Results 5,541-5,560 of 18,761 for speaker:Michael McDowell
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: We are in the process of installing counter measures in prisons, but I do not know whether they will be 100% effective or if ways may be found to get around them.
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: That is a good point. I am not unmindful of those points.
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: Yes, but prison officers are not supposed to have phones with them while on duty, so that is another point. They are tough penalties, but if they were not, on indictment, we would have problems arresting people who were attempting to smuggle phones into prison because the supply clause in section 36(1) applies to persons supplying a device to a prisoner without such permission. A person who...
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: I should have said the criminal law applies both inside and outside prison.
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: There is a provision in the rules that the Minister can issue directions as to whether a governor shall be under a duty to report an incident to An Garda SÃochána for investigation or whether an offence has been committed under the Criminal Law Act 1976 or under this rule. There has to be discretion.
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: If one prisoner throws a punch at another we cannot haveââ
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: ââa situation where the Garda has to come in. There has to be discretion, but obviously in relation to serious offences the Garda should be called. It is a matter of judgment for the individual governor as to whether it is appropriate to bring the Garda in, because prisoners can be punished for minor infractions and for major infractions. A prisoner, for instance, who is found in...
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: I am grateful to the two Deputies for raising the issue of St. Patrick's Institution. Following a review of the youth justice system, the Government agreed in December to a number of reforms, including amendment of the Children Act 2001, which has since been included in the Criminal Justice Act 2006, and the establishment of an Irish Youth Justice Service. The issue of the accommodation of...
- Prisons Bill 2006 [Seanad]: Report Stage (Resumed) and Final Stage (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: Between 18 and 21 years is the plan. I have to have some segregated facilities for younger offenders there. My intention is to bring the use of St. Patrick's Institution to an end as soon as I can. I cannot do it in the context of not having facilities built at Thornton. That is why this Bill is so important to both of those projects.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: On the VHI matter, as Deputy Bruton will be aware, the Minister for Health and Children, Deputy Harney, proposes to publish health insurance legislation this session. Deputy Bruton will also be aware that there is a group, under Mr. Colm Barrington, studying some of the fundamental issues which lie at the heart of current controversies. The Government awaits its report this month. The...
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: It is my hope that the Bill will be published on Monday of next week.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: That will allow the whole of next week and the bulk of the following week, or until Thursday, for Deputies to consider the text and contents of the legislation. It is proposed that a two-day Second Stage debate will be held on the legislation on Thursday and Friday of the following week. With regard to Committee Stage, I have always been willing to sit lengthy hours and until midnight if...
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: It may not be family friendly but sometimes the families of innocent people who have been shot down must also be considered.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: The legislation is needed. If I did not think that was so, I would not propose it. There is a clamant public demand to make the law as it pertains to bail, detention and questioning of people accused of tiger kidnappings, firearms murders and the like effective. That has to be done. I ask Deputy Howlin to bear in mind that we should not give up our day jobs just because an election is...
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: We have a lot of work to do and we owe it to our constituents and the peopleââ
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: ââto put in place the necessary measures to safeguard the people's welfare and protect the rights of individuals.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: The people's constitutional rights are not simply those of an accused in a criminal process. The rights also exist not to be shot or to have to stand at the foot of one's son's coffin.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: An individual has the right not to have his or her family kidnapped in a tiger kidnapping. These are all important constitutional rights and they should be defended with vigour by this House.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: The Bill is scheduled for publication in early summer.
- Order of Business (8 Mar 2007)
Michael McDowell: The Bill in question will be brought before the House this session.