on to contain 8 decisions by the DPP not to prosecute between 1995 and 2014.

I then had an attempt at a civil case, and an application to the European Courts being turned down. The Commissioner refused to re-look at Noleens case, despite setting up a cold case team to investigate old murder cases, and an attempt with the Gardai Ombudsman being refused. I also had an application with the Commission to Enquire into Child Abuse, but they dropped primary schools from their remit and wouldn't look at my application.

Noleen was officially identified by a Coroners Court in February 2007, and issued with a death Certificate, and by identifying her, the court also identified her place of death, as my family home, the time of her death, and the cause of death, which was 40 stab wounds, and yet, still no justice. At the Inquest two other sisters reported that they had had hidden pregnancies in our family home, that my mother concealed and refused them medical help, the garda had known about this when my mother was alive, but she wasn't convicted of concealing a pregnancy or refusing them medical help. 8 siblings in the family home claimed to be abused, and a niece, but still there was no conviction.

My book "Living with Evil" was published in January 2010 and June 2010, but this blog is intended to give voice to the things I couldn't say in the book, or at the Inquest, and to remind people that for 40 years, the people who done this, have walked free around my home town, and are still FREE now to abuse other children, most of them work in area's that consist of young children.  I have been imprisoned in my mind for 43 years, trapped in a nightmare as the child this happened to, that wasn't rescued, or the adult who has had to live with the trauma and horror and despair, as I have watched the last 23 years unfold, being betrayed by every Taoiseach since 1995, every Minister for Justice since 1995, having told my story to every one of them they simply refuse to meet with me or help me.


All of the men were re-arrested in 2014 but let go without charge, however they are still a risk to children, and we are still waiting to hear from the police if they are following other lines of inquiry and pursuing other matters. 

I will update you once I have more news. 


Newspaper Articles about my case

The link below is newspaper articles about my case just copy and paste link into your browser.

  
https://justiceforpanelreviewvictims.wordpress.com/2015/02/17/cynthia-owens-fight-for-justice-dalkey-house-of-horrors-please-read-please-share/

Tuesday, 19 January 2016

Another piece by Broadsheet.ie

http://www.broadsheet.ie/2016/01/17/supporting-cynthia/#comment-1514244

Wednesday, 13 January 2016

Article in Broadsheet.ie

A Dalkey Archive

 at 3:30 pm January 12, 2016
cynthiaOwen
Cynthia Owen
Cynthia Owen recently used Facebook to name the people she said were among a paedophile ring operating in Dalkey, Co. Dublin, that abused her in the 1970s.
In 2007, the then Justice Minister Michael McDowell appointed Patrick Gageby SC to review the Garda investigation into the death of Cynthia’s daughter Noeleen Murphy, whom Cynthia gave birth to when she was just 11, in 1973.
Mr Gageby, who was to see if the public interest required the matter to be taken further, found this not to be the case.
A recent Independent Review Panel, set up by Justice Minister Frances Fitzgerald to look into allegations of Garda misconduct (following allegations made by Sergeant Maurice McCabe and former Garda whistleblower John Wilson), looked into the Gageby Review and concluded that they agreed with Mr Gageby’s findings.
A vigil was held at the weekend outside Leinster House in memory of Cynthia’s daughter.
Below is a timeline of significant events in Cynthia’s story to date and below Cynthia writes about her fight for justice.
1961: Cynthia Owen (nee Murphy) is born to Peter Murphy and Josephine (“Josie”) Murphy. The family reside at 4 White’s Villas, Dalkey. He is a familiar figure in the pubs around Dalkey and, in later years, he would become the caretaker of the Town Hall in Dalkey.
1968-9: From the age of 7, Cynthia is anally and vaginally raped by Peter Murphy. She is also abused by her mother, Josie Murphy, various members of her extended family and by a man who visits the family home and rapes her with the consent of her parents in return for payment. This man, known as Ken, would later form part of the paedophile ring that abused her.
1971: A 10-year-old Cynthia is taken by her mother at night to a house, near her home where she is raped by a number of local men with the consent of her mother. The next day Cynthia is sent around to the businesses of some of the men concerned to collect items and money. The rape in the house recurs on a monthly basis and continues after Cynthia gets her first period at the age of 10. She also continues to be abused by her father and other family members.
1972: Shortly after her 11th birthday, Cynthia experiences the first symptoms of pregnancy. She is informed by her mother that she is having a baby and that this must be kept secret. On her mother’s instructions, Cynthia continues to attend school throughout her pregnancy, concealing her figure under a coat worn at all times. Mother Dorothy, the school headmistress, accosts her and asks if she is pregnant, but Cynthia, who does not fully understand the word ‘pregnant,’ denies this. In response, Mother Dorothy makes Cynthia sit with her back to the class.
April 1973: Cynthia gives birth to a baby girl, Noleen Murphy, at White’s Villas. Immediately after her birth, Noeleen is stabbed to death by Josie Murphy using a knitting needle. In the early hours of the morning, two of the men from the paedophile ring, one of them a Garda, are waiting in the garden to enter the family  home to help clean up the scene.
Josie sets off with Cynthia on foot to Dun Laoghaire to dispose of Noleen’s body. On the way, they meet two members of the Gardaí who question them but accept Josie’s statement that they are on the way home from visiting relatives.
Noleen’s body is found that evening by two local boys in Lee’s Lane, Dun Laoghaire, where she had been left by Josie and Cynthia. The Garda spend just six weeks on the murder case, and then downgrade it to infanticide. Neither Cynthia nor her family are ever interviewed as part of this investigation. An inquest into Noleen’s death is postponed indefinitely, and she is buried in a communal grave in the Holy Angels plot in Glasnevin Cemetery. The abuse of Cynthia by family members and local men continues as before.
1976: Cynthia becomes pregnant for the second time and leaves school. In June, she gives birth prematurely to a stillborn boy, John Murphy, and her family bury his body in the back garden of 4 White’s Villas.
1981: Cynthia marries and leaves home.
1982: Cynthia’s younger brother, Martin Murphy, makes his first suicide attempt and is admitted to hospital.
1990: Cynthia, living in England and in a new relationship, attends counselling to deal with recurring anxiety arising from her childhood experiences.

1991: 
Cynthia receives a visit from her niece Theresa Murphy, daughter of her older sister Margaret Stokes but brought up as the child of Peter and Josie Murphy, who tells her that she and her brother were repeatedly abused by Peter Murphy as children.
April 1994: Cynthia makes a statement to the North Yorkshire Police about her childhood abuse.
January 1995: Martin Murphy dies by suicide at 4 White’s Villas.
April 1995: Cynthia contacts Dun Laoghaire Garda Station and makes a full statement about the circumstances of Noeleen’s death. The investigation is re-opened, but Peter and Josie Murphy, when arrested and questioned, deny Cynthia was ever pregnant.
June 2002: Another younger brother of Cynthia, Michael Murphy, goes missing. He had been suffering from depression prior to his disappearance.
April 7, 2003: Carol Coulter, in The Irish Times, reported:
“Miscarriages of justice can and do occur with sexual offences, according to a leading senior counsel. Mr Patrick Gageby SC told a conference there was a particular danger of this happening when the case relates to old offences. In more recent cases there was usually forensic evidence which could be of help to the accused as well as to the prosecution. But this did not exist with old cases. Mr Gageby said there was also a subversion of the presumption of innocence with old cases. People asked why a person would “say such a thing” if the offence had not happened. It was important that old cases be carefully investigated, and that collateral matters be examined. Giving an example from his own defence experience, he said he had a case where the victim described being abused in a neighbour’s house, and had a vivid memory of a floral-covered couch in the room. It emerged on investigation this couch was in his own home, not the neighbour’s. He warned that cases up to 40 or 50 years old might be given a credence they did not deserve. Judges should give carefully worded warnings to juries when they were summing up old cases. Proper and full disclosure was vital, he said. The gardai were not there primarily to help the victim, but to assist in the administration of justice.”
February 1, 2005: Michael Murphy’s remains are found by builders near Killiney Dart station, close to the Killiney Court Hotel where he was last seen. An earlier Garda search in the area had failed to uncover his body. An inquest into his death returns an open verdict due to a lack of evidence. It is read into the record at the inquest that Michael was an abuse victim.
February 23, 2005: Theresa Murphy dies by suicide. She leaves behind a 37-page document containing graphic accounts of sexual abuse at 4 White’s Villas. An inquest into her death, finds that it was contributed to by sexual abuse by unnamed family members.
May 30, 2005: At the National Prosecutors Converence Senior Counsel Patrick Gageby – a Senior Counsel with a long history of representing defendants in sexual offence cases – suggests a limit of 15 years on criminal proceedings taken against those accused of sexual abuse, saying that the media is “wholly uncritical” of the redress and compensation system for victims of institutional abuse with almost “uncritical” acceptance of everything an alleged victim says.
May 30, 2005: Carol Coulter, in The Irish Times, reports that “leading defence counsel” Patrick Gageby SC was calling for a limit on the time allowed to elapse between an alleged sex crime and the prosecution of the suspect as there was a danger the accused could not receive a fair trial.
June 2005: The garden at White’s Villas, no longer occupied by the Murphys, is excavated by Gardaí but the remains of Cynthia’s stillborn son John Murphy are not found.
September 2005: Following representations from Cynthia’s solicitors,the inquest into Noeleen Murphy’s death is re-opened. It had taken Cynthia and her legal team eight years to get the inquest re-opened.
June 2006: The Director of Public Prosecutions states that he does not intend to take any criminal proceedings in respect of the death of Noeleen Murphy.
June 2006: Dublin City Coroner Kieran Geraghty, presiding over the re-opened inquest into Noeleen’s death, writes to the Minister for Justice Michael McDowell requesting the exhumation of her body. Following receipt of strong objections from the Dublin Cemeteries Committee, the voluntary, independent body that owns and operates Glasnevin cemetery, McDowell turns down the request saying that he “cannot stand over an exhumation project which would cause such extensive distress and face such an uncertain outcome.”
August 2006: Josie Murphy dies.
February 2007: At the inquest into Noleen’s death, contemporaries of Cynthia Owen give evidence that she had been visibly pregnant in school at the age of 11. Cynthia and her sister Frances Murphy give evidence of persistent and repeated sexual abuse by family members including their brother Peter Murphy Junior, who waives anonymity to deny the allegations against him.
Two other sisters, Catherine Stevenson and Esther Roberts, admit sexual abuse by family members.
Margaret Stokes, mother of Theresa Murphy, denies ever having been abused but admitted that she once suffered a miscarriage in White’s Villas which her mother flushed down the toilet when she was 13 years old.
In a statement provided for the purposes of the inquest, but not made public by the Coroner, Cynthia Owen lists the men alleged to have been part of the group which had abused her, seven of whom are still alive and live in Dublin, and which include three members of the Gardaí.
The inquest also hears evidence regarding the original 1973 investigation. The jury are told that the investigation lasted a mere six weeks; that no blood samples were taken from Noleen’s body; that several items are missing, along with the plastic bag in which she had been found and its contents, from which no forensic samples had been taken. Half the investigation file has disappeared. In the remaining file is a written statement purportedly executed by Eddie Russell, former Dun Laoghaire station sergeant, confirming sight of Noleen’s body, which Mr Russell denies having executed, disputing its accuracy. No attempt is made by Counsel for An Garda Síochána to challenge Mr Russell’s denial.
February 17, 2007: The jury at the inquest into the death of Noeleen Murphy unanimously find that she was the child of Cynthia Owen; that she died at the family’s former home in White’s Villas in Dalkey; and that her cause of death was haemorrhage due to stab wounds. Having been told by the Coroner that they cannot return a verdict of unlawful killing as it would “implicate people” in criminal activity, which is outside the remit of an inquest, they return an open verdict in relation to the cause of death.
February 19, 2007: Responding to the inquest verdict, Michael McDowell states that he wants a full report from An Garda Síochána into its handling of the investigation into the death of Noeleen Murphy
February 19, 2007: Alan Shatter, solicitor and politician, recommends a full review of the Garda investigation. Mr Shatter raises once again the possibility of exhumation, stating that “DNA fingerprinting has reached a level of sophistication where, if the Government and An Garda Síochána were prepared to meet the cost of this, there’s a real possibility that the remains of this child be distinguishable from other remains… and might provide very cogent and important evidence, which I think would give rise to the possibility of a future criminal prosecution.”

February 25, 2007:
 In an article published in the Sunday Tribune, journalist Justine McCarthy states that one garda, who worked on the investigation and who took statements from witnesses, was known to be a friend of Cynthia’s father. She also stated that another journalist, Brigid McLaughlin, who had written about Cynthia’s case, had been told by a member of the Dalkey rowing club that she would ‘end up in the sea’ if she continued to do so.
February 26, 2007: Michael McDowell announces that he has appointed Patrick Gageby SC – a Senior Counsel specialising in sexual offence cases – to review Noeleen’s death “on the basis of all the available papers on what is known in relation to the case and the garda investigation to see if the public interest requires the matter to be taken further.”
May 14, 2007: Peter Murphy and his daughters Esther, Margaret and Catherine issue judicial review proceedings in the High Court challenging the inquest verdict on the grounds of bias on the part of the coroner due to a predisposition to believe Ms Owen’s evidence. Questions are asked as to how Peter Murphy can fund the legal fees from the inquest and now a High Court case.
September 28, 2008: The Gageby report into Noeleen’s death is delivered to the Minister for Justice. It advises against a public inquiry, apparently because of the legal difficulties that would be brought about by the serious allegations made against certain people, and because of the amount of time that has elapsed since the death. To date, the report has not been made public.
December 12, 2009: Peter Murphy dies leaving an estate of €90,000.
June 2009: At a briefing on protecting children organised by the ICCL in Leinster House, Mr Gageby expresses the view that most cases involving under-age sex concerned people of roughly the same age rather than “flocks of paedophiles in dirty macs.”
March 12, 2010: The Murphy family withdraws their challenge to the inquest verdict following an acknowledgment by the Coroner that this verdict did not implicate Cynthia’s sister Catherine Stevenson in any wrongdoing.
2011: Alan Shatter is appointed Minister for Justice.
April 2013: Gardaí commence a review of the events surrounding Noeleen’s death as part of a series of reviews intended to examine claims that paedophile rapists were able to use influence to hinder scrutiny of their activities.
April 13, 2014: Cynthia Owen hands a petition with 12,444 signatures into the Department of Justice in support of a public enquiry into Noeleen’s death.
30 April 2014: Richard Boyd Barrett TD tells the Dail that Cynthia Owen was ritually abused and raped by members of her family, the local community and “at least 3 Senior Gardai from the area,” and that “one of the people accused by Cynthia Owen as being one of the abusers was one of the gardaí who arrived on the scene when her baby was found.” Mr Boyd Barrett further reports that Patrick Gageby SC had stated publicly, at a national prosecutors’ conference, that he believed cases of rape and abuse more than 15 years old should not be investigated and that counsellors and psychologists working in this area usually gave unreliable evidence, making his examination of the original investigation ‘a travesty’. He also expresses concern about the failure to prosecute given that, on the finding of the jury at the inquest, a statutory rape must necessarily have taken place.
Alan Shatter, responding to Mr Boyd Barrett, states that he has sought a full report from Garda authorities prior to proceeding further. He also states that he is not in a position to overrule the view of the DPP that there is insufficient evidence to warrant the taking of a prosecution. He describes the allegations of bias made by Mr Boyd Barrett against Mr Gageby as defamatory and expresses the view that a public inquiry is likely to achieve little unless it results in a prosecution.
May 2014: Alan Shatter resigns as Minister for Justice and is replaced by Frances Fitzgerald TD
December 2015: The Department of Justice writes to Cynthia Owen informing her that no public inquiry will be carried out. Up to this point the case has been sent to the  DPP eight times.
January 2016: Cynthia Owen names her abusers on her Facebook page, in an attempt to encourage other victims to come forward.
January 10, 2016: The Irish Mail on Sunday reports that the Independent Review Panel into alleged cases of garda misconduct, set up by Justice Minister Frances Fitzgerald following allegations made by former Garda John Wilson and Sergeant Maurice McCabe, has rejected more than 90 per cent of the complaints. Cynthia’s case was included in this review.
SourcesIrish Times, The Guardian, The Irish Examiner, The Sunday Independent, The Sunday Tribune, The Sunday Business Post, The Evening Herald, The Sunday World
Meanwhile,
Cynthia Owen writes…
I have been fighting for justice since 1995 and, to date, no one has has been prosecuted for these crimes committed against me. To date the case has gone to the DPP 8 times, with no prosecutions being recommended. I also tried to take a case to Europe but that failed too. At one point Alan Shatter was my lawyer for four years and he was looking at a civil case. He also was very vocal in the media and often called for a public inquiry into the case. But after her got into power he refused to help me.
Patrick Gageby refused to meet with me, the main witness, and did his review from speaking to the Gardaí at Dún Laoghaire where, at the time, my father’s friend was over the murder and abuse case – this particular police officer was also friends with three of the retired gardaí that abused me.
Despite all this, the Department of Justice have stood by this review, and to date have refused to give me a public inquiry.
More recently an Independent Panel Review was put together by the Department of Justice to look at 321 cases of Garda corruption, and my case was one of them. We were told we would have a decision in eight weeks, but the process took 15 months. Again, the Panel Review, made up of 5 solicitors and 2 barristers, did not interview or meet with any of the victims and, in the vast majority of the cases, no further action was recommended.
In my own case, the panel review admitted that while the Gageby Review was outside their remit, as they were supposed to be independent, they actually viewed the Gageby Review and said that they agreed with it, and then said that because the Gageby Review directed that no public inquiry be held into the matter, they felt that that was to be upheld.
Simply put, an Independent Panel Review, supposed to remain impartial, agreed with Gageby who had gained ALL of his information from the Garda who were friends with the men who abused me.
Fine Gael were actually proud of this Panel Review and boasted regularly in the Dáil that they were the first Government to ever set up a process to look at Garda corruption, but then went on to ignore the seriousness of the cases involved and refused to open a Commission of Investigation into the cases, which is the only way the victims in these cases will ever get any real answers about their loved ones.
In the very small percentage of cases that saw recommendations, some of them were recommended to go to the Garda Ombudsman, an avenue the victims could have pursued themselves without waiting 15 months to do so. Or some of them went to the Garda Commissioner for a report, again another avenue that a victim can explore themselves.
I am in regular touch with some of the other victims and I can say that we are literally devastated by the way we were treated by the Independent Panel Review. We had all really pinned our hopes on this process, but now feel shattered and completely disillusioned and let down all over again. Most of us had to wait 15 months to find out our cases were being ignored and some of us even got the letter on Christmas week, which is an awful time for those of us who have lost loved ones.
We have called for Frances Fitzgerald to resign and believe that she should be ashamed of how she treated us as a whole.
I have written to every member of the Dáil to ask them to commit to me in writing. I will be asking them that, should they be elected, will they give me the inquiry this case deserves. I intend to make public their response in the media on January 17.
petition has been opened to call on Frances Fitzgerald to ignore the panel review’s recommendation and to give me the inquiry this case deserves. Please sign and share my petition link on social media.
Cynthia’s Facebook page can be visited here

Tuesday, 8 December 2015

Independent Review Panel Mechanism

Independent Review 

On 13 May, 2014 the Government decided that the Minister for Justice and Equality, in consultation with the Attorney General, should establish an Independent Review Mechanism to consider allegations of Garda misconduct or inadequacies in the investigation of such allegations, with a view to determining to what extent and in what manner further action may be required in each case. This was one of the actions agreed by Government as a response to the Guerin report.
A panel consisting of two Senior and five Junior Counsel, all selected on the basis of their experience of the criminal justice system, was established for the purpose. The complaints were in the form of letters, some of which have been sent by the individuals direct, while others had been submitted through intermediaries, such as TDs or representative organisations. They arose from a wide variety of situations.
The review of each allegation consisted of an examination of the papers by a counsel from the Panel, and did not involve interviews or interaction with complainants or any other form of investigation, although counsel could recommend that the Minister seek further information to assist in coming to an appropriate recommendation in any particular case. The purpose of the review was to triage the allegations to see if further investigations are needed.
While the volume and complexity of cases has led to the review taking longer than originally anticipated, the Panel has provided recommendations to the Minister in all 320 cases submitted to them and has therefore largely concluded its work.
The Minister is mindful that all complainants are anxious to know the outcome of the review of their case and every effort is being made to conclude the process.  In each case a submission will be prepared. Mr Justice Roderick Murphy will review the summary of the conclusion and the letter of notification drafted, to ensure that they are a fair and accurate reflection of the recommendation.
The issuing of notification letters to complainants commenced on 29 June. 

Letters will continue to issue to all complainants until the process is completed.

 It is the Minister’s intention, on the completion of the process, to make a comprehensive statement on all the actions she has decided to take in line with the recommendations of counsel. 
While it would not be appropriate to publish individual recommendations, the Minister has considered how best information on the outcome of this process could be made public.  

In this regard, the Minister has asked counsel, in addition to making recommendations in individual cases, to produce a general overview Report of the issue and trends identified through this process.  This Report will inform consideration of any changes which may be necessary to ensure that similar issues do not arise in future. The Minister has indicated that she will publish this Report

Data Protection Act

Did you know?
You can request your Garda Files using the Data Protection Act?
Here's what to do.
Write to:
Data protection Officer.Garda data processing unit.
Racecourse Road,Thurles ,County Tipp.
Here is how you have to word the letter.
Dear Data Protection Officer under the data protection act 1988-2003 I wish to make access for copies to all data you hold on me on computer or in manual form. My date of birth is _____ .Enclosed with my application there is an Irish money order for E6.35 and a copy of my ID or birth cert.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
When you write this letter make two copies of your money order and letter to the data protection officer.
You will need these later on in the process, so keep a copy of them.
You will receive a letter back saying they got your application and are working on it. You may not hear from them again .So 40 days after making the application make two complaints .One to the data protection commissioner and another complaint to the garda ombudsman. Do not call the garda data protection office when you do not hear from them.
Enclose your copy of the letter and the money order you originally sent to the Garda Data Protection Office.
If you have had a case sent off to the DPP by the Garda you can also request that file using the data protection act to get them. If you want them. You will also need a money order for them too.
If anyone does use this service please let me know how they got on, see the below link also.

Sunday, 6 September 2015

UPDATE 6 SEPTEMBER 2015

UPDATE:

Sorry I haven't posted for such a long time, was trying to prepare for a meeting with the Garda and had to get so much paper work ready. 

We met on Friday 28/08/15 and had a 10 hour meeting, over all I was happy enough with it, even though we only got through half the papers and now have to meet again, but in all I think it is going in the right direction and I really cant say much more than that at this time.

Hubby and I were married 21 years on 17th August, and our son turned 28 the next day so we had lots to celebrate. 

I am still waiting to hear from the Department of Justice about the Panel Review and if my case has been chosen to be heard by a Commission, it if was, it means I can summons "witnesses" to give evidence which means I can call the men who abused me, and the cops who worked on my daughters murder case. 

I could also call family members who protected the paedophiles in my family and in the village of Dalkey and establish if some of my older sisters are receiving silence money.



Cynthia Owen 

Saturday, 13 June 2015

Update (13th June 2015)

Sorry I have not been posting much recently have been busy moving house and supporting hubby in his recovery and trying to finish my studies. I am now delighted to report I have earned a 2.2 BA Honours Degree in Social Sciences and I will post more about this achievement once I graduate in July.

Still no word from the Police (well only to say they are nearly finished their investigations) and still no word from the Panel Review, but recent media reports suggests we should begin hearing very soon.

There are now 365 cases of Garda Corruption to be looked at, will the government finally become  transparent or will they carry on their tradition of betraying and ignoring us? We will have to wait and see................................

For myself I swing between "surely to God they won't be that stupid to ignore such a huge divide between victim and oppressor, with elections coming up, they have no choice but to put this right" to.... "dont be ridiculous you have been on this campaign for 22 years and nothing has EVER changed over that time, still the same old, same old, covering their backs theory and brushing it all under the carpet"

One thing I do know is that the waiting has nearly  killed me, coming up to a year now, to hear from the panel review with little or no information from them to help me along the journey, despite my solicitor and I writing to them with several queries over that time. And waiting for the police to complete for the last 18 months or so, and the trauma it caused me assisting both the Minister for Justice and the police having to go over it over and over again, is NEVER worth the trauma I suffer and never justifies the outcome which is usually a big fat nothing.

The last 18 months have also been very difficult for hubby as we battled through his cancer, feeling scared, alone and isolated, almost in a dream like state with every day feeling like a nightmare, we were surrounded by friends and loved ones and the support was outstanding, but it didn't stop us feeling terrified and anxious and scared. The whole process knocked us both for six and is still on-going.

On top of that I had my degree to finish,  I was  supposed to have finished in June 2014, to Graduate in July 2014, but I had to put it on hold due to the trauma from assisting the police, telling myself it would be worth it. I just could not manage both, but a whole year later I am still waiting and still traumatised every day as I wait to hear big news and wake each day with it on my mind, this doesn't feel any different to me than the usual waiting game that normally comes to nothing and no real answers or no real recognition or acknowledgement or apology. Lets hope I am wrong.

I intend to eventually blog on a more regular basis and in time I intend to put up extracts from my book that I wasn't allowed to publish for legal reasons, this has always rankled me, while I completely understood that the publishers had to protect themselves and given that I have been legally threatened a few times, I was happy to accept their worries.

However somewhere down the line if I ever get the time I intend to tell my full story on here if I can't get to tell it in a courtroom or an inquiry  and I intend to name all the men responsible so watch this space............................



~Thank you

Thursday, 5 March 2015

SOME MORE POSITIVE NEWS:


SOME MORE  POSITIVE NEWS:

I am delighted to announce that Simon got the all - clear today from Prostate Cancer. Simon was very young to have had prostate cancer, it was diagnosed when he was 47, but his symptoms had been present since he was 43. 

Please if you are having any problems with your "water works" see your GP a simple blood test can catch it and studies show that it is a very high success rate if caught early enough. 

Men whose father or brother had prostate cancer are two and a half times more likely to have prostate cancer and men who have prostrate cancer their sisters are at risk of getting breast cancer so please get yourselves to the GP and don't leave it too late. 

Thankfully Simon is now in a low risk grade and will be checked every three months for the next five years. We certainly were very lucky, as we caught it on time. Will you?

Thursday, 19 February 2015

Some positive news!!!!!

URGENT POSITIVE NEWS!!!!!!!
Received this tonight as I logged on after midnight but wanted to share its quite "hopeful" and I am surprised they even replied to me! This is very positive news for my case, and I may very well end up getting the inquiry I have always wanted in that I will be able to put the men who abused me on the stand, okay so it wont be a criminal trial, but, they will be summonsed to attend and will face legal consequences if they don't.
However, please do continue to email the Minister and her Department and insist my case is looked at by a Commission its very important to put pressure on her office, thanks.
Email: info@justice.ie and show your support for Justice for Noleen.
Minister's Reference: 0819100447 IRM Reference: 4/500/1/171
Dear Ms. Owen,
I am directed by the Minister for Justice and Equality, Ms Frances Fitzgerald, T.D. to refer to your open letter of 22 December, 2014 expressing concern that none of the matters being considered by the panel of counsel operating the Independent Review Mechanism were included in the terms of reference for the Commission of Investigation set up as a result of the recommendations of the Guerin Report.
The delay in responding is regretted. This independent review panel has been examining 315 cases referred to them. This is a significant number of cases, and somewhat higher than originally estimated.
This has meant that the review has taken longer than originally expected, as it was not thought right to place a time constraint on the review. It is important for every case to be considered properly especially as the cases contain a very wide variety in the type and seriousness of the allegations.
Counsel are however making every effort to conclude their work as soon is reasonably practicable. It is open to the panel of counsel operating the review mechanism to make recommendations as they see fit in relation to each case. Where counsel do recommend further investigations, the Minister has clearly stated that she will be very strongly guided by that advice.
There are a number of possible options for further investigations. The Minister has stated that any recommendation for referral of a case to a commission of investigation will be very carefully considered. Such investigation could be arranged either by way of amending the terms of reference of an existing commissionor the establishment of a separate commission.
I hope that this explanation is of assistance. I will write to you again once the Minister has received and considered counsel’s recommendations. Yours sincerely,
Chris Quattrociocchi

Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Nearly that time of year again!

NOLEEN'S 42nd ANNIVERSARY:

I cannot believe that we are fast approaching Noleen's 42nd Anniversary on 4/4/2015. I set this blog up in January 2013, in the run up to Noleen's 40th Anniversary, little did I know I would be changing the blog title as each year passes. So soon the link to the blog will be www.noleenbetrayed42years.blogspot.com

Already the daffodils are out and spring is in the year as we creep through February and my sister Theresa's 10th Anniversary, on the 23rd February she would have been 43 had she lived,  I am not sure yet if I will mark her anniversary on my Facebook page (DalkeySindyMurphy) as I have so    much to cope with right now.

Simon has had his operation to remove his prostrate and we are just waiting on the biopsy to see if he is now cancer free, he is not home a week yet, from the hospital, depending on how things go, I may just spend Theresa's anniversary quietly with my daughter in law, and go somewhere beautiful and scenic to think of her.

I am waiting on so much news from Ireland too, which I have asked my solicitor to put on  hold while I help Simon recover from  his operation, so lets see how things go.

This year for Noleens anniversary we are going to visit our Niece, so can spend it with family, instead of my usual pilgrimage to Ireland to keep Noleens name in the media I am going to spend it at home with my 9 year old niece whom I love to bits and her parents. It will be nice to be around children and to laugh and feel free from shackles of guilt that usually torment me every year and send me to Ireland to do press conferences or memorial masses to keep her name alive.

However it will still be a sad and painful time, and to make it worse I will be visiting a town where Theresa and I lived together for four years, and where I first found the courage to tell someone in Authority about Noleen, that will bring its own challenges,  but I will face them and use the time to quietly spend time with people who love me and care about me.

My heart is already aching as I prepare mentally now to wake up on 4/4/2015 the 42nd anniversary of my beautiful little baby who was born and murdered on that day, already the pain has begun. The daffodils always mark the start of this time for me, as they were in bloom all around me when Noleen died and are always a constant reminder for me, I always fill the house with them at this time of year.

As soon as I see them in the shops I enter into a mourning period that starts earlier and earlier each year as we get milder winters.

And so the long painful journey to 4/4/2015 begins.....................................

Wednesday, 31 December 2014

Goodbye 2014!!!!!!

Goodbye 2014!!!!! Okay, so its time to say goodbye to 2014, and what a year. Looking back its been a good year as far as my legal battle has gone. Lots of things happened and there is lots more to come. I have already mentioned this but I will go over it again for those of you who might not know. In January a new police team in Dunlaoghaire headed up by Chief Superintendent Diarmuid O'Sullivan began to re-examine the file , my solicitor worked closely with them and by April and Noleens 41st Anniversary six of the men who abused me (known as the Sorrento Six were interviewed by the police).< On Noleens anniversary a petition with 12,444 signatures was handed in to the Department of Justice demanding that my case be part of The Commission to Investigate into the Guerin Report which was a review of Garda Mishandling and corruption. The Minister for Justice asked for a report into my case and then later on we found out that 305 cases of police corruption and Garda mishandling were submitted to the Department of justice. (This would later become 322 cases). This led to the setting up of a Review Panel of 7 barristers to look at these cases to see if they too could be added to the Guerin Report findings which could mean that our cases went to the Commission to Investigate and would be part of a public inquiry, back to that later. The Sorrento six (Who were dubbed the Sorrento Six by the garda, because they are the six remaining men who abused me in a house on Sorrento Road in Dalkey) were brought in for questioning again and some of their homes searched, one of them was thankfully removed from a large sports club in Dalkey where he had open access to over 200 children, another sacked as a taxi driver and another had to move from his local pub having been a customer there for over 40 years. The net was closing in and finally these men were beginning to be treated as suspects in a murder case and as prolific paedophiles and the risk they posed was finally being taken seriously as was the risk my two brothers posed. The police are still investigating and although it is painfully slow which causes me daily anguish and trauma I am hoping that things will be wrapped up pretty soon, I met with the police for five hours in June and I hope to meet with them again early in the new year. The police are pursuing two new avenues that I cannot reveal just yet but both of them could be the major breakthrough my case needs and could lead to justice. Separately to that, my case could be included in a public inquiry which would mean I could call the men who abused me as witnesses and finally reveal to the world just who they are and what they did to me and the part they played in covering up my daughters murder. The men are still being investigated and can be called back in for questioning at any time, and I'm hoping that one of the avenues the police are pursuing may see them finally prosecuted if all goes well. So in all 2014 was a good year with lots of positive developments in the case and lots of options available and some still available in my quest for justice. As always I was well supported by my friends and the Dalkey girls took a trip to Liverpool to spend quality time together which a great time was had by all! I was delighted to be able to spend time with my childhood friends who have supported me since day 1. I was as always supported by Simon and my immediate family and Simon's family and as most of you know Simon and I renewed our wedding vows in Gretna Green to celebrate 20 years of marriage which was absolutely awesome and wonderful. Not only was I supported by my lifelong friends and my family but as always I was supported by so many of you on Facebook and other members of the public and the regular ongoing messages /letters/texts remind me why I am doing this and give me strength to carry on. I am also supported by my solicitor Gerry Dunne who has been with me on this awful road for many many years now. I have been well supported by the media who follow my quest for justice and in particular Nicola Tallant and the Sunday World who have stood by me through the years and fought hard for justice for Noleen. I was relieved and excited to reach a stage in my studies recently where I knew I would be able to graduate in 2015 with a Bachelor's Degree in Social Science and I felt I had achieved the unachievable and I will post more on that nearer the time.

So yes, in all I feel I got somewhere in 2014, I feel I achieved something and I feel I did all I could to get justice for Noleen. Its not easy for me to say that because most of the time in the last 20 years I felt I had not done enough for her, in fact nothing I ever did for her ever felt enough, how could it?? How could I as a mother ever feel I had done enough to put right what they did to her?

I can already hear you saying that it wasn't up to me to make it right, that I was only a child too, but as a mother I have this huge need to make it right for her, and when I can't I torture myself and carry the huge burden of responsibility of trying to get justice for her.

So this year I have been able to feel that the burden is not so heavy because the police investigation along with the possibility of the public inquiry and the petition and the support from my solicitor and the Sunday world have eased my load and helped me to
feel that things are moving or happening at long last.

I must not forget Richard Boyd Barratt and Clare Daly and the support they also gave me which is second to none and remarkable, also Niall Collins has been in regular touch with my solicitor too.

But of course it wasn't all good, firstly the fact that the case was being looked at caused me a lot of trauma and distress, which haunted me daily, it was agonising and prolonged and it is still on going and not about to ease up anytime soon. Most days it was all I could do was to get out of bed and my studies went out the window causing me to have to cancel my graduation in the summer of 2014, this left me feeling very upset and disappointed and robbed all over again.

Simon was diagnosed with prostate cancer in September but had been having the tests for months and they were hanging over our heads, he is now waiting to have surgery so things are still worrying until he gets the all clear.

I would say that 2014 was probably the worse year in many years for trauma and distress and PTSD and nightmares and flashbacks and anxiety all due to the police investigation and other developments.  A lot of the time I felt as if I was dead inside and an empty shell, every time I thought things were settling down another part of the case jumped out at me or came back to haunt me. But I wasn't the only one haunted.

I knew that no matter what I was going through the men who abused me were going through more, the tables had now turned, they were the ones frightened of the knock on the door, or scared of the newspapers reporting on the crimes they committed and it was now them running scared, OK, so they were not in prison but they might as well have been because everyone now knew who they were and they were exposed in the Sunday World with their faces pixelated but easily identifiable.

It was reported in the media when they were brought in for questioning and it was also reported when there main ringleader of the paedophile ring was booted out of the sports club where he had been chairman for over 40 years, even two weeks ago a journalist knocked on his door and I am sure they will be knocking again very soon.

So, what's the moral of the story?? What can I say at the end of 2014?? Well, I can say that despite everything, the stress and the trauma, the awfulness of it all, I still survived, despite Simon being ill we soldiered on, despite not graduating I still managed to go back to my studies and to see to it that I will graduate this year.

But most importantly I think that despite the awful horrific childhood I had, a childhood I should NOT have survived I did survive, but not only did I survive I went on to learn to love and to be loved.

I went on and found the strength to fight and I finally feel that I was a good contender that I put up a good fight and that I took back some of my power. I am no longer that terrified little child that they controlled and ruled in my home and my school and my community.

No matter how this ends for now I feel like I didn't give up, I didn't take no for an answer and I went after them, I went after the men who abused me and destroyed me and who thought they had got away with it. I went after men whom I was terrified of as a child, men who controlled me, men who were sure of my silence and their secrets being kept, men who were pillars of the community, men who had the money to pay others for their silence too and men who were policemen and had good friends in tje police but nothing lasts forever and just when they might have began to believe that they finally got away with it, that they were home and dry I came after them and  for that I am proud of myself.

Even if they never go to prison I still feel like they are incarcerated in their minds, just like I used to be as a small child waiting for them to do what they did, now they are waiting for me.

As we go into 2015 I am no longer an abuse victim, I am a fighter and a survivor and I am also a wife and mother, I am a student and a friend, a pet owner and many more things.

I no longer allow abuse to define me, its now a small part of who I am, I am many things and I am sure in the future I will be many more.

So, my plans as we go into the new year??? Well,,,, my plan is to continue in the new year on the path I am on now, the path of seeing out the police investigation and praying that these major developments come to fruition. Then hopefully I will get the inquiry my case needs and deserves and I also intend on keeping up my campaign as usual, updating my Facebook page and I am now on twitter @cynthiaowen91 and I also intend to keep on, keeping on.

I have no intention whatsoever of giving up or giving in, if I do not get justice or the inquiry or any other avenues then I intend to name and shame my abusers publicly.

I intend on letting the world know who they are and where they live and what they did, one way or another the world will find out what really happened to myself and Noleen and my siblings. So, for now I am happy to wait for the slow wheels of justice to keep on turning but once those wheels stop I will be ready to launch my public campaign immediately and ready to name them all and what they did.

So my message for the monsters who abused me  as we go into 2015 is, one way or another I'm going to find a way to make sure the world knows who you are, however I do it, but it will be done, no more secrets or silence and no more lies.

Thank you everyone for your much appreciated support and a Happy New Year, heres to justice and recognition and acknowledgement for myself and my siblings and Noleen and John.


Saturday, 22 November 2014

Dessie Swords (Facebook 21 November 2014)

So, I log onto Facebook last night and some guy had put up a photo of Dessie Swords a deceased church clerk from Dalkey, who had been clerk to the church for 50 years.

Dessie Swords was one of the men who abused me, and was in some ways held up as a pillar of the community while in other ways local housewives warned thier children not to go to the church during the day when he was there and to stay away from 'Dirty Dessie'.

Dessie could be seen on a daily basis walking around the town in his church garb, approaching the young kids encouraging them to come to the church at 6pm where he would let them ring the church bell then sexually assault them while doing so.

He had been reported to the police and the parish priest, and he left many victims in his wake.

Some of these victims have spoken to my solicitor.

If you wanted to contact my solicitor in strict confidence his name is Gerry Dunne, Dublin 01-6628530. Or alternatively you can ring Dunlaoghaire Garda station and ask for Chief Superintendent Diarmuid O'Sullivan he also is aware of Swords background.

Or if you want to contact me about Swords or any other paedophile in Dalkey in confidence my email address is sindyowen@googlemail.com

I have seen other postings about Swords in the past and made the decision to say nothing, but no more lies and silence, I just couldnt stand by and watch him being held up as a pillar of the community again when the real truth is he was a prolific paedophile.


Tuesday, 18 November 2014

Panel Review have looked at 140 cases

Panel Review half way through!

Department of Justice and Equality
Garda Misconduct Allegations

Niall Collins (Limerick, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source
514. To ask the Minister for Justice and Equality the status of the independent review panel of complaints against An Garda Síochána; the timeline for the completion of the review; the personnel currently on the review panel; the conflict of interest procedures on the panel; if the findings of the panel will be published; if a debate will be held on the report; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [41459/14]
Niall Collins (Limerick, Fianna Fail)


Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source
517. To ask the Minister for Justice and Equality the timeframe for the completion of the independent review mechanism currently being conducted by the panel of barristers; the number of cases that have been completed to date; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [41519/14]


Niall Collins (Limerick, Fianna Fail)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source
519. To ask the Minister for Justice and Equality the actions she will take to address cases similar to those currently being reviewed by the independent review mechanism when the review mechanism ceases to function; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [41521/14]


Clare Daly (Dublin North, United Left)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source
533. To ask the Minister for Justice and Equality the numbers of cases that have been reviewed by the review panel; if persons have been notified of the results; and the outcome or current status of their cases. [41946/14]

Frances Fitzgerald (Minister, Department of Justice and Equality; Dublin Mid West, Fine Gael)
Link to this: Individually | In context | Oireachtas source

I propose to take Questions Nos. 514, 517, 519 and 533 together.

The Deputies are referring to the mechanism established for the independent review of certain allegations of Garda misconduct, or inadequacies in the investigation of certain allegations, which have been made to me as Minister for Justice and Equality, or the Taoiseach, with a view to determining to what extent and in what manner further action may be required in each case. A panel consisting of two Senior and five Junior Counsel was established for the purpose. The counsel appointed to the panel, and who were all selected on the basis of their experience of the criminal justice system, are:
Senior Counsel: Conor Devally, Paul Greene.

Junior Counsel: Paul Carroll, John Fitzgerald, Tony McGillicuddy, Siobhán Ni Chúlacháin, Karen O'Connor.

Appropriate steps have been taken to ensure that nothing arises which might in any way detract from the integrity of the review mechanism, including issues of conflict of interest. Arrangements have been put in place to ensure that if there is any conflict, or potential conflict, the conflicted counsel not only will not be involved in the particular complaint, but also will not be aware of which counsel is reviewing it. This is normal professional conduct and there are sufficient counsel on the Panel to ensure the practicality of this. Whatever steps are necessary will be taken to ensure there is no conflict of interest.


It was originally anticipated that the review would last some ten to twelve weeks. However, the availability of Counsel due to the operation of the Courts calendar together with the volume of complaints submitted means that this timeframe will be exceeded. As I already mentioned, it is important that nothing arises which might detract from the integrity of the review mechanism. It is therefore considered inappropriate to place a time constraint upon the working of the Panel, although they intend to conclude their work as soon is reasonably practicable.

I understand the panel have to date reviewed almost 140 cases and I expect recommendations to be submitted to me in due course. I will decide whether any further action is desirable and could practicably be taken in each case in light of the recommendations made by Counsel on the Panel, and each complainant will be notified accordingly.

While it would not be appropriate to publish individual recommendations, I will consider how best information on the outcome of this process could be made public.
While the independent review mechanism was established as a temporary measure, it was envisaged that there might be a need to consider the case for a continuing capacity to review further cases which may arise in the future. I have no doubt that the contents of the recommendations received from the Panel will inform how we deal with such issues once the independent review mechanism has concluded its work.

The Deputies will be aware however that, as part of the Government's comprehensive programme of reform in the areas of policing and justice in the State, I am bringing forward new legislation to amend the Garda Siochana Act 2005 to strengthen the remit and powers of GSOC, which is the statutory independent body set up under the Act with oversight functions in relation to the Garda Siochana. One of the legislative changes is to broaden the scope for me as Minister to refer any matter that gives rise to a concern to GSOC for investigation, and I would envisage GSOC as the primary mechanism for the future examination of allegations of this nature.