Fleadh Rua Red Head Festival taking place this weekend

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The Fleadh Rua Red Head Festival will take pace in Forkhill this coming Saturday August 1st.

The second year of the event, it gets underway from 12 noon at the community centre and everyone is welcome, particularly red heads.

Amongst the events planned include face painting, clay modelling, a bus tour of the Ring of Gullion and a range of entertainment, including a ceili that night in The Welcome Inn at 9pm.

Suicide prevention group PIPS are the beneficiaries of funds raised at the event, having received over £1,100 last year.

For further details check out the Fleadh Rua Facebook page.

End of an era as Country Stores Toymaster prepares to close

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There’s probably not a parent in Dundalk of a certain age who didn’t shop there over the years but, after 31 years in business, the Country Stores Toymaster in Forkhill is set to close for good.

Located just over the border, near Murphy’s on the Carrickasticken Road, its owners Sharon and John Eveson announced at the weekend they were to retire.

The Evesons had previously operated a Toymaster in Dundalk, firstly in Clanbrassil Street from August 1991 to 2007 when they moved to the Long Walk before closing in the summer of 2008.

Their Forkhill store remained open though and it is on a nostalgic note that its closure has arrived. Its location just three miles from Dundalk made it a hugely popular place for toys, particularly in the late Eighties and Nineties before the likes of Smyth’s arrived in town. It proved particularly popular in years where the old Irish punt was worth more than sterling.

The Evesons have thanked all their customers from over the years and have announced a retirement sale, which gets underway this Tuesday at 10am. Be sure to call out to Country Stores Toymaster one last time to grab a bargain.

19-year-old woman denies running a bomb factory in Forkhill

Orla O'Hanlon

Orla O’Hanlon

A 19-year-old woman, jointly accused with her boyfriend of running a “bomb factory” for dissident republicans just outside Dundalk, yesterday denied eight offences relating to explosives and ammunition.

Orla O’Hanlon entered not guilty pleas at Newry Crown Court to various charges accusing her of making explosives, possessing explosive substances and reloaded ammunition with intent to endanger life and under suspicious circumstances on a date unknown between November 22 and December 18 2013.

Alongside her in the dock was her boyfriend 20-year-old, originally from Dundalk, who faces the same charges. His scheduled arraignment was adjourned to Thursday due to a mix-up with his legal team, who did not attend on Tuesday.

The charges arise after police searched their former home address at the Tievecrom Road in Forkhill, uncovering improvised fertiliser-based explosives in an industrial coffee grinder as well as other items including a “fully constructed” timer power unit (TPU), a mobile phone controlled detonator switch and a “large amount” of latex gloves.

During a failed previous bail application for McConnan, a police officer claimed that forensic examinations of the plastic bag containing the TPU uncovered a finger print attributable to McConnan and that when his main address in Dundalk was searched, police found a quantity of sugar-based material regularly used in home-made bombs.

The officer further claimed that the police had evidence that McConnan had used a fake name to buy the sugar-based material, the TPU and a quantity of wire, adding that taking everything together, “we have a fully fledged home-made explosive device”.

Following her denials O’Hanlon, now with an address on the Church Road in Forkhill, was released on continuing bail while McConnan was remanded back into custody.

One of the largest ever fuel laundering plants discovered in Forkhill

Part of the find in Forkhill this evening

Part of the find in Forkhill this evening

One of the largest amounts of toxic waste from fuel laundering found in the UK or Ireland was discovered just over the border in south Armagh this evening.

Customs officials have said the discovery has averted “a potential environmental disaster”.

Up to 50 tonnes of sludge, which is produced as part of the process of illegally laundering diesel, was found in a farm shed just outside Forkhill, a few kilometres from Dundalk.

It is understood the plant was capable of turning out 20 million litres of illicit fuel every year. The cost to the taxpayer is an estimated £12.5m in lost taxes.

As well as the toxic waste, 2,000 litres of illicit diesel, pumps and equipment were recovered during the operation.

The find is the second major victory in the battle against the illegal fuel trade in the space of 24 hours following the discovery of a separate plant in Co Monaghan yesterday.

The plant at Drumboat, Inniskeen, Co Monaghan – close to the borders with Louth and Armagh – was reported by RTÉ to have had the capacity to launder 20 million litres of diesel a year, with the potential loss of €10m to the Exchequer.

It is suspected that the plant was operating for more than a year.

A 42-year-old male was arrested following the overnight operation in relation to breaches of environmental waste legislation.

Organised criminal gangs are understood to be setting up front companies to source and launder fuel, which is then sold through petrol stations they control, with around 150 of these believed to be operating around the country.

Laundered fuel is discounted red or green diesel, which has been filtered through chemicals or acids to remove the government marker that shows the fuel is for agricultural or industrial use only.

HMRC senior investigation officer Derek Dubery told BBC News that the Forkhill find would cost a lot to deal with.

“This is going to cost £400 per tonne to clean up and there are 50 tonnes. That’s a lot of money that could be spent on more essential public services,” he said.

He said the only way the fuel launderers could be beaten was with the help of the public.

“Clearly people want to buy cheaper fuel. What people have to ask themselves is whether they support organised crime; whether they support damage to the environment,” he said.

“Because if they don’t support organised crime, if they don’t want to see damage to the environment, then they shouldn’t be buying this fuel.”

HMRC officers and the police were joined in the operation by officials from the environmental crime unit of the Northern Ireland Environmental Agency.

No-one has yet been arrested in connection with the find, but Mr Dubery said forensic officers were at the scene looking for evidence to connect offenders to the plant.

“If we can provide that evidence and give it to the prosecution service, then people will be brought before the courts; that’s the best that we can do,” he said.

He also said that the fight to put the launderers out of business will go on.

“We will do our bit, we will improve the markers in the fuel, we will make this process more difficult. But it will be a constant battle,” he said.

“While there is a market, while there are people out there buying it – just like drugs – while there are people there to buy it, there will always be people there to sell it.”

Former local doctor pleads guilty to forging will of elderly woman

Dr Cassidy

Dr Cassidy

A former local doctor who used to work with the Tyrone GAA team received a suspended prison sentence yesterday after pleading guilty to being involved in the forging of a will of an elderly woman who left a €1.9m fortune.

Dr James Cassidy (62), also known as Seamus, pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy in connection with the €1.9m (£1.5m) will of a widow whose body had to be exhumed as part of the police investigation.

The GP, from Killyman Road, Dungannon, had previously pleaded not guilty to doctoring the last testament of south Armagh publican Catherine ‘Kitty’ Haughey when he appeared in court.

But earlier this year, Dr Cassidy changed his plea and was sentenced to one year and six months in prison, which was suspended for three years.

While the sentence was handed down in June, it couldn’t be reported until this week when reporting restrictions were lifted.

Catherine ‘Kitty’ Haughey was found dead in the living quarters of her south Armagh pub in December 2004. Concerns were raised about her will after it emerged it had been changed two weeks before her death. Ms Haughey was widowed and childless.

Her body was exhumed in 2007 amid fresh suspicions surrounding her death.

However, a post-mortem examination later confirmed she died of natural causes.

Dr Cassidy, who had a practice on the Avenue Road in Dundalk where he was once based with the late Dr Mary Grehan, pleaded guilty in June alongside David McQuaid (38), a quantity surveyor from Lisnaree Road, Lisnaree, Banbridge.

The restrictions were lifted after the last of the co-accused – the widow’s godson Francis Tiernan (53) of Carrickasticken Road, Forkhill – pleaded guilty to two charges of conspiracy to use a false document. He will be sentenced later this month.

A fourth accused, Dr Cassidy’s secretary Niamh Hearty, was unanimously found not guilty of forging the widow’s signature.

Ms Haughey’s forged, handwritten last will attempted to redirect the childless widow’s fortune from charitable organisations and a female friend called Alice Quinn to persons “in the business of becoming millionaires”.

The Newry court was told that Ms Haughey was the target of a “Hollywood scripted” conspiracy, which was discovered after Ms Quinn brought her suspicions of Kitty’s falsified signatures on a forged will to the Gardaí.

The jury at Miss Hearty’s trial heard that Ms Quinn became apprehensive about the document during a conversation with a man (now known to be Francis Tiernan) at Ms Haughey’s wake. The Garda investigation gained speed when a falsified patient file at the GP surgery of Dr Cassidy was generated at the behest of a letter said to be from a Dundalk solicitors.

The details of the GP’s letter were constructed to read that an examination of Ms Haughey had been done by a now deceased doctor shortly before the publican’s death.

The diagnosis was to say that Ms Haughey had been a healthy woman right up to her death. The letter was declared to be false in its entirety in 2008 and only a photocopy of it survived.

Details of the case emerged for the Newry Crown Court jury which later found Ms Hearty not guilty of involvement.

The 34-year-old from Long Avenue, Dundalk, was charged with two counts of conspiracy to use a false document and two counts of forgery in 2004.

A defence solicitor said the criminal investigation was “blown open” by Ms Hearty, who exposed the illegitimacy of her signature on the forged will.

He said she was a young woman working at the surgery and had been targeted as a “fall girl”.

Source: Newry Reporter

Red head festival planned for Forkhill next month

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Red heads traditionally get their fair share of slagging but you’d be a brave man or woman to do it in Forkhill next month at the first local red head festival.

The Fleadh Rúa will take place on Saturday June 14th. It is described as a “festival-gathering, celebrating the existence of the unique red-head gene, in an atmosphere of traditional Irish music and culture.”

A PIPS (Public Initiative for the Prevention of Suicide & Self-harm) fundraising event, some of the events planned for the day include a funfair, an arts and craft market, a farmer’s market, a ceili and a ‘Lovely Red Headed Girl’ contest.

You can find out more about the event on its official Facebook page here.

Alleged Dundalk bomb maker refused bail

McConnan appeared at Newry Magistrates Court

McConnan appeared at Newry Magistrates Court

An alleged dissident republican bomb maker from Dundalk has been refused bail after a judge deemed he appeared to be “more actively involved in this enterprise” than first believed.

The comments were made by District Judge Eamonn King after he heard that the police investigation into 19-year-old Keith McConnan had revealed further evidence allegedly linking him to the manufacture of a “fully fledged” bomb.

A Detective Constable had earlier told Newry Magistrates’ Court that a fingerprint allegedly belonging to McConnan was found on a bag containing a “fully constructed” timer power unit (TPU), that there was evidence indicating that he used a pseudonym to buy both the unit and other component parts.

The officer also said a search of McConnan’s home in Dundalk uncovered a large quantity of sugar-based material and that terrorist organisations regularly used material such as glucose in conjunction with ground down fertiliser to make improvised explosive devices.

McConnan, who is originally from Dundalk but now has an address at Tievecrom Road in Forkhill, faces three charges of possessing explosive substances namely a timer power unit and ground down ammonium nitrate with intent to endanger life and making an explosive substance with intent to endanger life on a date between 15 to 18 December last year.

His girlfriend, Orla O’Hanlon, 18 and of the same address, faces the same charges after police raided their home just before Christmas last year when they found the timer power unit, an industrial grinder with associated ground down fertiliser and a large amount of latex gloves.

Objecting to McConnan being released on bail, the officer described how the TPU was ready to be deployed and that it could be detonated remotely by a mobile phone, adding that since the initial search, it had been confirmed the white powder found in the grinder, the kitchen and in a vacuum cleaner was ground down ammonium nitrate fertiliser.

He also claimed that forensic examinations of the plastic bag containing the TPU uncovered a finger print attributable to McConnan and that when his main address in Dundalk was searched, police found a quantity of sugar-based material regularly used in homemade bombs.

The officer further claimed that the police had evidence that McConnan had used a fake name to buy the sugar-based material, the TPU and a quantity of wire adding that taking everything together, “we have a fully-fledged homemade explosive device”.

Under cross examination from defence lawyer Kelly Doherty, the officer agreed that McConnan had a clear record and that his girlfriend O’Hannon had been granted High Court bail but he claimed that she would not have been released if the High Court had heard the same information.

He further agreed there was no forensic DNA evidence linking McConnan to any of the materials but told the lawyer that was no surprise “given the extensive amount of latex gloves found”.

The officer said police were objecting to bail on the grounds that McConnan would reoffend and given that he potentially faced a lengthy jail term, had an address in the Republic and had access to significant funds, he may flee the jurisdiction.

Refusing the bail application and remanding McConnan into custody to appear again on 25 May, Judge King commented that the “first impression” he had when the couple first appeared before him was that “these two individuals were used by more sinister people”.

The judge added, however, that given the police claims on Wednesday “it would tend to indicate that this particular defendant was more actively involved in this enterprise”.

Source: UTV News

Sunday World publishes first picture of teenager accused of bomb making

Orla O'Hanlon

Orla O’Hanlon

The Sunday World have published the first photo of the ‘pretty’ teenager, who is one of two people charged with bomb making.

Orla O’Hanlon is charged along with fellow teenager Keith McConnan 19, in connection with the discovery of a bomb making factory in south Armagh last year.

Last week she was refused Legal Aid after a heated courtroom argument between the judge and her defence counsel at Newry magistrate’s court.

O’Hanlon 18, of Tievecrom Road, Forkhill and Dundalk man McConnan are accused of making and possessing explosives with intent to endanger life or property between December 15 and December 18 last year.

O’Hanlon had been released last month on High Court bail of £25,500 with a £500 cash sum and the deeds to her father’s house being handed in to the court by way of surety.

According to The Sunday World, the accused teenager, who was only two when the Good Friday Agreement was signed, has also been ordered to hand over all her travel documents and must sign in three times at a week at a PSNI station. She was also ordered not to be in contact with co-accused McConnan or a businessman named in court as ‘Oliver Treanor’.

District judge Bernie Kelly declined a Legal Aid application as the defendant lived under her parents’ roof and therefore regarded them as providing financial support for her.

Counsel for O’Hanlon reacted angrily: “Am I now being asked to do this for nothing?” he exclaimed.

O’Hanlon, who has changed her hair colour to brunette, was not in court. The pair were arrested at a house on Tievecrom Road on Wednesday, December 18 under Section 41 of the Terrorism Act.

At a previous hearing a detective constable from the PSNI’s Serious Crime Branch told district judge Eamonn King that he could connect the two teenagers to the charges.

He told the court that in a walk-in wardrobe in a bedroom officers found a timer power unit and ancillary items for the timer power unit.

”This would enable a bomb to be placed which could delay the detonation for several days.”

The detective added that in a bin a white substance was discovered which was forensically tested and found to be ammonium nitrate which he said is used for “home made explosives”.

O’Hanlon spoke openly about her family and home life during police interviews but refused to comment on anything further apart from to claim the industrial coffee grinder was used to grind down flour.

Source: Pretty teen charged with making bombs (The Sunday World)

Giro d’Italia Dundalk route and sprint finalised

Dundalk Town Council chairman Cllr Eamonn O'Boyle (left) welcomed the Giro crew to Dundalk last week

Dundalk Town Council chairman Cllr Eamonn O’Boyle (left) welcomed the Giro crew to Dundalk last week

The Giro d’Italia route through Dundalk has been finalised following a visit by Irish organiser Darach McQuaid of Shadetree Sports, along with his Italian colleagues and event organisers.

On Sunday, May 11th Giro d’Italia cyclists will sprint into Dundalk. The race for the coveted Red Jersey will pick up pace as the cyclists approach Dundalk and will end at St Nicholas’ Green Church, meaning that spectators will get to see cyclists taking a gentler pace up through Church Street, Clanbrassil Street, the Market Square, Francis Street, Park Street, Dublin Street and onto the Dublin Road.

The Giro logistics crew were welcomed by to Dundalk by Town Council chairman Cllr Eamonn O’Boyle, Town Clerk Frank Pentony, and Cuchulainn Cycling Club’s Pat O’Shaughnessy. Also putting their best foot forward for the town were Fiona Cunningham of Dundalk BIDS and Dundalk Tourist Officer Sinead Roche.

Pat O’Shaughnessy said that the crew were impressed by what they saw as they took a walk along the Clanbrassil Street and pinpointed locations for the sprint finish.

“Dundalk will be the place where thousands can gather at the Market Square, see the only sprint in the Southern leg of the race approach Dundalk on the big screen and anticipate the competitors’ arrival through the town centre.

“It’s going to be an amazing sight given the speed of the sprint in contrast to the much slower pace they’ll cycle at through the remainder of the town route.

Speaking following the Giro d’Italia crew visit, Cathaoirleach Eamonn O’Boyle said: “Dundalk is in the enviable position of being the only town centre to feature prominently on the Irish route. Everyone involved in Giro Dundalk, including myself is delighted that the cyclists will now travel the full length of the town, highlighting Dundalk on a global platform.”

Giro d’Italia route for Sunday May 11th: Starts in Armagh via Keady, over Keady mountain, Newtownhamilton, Lislea, Longfield Rd, and into Louth on the Carrickasticken Road, on its journey past Forkhill, into Kilcurry and joining the R177 Armagh Road, onto Lisdoo and into Dundalk Town Centre.

Leaving Dundalk, it travels on the R132 via Castlebellingham, Dunleer and Drogheda to Dublin.

Three arrested in Carrickcarnon

Three men have been arrested in the Carrickcarnon area as part of ongoing investigations into Dissident Republicans.

The men, aged in their early 20s to mid 50s, are currently being held in Dundalk Garda Station following their arrests last night.

The latest arrests comes after a 43-year-old man was arrested in Kilcurry earlier this week, shortly after two teenagers from Dundalk – a 19-year-old male and an 18-year-old female – were arrested in Forkhill after a bomb making factory was discovered during the search of a premises.