Garda body-cam footage used in prosecution of anti-immigration activist arrested during Coolock riots

Philip Dwyer given two-month suspended sentence for failing to obey a garda direction to move on

Philip Dwyer received a suspended sentence for failing to comply with gardaí during the  Coolock riots. Photograph:  Collins Courts
Philip Dwyer received a suspended sentence for failing to comply with gardaí during the Coolock riots. Photograph: Collins Courts

Garda body-cam footage has been used for the first time in a court case for the prosecution of citizen journalist Philip Dwyer for failing to obey a direction to move on during riots in Coolock, Dublin, last year.

The prominent anti-immigration activist made legal history as he was handed a two-month suspended sentence by Judge John Hughes at Dublin District Court on Thursday.

Dwyer (56), a father-of-three from Tallaght Cross West, Tallaght, Dublin 24, denied failing to comply with a garda direction and refusing to give gardaí his name and address under the Public Order Act on July 15th at Malahide Road.

There had been unrest in the area after the Government announced plans to use the disused Crown Paints factory to accommodate hundreds of international protection applicants.

READ MORE

Dwyer, who could have faced six months in jail, unsuccessfully ran in last year’s European, general and local elections and campaigned for tighter immigration controls.

Following legal submissions by defence counsel Luke O’Higgins, the accused was cleared of refusing to tell gardaí his name.

But Dwyer, who told gardaí at the scene that the case would be “thrown out of court”, was found guilty of failing to comply with a direction to leave the area.

He was fined €500 and ordered to report to the Probation Service every three months for the next two years.

Frontline gardaí began using body-cam last year, and the case marked the first time the technology was used in court to secure a conviction.

Dwyer is a self-described citizen journalist. The court heard he was a trainee journalist on a course, did freelance work with sporadic income, totalling about €500 a year, and relied on social welfare.

The former property manager and window repairman also depended on donations for equipment.

He had testified he had been in the Coolock area that had been there reporting on a subject of national interest. He was live-streaming to 13,000 followers at the time.

He claimed he was singled out. He maintained that he followed a direction given to him by Detective Inspector Alan McDevitt, who had told the hearing that the accused tried to “interview” him immediately after he was given the direction to leave.

Finding him guilty, however, Judge Hughes held that he had not obeyed and did not leave immediately, as required under the law, in a peaceable and orderly manner.

He remarked that it clearly happened during “riotous conditions.

The judge went on to describe it as a “very difficult, dangerous, very dynamic and fast-moving situation” where other individuals felt it was appropriate to go “toe-to-toe with the State”.

Footage from Det Insp McDevitt’s official body-cam was shown during the hearing.

It picked up Dwyer saying that he was a citizen journalist, and the officer replied: “You’re a prisoner now”, as he was arrested and handcuffed.

The video showed the accused telling the inspector that he had not refused to leave and that the “people of Ireland have the right to know”, and he accused gardaí of being “unable to control unvetted people coming in.”

Dwyer was also heard telling them, “This is going to be thrown out of court unless you tell a lot of lies,” which the judge found to be indicative of Dwyer’s mindset before arrest.

In evidence, the accused claimed he had told youths throwing stones to stop and that he complied with the garda within seconds but had argued his case with the officer and was arrested.

Dwyer believed his arrest was not justified.

The accused said he had asked about updates and that he was reporting on the events in the area but denied trying to interview the inspector.

The court heard he had minor road traffic convictions dating back to 2014.

The judge said that the accused was “not protected by the claim of being a journalist, or a citizen journalist, or a credited journalist, or a judge or a priest or whatever, you are still subject to the rigours of section 8 of the Public Order Act.”