List of public inquiries in the Republic of Ireland

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In Ireland, there are several kinds of public inquiry. A Tribunal of Inquiry, often simply called a tribunal, is a powerful type of statutory inquiry whose procedures are governed by the Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) Act 1921 as amended. [1] An Oireachtas inquiry is a less powerful non-statutory inquiry controlled directly by the Oireachtas (parliament). A 2013 proposal to strengthen the power of Oireachtas inquiries was defeated at a referendum. The Law Reform Commission published a report in 2005 examining the operation of public inquiries and recommending changes. [2] A commission of investigation is a different form of inquiry, with evidence generally given in private; provided by the Commissions of Investigation Act 2004 to address scandals relating to medical care and child abuse. [3] [4]

Contents

Tribunals of inquiry

Tribunals have been held to address many political controversies, increasing in frequency since the Beef Tribunal of the early 1990s. While they have been the subject of many dramatic revelations in Irish politics, they have also become known for running long beyond their intended length – the longest being the Mahon Tribunal (previously the Flood Tribunal) which began in 1997 and issued its final report in 2013.

The Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) Act 1921 was enacted by the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland before the setting up of the Irish Free State and as such remains in Ireland. [5] It has, however, been amended since by several Acts of the Oireachtas. The chair of the inquiry is mandated by the Oireachtas (following resolutions in both the Dáil and the Seanad) to carry out the inquiry into matters of urgent public importance by a Warrant of Appointment. The terms of reference of the inquiry are given as part of that warrant.

Tribunals of Inquiry are established by the Oireachtas where the evidence of malfeasance might not be enough to secure a criminal conviction, but where public policy requires answers. Critics of the system say that tribunals: are relatively toothless; may give witnesses immunity that they would not obtain from a court; allow legal representation to all parties, resulting in a higher final cost to the State than the cost of the original malfeasance; and that they can delay difficult political decisions. [6] The Comptroller and Auditor General published a report in 2008 into the cost of Tribunals of Inquiry and making recommendations. It noted that 50%–85% of the cost of recent tribunals had been legal fees for third parties, as distinct from administration and the tribunal's own legal fees. [7]

Tribunals of Inquiry are invested with the powers, privileges and rights of the High Court. It is not a function of a Tribunal to administer justice; their work is solely inquisitorial. Tribunals are required to report their findings to the Oireachtas. They have the power to enforce the attendance and examination of witnesses and the production of relevant documents. Tribunals may consist of one or more persons, though the practise has been to appoint a Sole Member. Tribunals may sit with or without Assessors (who are not Tribunal members). Sittings are usually held in public but can, at the Tribunal's discretion, be held in private.

List

Tribunals of inquiry since the foundation of the state in 1922 [8]
NameSubjectMember(s) [n 1] Dáil
resolution [n 2]
Seanad
resolution [n 2]
Ministerial order [n 3] Report laid [n 4] Cost [n 5]
Food Prices TribunalRetail prices of "articles in general consumption" Samuel Lombard Brown, Joseph Johnston, John Busteed, Richard A. Butler, Máire Ní Chinnéide, Bryan Cooper, Thomas Farren, J. F. Maguire, Patrick Shaw [9] 16 December 1925 27 January 1926 £1,667 [n 6] [10]
Ports and Harbours TribunalPorts and harboursH.B. O'Hanlon, C.H. O'Conor, Michael Keegan 19 January 1926 27 January 1926 12 May 1926 1930
Shooting of Timothy Coughlan George P. Cussen, Cyril Beatty, J. S. Troy [11] 15 February 192815 February 192814 April 1928 [12]
Grain Inquiry TribunalWhether mixture of maize meal and maize products with home-grown cereals would be in the national interestJ.J. McElligott, Joseph Whelehan, J.H. Hinchcliff27 November 192928 November 192929 November 1929 12 October 1931
Marketing of butter John Dulanty, John P. Colbert, Thomas Duggan, Michael B. McAuliffe, Patrick Vaughan [13] 30 April 1930 14 May 1930 December 1930 (interim report [n 7] )
Pig Industries TribunalPromotion of pig production Henry J. O'Friel, Daniel Twomey, Joseph B. Whelehan, Patrick A. Rogan 5 May 1933 11 May 1933 18 May 1933 26 January 1934
Grading etc. of Fruit and VegetablesHenry J. O'Friel, Joseph B. Whelehan, Hugh Bradley12 December 193419 December 193421 March 1935 14 September 1940
Town Tenants (Occupation Tenancies)Hardships in rented urban accommodationWilliam Black, et al. [15] 13 December 1935 18 December 1935 1936 [15] early in 1941 [15]
Pearse Street fire Martin C Maguire, William Ian Bloomer, William Maguire25 November 1936N/A [n 8] 5 January 1937 15 September 1937 £622 [16]
Public Transport Public transport Joseph Ingram7 December 19387 December 19381939
Fire at St. Josephs Orphanage, Cavan Joseph A. McCarthy, James J. Comerford, Mary E. Hackett3 March 194310 March 194325 March 1943 17 September 1943
Dealings in Great Southern Railways Stocks between 1/1/1943 and 18/11/1943A.K. Overend, Cahir Davitt, Barra Ó Briain24 November 194325 November 19431 December 1943 20 September 1944
Ward TribunalAllegations by Patrick MacCarvill against Conn Ward, Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister for Local Government and Public Health John O'Byrne, Kevin Haugh, William G. Shannon 5 June 1946 5 June 1946 7 June 1946 1946 £4,389 [17]
Supply of milk for the Dublin sale districtMartin C. Maguire, Robert A. O. O'Meara, William C. Kenny30 November 19446 December 19441 March 1945 8 July 1947 £650 [18]
Disposal of Locke's Distillery, KilbegganJohn O'Byrne, Kevin Haugh, Cahir Davitt5 November 19476 November 19477 November 1947 20 December 1947
Cross Channel Freight RatesShipping between Ireland and Great BritainPádhraic Ó Slatarra, F. Vaughan Buckley, John J. Walsh23 October 195713 November 195719 November 1957 12 June 1959 £2,989 [19]
Pay of clerical-grade public servantsGerard Quinn, Edward J. Gray, Charles McCarthy, Cathal O'Shannon, Joseph S. Quigley3 October 196510 October 196530 November 1965 25 May 1966
Death of Liam O'Mahony in Garda custody William FitzGerald, George D. Murnaghan, John Charles Conroy18 July 196719 July 196719 July 1967 1 December 1967 £13,000 [20]
Tribunal on Teacher's SalariesTeachers' salariesLouden Ryan, Ernest Benson, Maurice P. Cosgrave, L.M. Fitzgerald, Cathal O'Shannon 15 December 1967 23 May 1968
"Seven Days" Television programme on Illegal Moneylending Seán de Buitléir, A. Denis Pringle, Patrick O'T—18 December 196917 December 196922 December 1969 5 August 1970
Allegations made in the Dáil by Bobby Molloy and Brendan Crinion against James Tully, the Minister For Local Government Séamus Henchy, Weldon R.C. Parke, John Charles Conroy 3 July 1975 4 July 1975 4 July 1975 1 August 1975
Costello Inquiry Whiddy Island Disaster Declan Costello 6 March 19796 March 19799 April 1979 26 July 1980
Fire at Stardust Club, Artane Ronan Keane 18 February 198119 February 198120 February 1981 12 November 1982
Kerry Babies Tribunal Kerry Babies case Kevin Lynch11 December 198412 December 198413 December 1984 4 October 1985 Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine £1.645m [21]
Beef Tribunal Beef Processing Industry Liam Hamilton [22] 24 May 199129 May 199131 May 1991 9 August 1994 €27.233m [23] [24]
Finlay Tribunal Hepatitis C infection of pregnant women from Rho(D) immune globulin Thomas Finlay 17 October 1996 17 October 1996 24 October 1996 11 March 1997 €4.57m [23] [24]
McCracken Tribunal Alleged Payments by Dunnes Stores Brian McCracken 6 February 19976 February 1997 25 August 1997 €6.56m [23] [24]
Moriarty Tribunal Payments by Ben Dunne to Charles Haughey and Michael Lowry Michael Moriarty11 September 199718 September 199726 September 1997 December 2006 (Pt 1) March 2011 (Pt 2) €46.15m [n 9]
Mahon Tribunal Planning matters (including rezoning by Dublin County Council and other Dublin local authorities) Alan Mahon, with Mary Faherty and Gerald Keys; prev Feargus Flood 7 October 1997 / 1 July 1998 / 5 July 2001 / 28 March 2002 / 3 July 2003 / 17 November 2004 [n 10] 8 October 1997 / 2 July 1998 / 5 July 2001 /

28 March 2002 / 4 July 2003 / 17 November 2004 [n 10]

4 November 1997 / 15 July 1998 / 24 October 2002 / 7 July 2003 / 3 December 2004 [n 10] [25] 22 March 2012 (Vol I-IV); 31 July 2013 (Vol V) €159m [n 11]
Lindsay Tribunal HIV and Hepatitis C infection of haemophiliacs Alison Lindsay2 June 19992 June 1999 5 September 2002 €46.649m [23]
Barr Tribunal shooting of John Carthy in Abbeylara, County Longford on 20 April 2000Robert Barr 17 April 2002 18 April 2002 1 July 2002 20 September 2006 €20.7m [29]
Morris Tribunal concerning some Gardaí of the Donegal Division Frederick Morris 28 March 2002 28 March 2002 24 April 2002 June 2004–September 2008 (8 volumes) €70-72m [n 12] [30]
Smithwick Tribunal whether Irish officials colluded in the murder of two RUC officers on 20 March 1989 [31] Peter Smithwick 23 March 2005 24 March 2005 31 May 2005 3 December 2013 €12m [n 13] [32]
Disclosures Tribunal [33] Garda whistleblower scandal [34] Peter Charleton 16 February 2017 [ permanent dead link ] 16 February 2017 17 February 2017 [35] TBDTBD
Notes
  1. Where multiple members are listed, the first listed chaired the tribunal.
  2. 1 2 Date of resolution mandating establishment of Tribunal. External link is to the resolution debate.
  3. Date of order by minister, or by Governor-General until 1936, establishing tribunal.
  4. Date report was laid before the houses of the Oireachtas. External link is to the report: either an official webpage or a PDF scan from the Oireachtas library.
  5. Estimated or actual cost, generally excluding legal costs of third parties where not paid by the state.
  6. 1927 projection
  7. No other report was issued. [14]
  8. Seanad had been abolished
  9. Total up to August 2011; made up of €42.706m to the Tribunal itself and €3.444m in Department of Communications, Energy and Natural Resources legal costs. [23]
  10. 1 2 3 First date is of original resolution; later dates are of resolutions amending its terms of reference.
  11. September 2014 estimate. [26] A December 2014 Supreme Court decision may increase this by a further €36m, [27] though this is disputed. [28]
  12. 2011 projection
  13. 2013 projection

Other inquiries

Non-tribunal official inquiries, and subsequent reports, include: [36]

Bibliography

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