Appeal date set for YouTuber jailed for posts identifying asylum seekers

Paul Nolan (37) was sentenced to prison term for filming migrants outside Ipas centre in Tallaght last year

Paul Nolan: sentenced for online posts which risked identifying asylum seekers. Photograph: Tom Tuite
Paul Nolan: sentenced for online posts which risked identifying asylum seekers. Photograph: Tom Tuite

The first person convicted and jailed in Ireland for online posts that jeopardised the anonymity of asylum seekers has had a “priority” appeal date set in 2026.

Paul Nolan (37) stood outside the International Protection Accommodation Service (Ipas) centre in Tallaght, Dublin, on two days in August last year, questioning residents, including teenagers, a young woman and three men, Dublin District Court heard in September.

In that hearing, Judge John Hughes noted this was the first prosecution under the relevant law, which carries a possible 12-month prison term.

Nolan received a 10-month sentence, with the final three months suspended if he completes probation, anger management counselling, stays away from Ipas centres for two years and removes the videos.

Nolan, a father of three, told migrants in Tallaght that “in Ireland, you have no right to privacy”, and posted videos of his interactions on YouTube.

However, shortly after being jailed, he lodged an appeal to overturn his conviction and was released.

The next stage of that process was mentioned before Judge Deirdre Browne at the District Court Appeals on Friday, when the hearing date was scheduled for May 18th next.

Prosecutor Oisín Clarke BL asked for the hearing to be given priority and to have a full day to be set aside.

Defence counsel Luke O’Higgins agreed and the judge noted the District Court trial had taken a day.

The appeal judge granted legal aid to the unemployed appellant, who did not address the court.

She also requested an Arabic interpreter to assist witnesses when the case gets under way.

Nolan, from Mount Eagle Square, Leopardstown, Dublin, pleaded not guilty to charges of threatening and abusive behaviour under the Public Order Act. International protection applicants have the right to anonymity regarding their refugee application status.

He also denied four counts under Section 26 of the International Protection Act 2015, which makes it an offence to publish or broadcast information likely to identify an applicant without consent.

The incidents happened on August 22nd and August 24th, 2024, at St John’s House, a migrant accommodation centre on High Street, Tallaght, Dublin 24.

His videos included three men, one with two teenage sons who were also questioned, plus another 15-year-old boy and his 22-year-old sister. Video evidence showed one was threatened.

Judge Hughes called Nolan’s conduct repeated, premeditated and targeted. Finding him guilty, the judge had said Nolan used “a tissue of lies, wrapped in a shroud of pseudo-citizen journalism”.

While sentencing, the judge called his actions “a disgraceful, glorious display of rudeness, hyena-like behaviour, and ignorance”.

Nolan claimed he went to investigate a demonstration as an untrained citizen journalist for his YouTube channel.

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