McDowell accused of playing the 'blame game'

The Minister for Justice Mr Michael McDowell has been accused of "playing the blame game" following confirmation that a public…

The Minister for Justice Mr Michael McDowell has been accused of "playing the blame game" following confirmation that a public apology would be given to families framed by corrupt gardaí in Co Donegal.

Mr Frank McBrearty Jr, who was wrongly accused of the murder of cattle dealer Richie Barron, said “Mr McDowell is playing the blame game now, blaming everybody except himself. He's trying to blame the Opposition.”

Earlier, Mr McDowell said people targeted by rogue officers in the events leading to the Morris Tribunal were owed a solemn letter of apology by successive governments including the Rainbow Coalition in the mid-1990s.

However, Labour Party leader Pat Rabbitte branded Mr McDowell's comments as “worthless bully-boy posturing.”

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Mr Rabbitte called for the Morris Tribunal to probe the role of Justice Ministers and the Justice Department in the affair.

Mr McDowell told RTE Radio: "When the facts are out in the open ... so that people know what is being apologised for, the state undoubtedly will owe the McBreartys, McConnells, the Peoples and various others involved in this affair a solemn apology for the way in which they were treated.

“That apology will be made on behalf of the state, on behalf of successive governments on whose watch various things happened, in particular the events between 1995 and 1997 which gave rise to this major miscarriage of justice.

He denied claims that he was trying to spread the blame for the events to the Opposition.

“People who are remedying these things now shouldn't be the subject of political charges by people who were sitting at the Cabinet table when [garda] morale and management systems collapsed and when all of these things were being perpetrated on the McBreartys.”

Mr Rabbitte, a member of the Rainbow Cabinet, said evidence to the Morris Tribunal showed that no minister or senior official was properly briefed on these issues until almost two years after the Rainbow had left office and Fianna Fáil and the PDs were in government with Mr McDowell as Attorney General.

He claimed that Opposition parties tried three times to have the tribunal's terms of reference extended in 2001 and 2002 but Government TDs defeated the proposals each time.

“If the minister is really serious about the dirt he is now seeking to throw at Opposition parties, he should welcome an impartial investigation.

“I therefore invite him, for a fourth time, to widen the tribunal's terms of reference so as to include an investigation of the role of the Department of Justice and of successive Ministers for Justice.

“If he does not accept the invitation, then his present charges and threats levelled against the Opposition can be dismissed as worthless bully-boy posturing.”

Judge Frederick Morris said in last week's second interim report that the garda investigation of Mr Barron's death in 1996 was “prejudiced, tendentious and utterly negligent in the highest degree."