RISE IN FRAUD SCHEMES RELATED TO CORONAVIRUS (#COVID-19) PANDEMIC.

Scammers are leveraging the COVID-19 pandemic to steal your money, your personal information, or both.

Don’t let them!

Protect yourself and do your research before clicking on links purporting to provide information on the virus; donating to a charity online or through social media; contributing to a crowdfunding campaign; purchasing products online; or giving up your personal information in order to receive money or other benefits.

Be on the lookout for the following:

Fake CDC Emails.

Watch out for emails claiming to be from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) or other organisations claiming to offer information on the virus.

Do not click links or open attachments you do not recognise.

#Fraudsters can use links in emails to deliver malware to your computer to steal personal information or to lock your computer and demand payment.

Be wary of websites and apps claiming to track COVID-19 cases worldwide. Criminals are using malicious websites to infect and lock devices until payment is received.

Phishing Emails.

Look out for #phishing emails asking you to verify your personal information in order to receive an economic stimulus cheque from the government. While talk of economic stimulus cheques has been in the news cycle, government agencies are not sending unsolicited emails seeking your private information in order to send you money. Phishing emails may also claim to be related to:

* Charitable contributions

* General financial relief

* Airline carrier refunds

* Fake cures and vaccines

* Fake testing kits

Counterfeit Treatments or Equipment.

Be cautious of anyone selling products that claim to prevent, treat, diagnose, or cure COVID-19. Be alert to counterfeit products such as sanitizing products and Personal Protective Equipment (#PPE), including #N95 respirator masks, goggles, full face shields, protective gowns, and gloves. More information on unapproved or counterfeit PPE can be found at http://www.cdc.gov/niosh. You can also find information on the U.S. Food and Drug Administration website, http://www.fda.gov, and the Environmental Protection Agency website, http://www.epa.gov. Report counterfeit products at http://www.ic3.gov and to the National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center at iprcenter.gov or to similar organisations/official equivalents in your country.

If you are looking for accurate and up-to-date information on COVID-19, the CDC has posted extensive guidance and information that is updated frequently. The best sources for authoritative information on COVID-19 are http://www.cdc.gov and http://www.coronavirus.gov. You may also consult your primary care physician for guidance.

Simply always use good cyber hygiene and security measures. By remembering the following tips, you can protect yourself and help stop criminal activity:

* Do not open attachments or click links within emails from senders you don’t recognize.

* Do not provide your username, password, date of birth, social security number, financial data, or other personal information in response to an email or robocall.

* Always verify the web address of legitimate websites and MANUALLY type them into your browser.

* Check for misspellings or wrong domains within a link (for example, an address that should end in a “.gov” ends in .com” instead).

If you believe you are the victim of an #Internetscam or #cybercrime, or if you want to report suspicious activity, please do so to your country’s policing service.

Ireland! Where Right is Wrong and Wrong is Right…

What is the difference between the Irish Government and an organised #crime syndicate?

 

Answer: There is none!

 

Ireland is no longer a country. It has no soul, no truth, no truthfulness, no justice, no equality, no decorum, no morals, no code, no honour, no creed, no leadership. It is a perverse, twisted and sinister land where right is wrong and wrong is right.

 

The courts are packed to the rafters with criminal trials and civil law suits, while white-collar criminals walk free and the small debt defaulter or a person prepared to assist the defaulters rights against a crooked regime gets a prison cell. It is a wild land where rules go flying out the window at a moment’s notice.

 

Elections mean nothing whatsoever whether people want them or not and are nothing but a next-in-line party system irrespective of suitability, credibility or law-abidance. The old guard are there while the system rots and rots from bureaucracy, self-serving unconstitutional legislation, diminution of the Irish Constitution, inertia and lying rhetoric. Political parties claiming they can do a better job in trying to oust the other, but only hiding behind prepared departmental rhetoric and defending what should be prosecuted when in government. Not that Ireland has what is known as government – more an autocratic regime overseen by an old-styled centralized, autocratic failed #USSR style of governance know as the #EU. The European Union is the ultimate downfall for the majority sovereign citizens of the bloc and is only geared towards further fiscal enhancement of the super-rich, as we saw in Ireland when bankers and foreign investors were bailed out on failed investments by every Irish man, woman and child to the tune of close to €50,000 each, a sum, one must note that none of the Irish banks would approve such an amount of money as a credit loan or advance for most citizens, yet the austerity ridden regime imposed that high a financial burden on every man, woman and child. It won’t be sufficient either to ever clear the debt of the country which is nearer to €1 trillion rather than the stated €200 billion.

 

A land where the terrorist, bomber, murderer, or recidivist gets early release and victims get kicked in the teeth for their trouble and forgotten about quickly. We badly need to follow suit of the people of Iceland and take back our country from criminally corrupted politicians and their crony super-rich friends and jail them accordingly, as in Iceland. It can be done and it will be done. Ninety nine percent of the people of what is left of our nationhood urgently want this to happen. The sovereign majority people simply hate politicians in Ireland and the EU with a passion.

 

Laws are lax or unenforced and nothing but a book of politics and convenience to set the guilty free.

 

Our people have being enslaved by a slick, sick and supine system of government and Church, under a corrupt waiting-list system, which has done more to divide people than unite them.

 

It is a disgraceful country where government abrogates its responsibilities and careerist politicians laugh at the electorate when they collect their enormous undeserved salaries, pensions and perks.

 

A society which does not give a damn and is chronically indifferent and self-serving in the extreme.

 

An abode where mé féiners will kick you when you are down and begrudge you when you are up.

 

A culture of fear, repression, ignorance, jealousy and one-upmanship. 

 

It is a regime of incessant work for the unconnected, un-ucronied and non-nepotised who ironically have no life and no disposable income who end up marooned under a mountain of debt for their life’s toil – while thousands are hidden on underpaid ineffective, illegal job initiatives.

 

An expensive country where money management is impossible and taxes are covertly progressive to fund criminal politicians.

 

This country is a load of trouble from beginning to its failed revolutionary end and will end up at the bottom of the bottomless pit.

 

There is nothing in Ireland for good honest law-abiding sovereign people only a load of very bad trouble.

 

 

 

Statement by the Taoiseach, Mr. Bertie Ahern, T.D. in Dáil Éireann on Wednesday, 14 February, 2007 in relation to The Report of the Tribunal of Inquiry (Moriarty Tribunal) into Payments to Politicians and Related Matters

Statement by the Taoiseach, Mr. Bertie Ahern, T.D. in Dáil Éireann on Wednesday, 14 February, 2007 in relation to The Report of the Tribunal of Inquiry (Moriarty Tribunal) into Payments to Politicians and Related Matters.

 

Ceann Comhairle

What came home very forcefully to me as I read this report is the sheer scale of the amounts of money – over €11 million (or some €45m in today’s values) – found by the Tribunal to have been either privately donated to Mr Haughey or misapplied by him during the period under inquiry from 1979 to 1996.  What struck me even more forcefully were the devices employed to conceal the fact of and the nature of those transactions.  We are indebted to Judge Moriarty and the Tribunal team for their outstanding work in painstakingly stripping away the layers of secrecy and obscurity surrounding Mr Haughey’s financial affairs and exposing them to public scrutiny.  We look forward to receiving the second part of their report soon.

To those of us who knew Mr Haughey, who worked with him over the years, who saw him as a dynamic colleague and leader of exceptional abilities, the detailed revelations in this Report come as a grave disappointment.  Even now, I and others who worked with him in government find it difficult to comprehend the complexity of the man and the other life he led. 

To quote Judge Moriarty:

“ Apart from the almost invariably secretive nature of payments from senior members of the business community, their very incidence and scale, particularly during difficult economic times nationally, and when Governments led by Mr Haughey were championing austerity, can only be said to have devalued the quality of a modern democracy”

It is a harsh and damning indictment.  It is also a great tragedy. 

I said hard things about Mr Haughey and my disappointment at his lapses from the expected high standards on numerous occasions.  I said it at our Ard Fheis in 1997 and in subsequent statements and in interviews.  I stand over those criticisms. 

I also stand over my comments made at Mr Haughey’s funeral and on other occasions that he did a lot of good work for this country.  I believe I was right in those comments and there is no denying that he delivered much political progress but history will be the final judge of that. 

Here, in this forensically detailed Report, we have a judgement on a politician and statesman, who had it in him to be great, but who was seduced by a conviction of personal entitlement that ultimately undermined his vocation to be a true servant of our country and of our people.   Regrettably, the account now presented to us, is that of the private person who failed to live up to the high standards that we are entitled to expect of those in public life, as elected representatives or as office holders.

It is a cause of deep personal hurt that the Report has also found serious misappropriation of donations intended to assist with the medical treatment of the late Brian Lenihan.  The revelation that Mr Haughey, for his own personal benefit, redirected those and other donations, such as the political donations intended for the Fianna Fáil Party, was a matter of grave disappointment for me and for those who worked with him. 

In those times past, the lack of a formal, developed, ethics code and oversight machinery for those in public office no doubt facilitated the years of evasion and deceit that characterised Mr Haughey’s financial dealings, but does not excuse them.  Today we have a highly developed ethics framework that not only provides a mechanism for keeping holders of public office honest, but sets out clearly for them the highest standards of behaviour that they need to meet to earn the public trust.  I refer specifically to the enactment of the Ethics in Public Office Act, 1995 and the Standards in Public Office Act, 2001. 

The 1995 Act provided mechanisms for dealing with conflicts of interest in relation to members of the Houses, Ministers and officials in the Civil Service and the wider public service. It established the independent Public Offices Commission and provided for a Select Committee on Members’ Interests in each House of the Oireachtas to oversee its key provisions. It required Members of the Oireachtas, senior civil servants, public board members and senior executives of State bodies to disclose their personal interests in order to provide transparency in decision-making and accountability.  It regulated the acceptance of gifts by office holders.

The 2001 Act, for which I personally pressed, established a new Standards in Public Office Commission (the Standards Commission), to be chaired by a judge or former judge of the Supreme or High Court.  It was given wide investigative powers into acts or omissions of public servants or officeholders that are inconsistent with the proper performance of their duties, or that would be inconsistent with the maintenance of public confidence in that performance.

The Commission can engage inquiry officers to conduct preliminary investigations of complaints and indicate whether a case exists for further investigation by the Commission of a matter of significant public importance. The Commission has tribunal powers; it can summon individuals and papers, administer oaths, order discovery and preservation of documents and require the giving of evidence. It is an offence to obstruct an investigation of the Commission or an inquiry officer.

The 2001 Act also provided for the preparation of Codes of Conduct, in consultation with the Commission, for Members, for Office Holders and for directors or others employed by public bodies. These Codes of Conduct deal with the standards of conduct and integrity appropriate to the performance of their public duties by the persons concerned.

The Act also requires Members of the Houses to furnish a tax clearance certificate within nine months of an election. A statutory declaration that the Member’s tax affairs are in order must be made one month either side of the election. Similar arrangements apply to persons appointed to positions as judges or senior public officials.  Penalties for a false declaration were increased from a fine of £50 to one of £2,000 and a term of imprisonment from three to six months.

The result is a strong ethics statutory framework, overseen by a powerful, independent, Standards Commission. 

The strengthening of the ethics framework has also led to the imposition of vigorously enforced standards for the treatment of political donations and expenditure, as set out in the Electoral Acts.

And we are presently preparing proposals to further strengthen the ethics legislation to address issues that arose last Autumn.

As a result of these initiatives, the transparency in the financial affairs of public representatives, now required and enforced by law, stands in sharp contrast to the secretiveness and evasiveness of the transactions revealed in the Tribunal’s Report. 

The Tribunal’s Report also makes a number of other important findings, not least ones relating to myself. 

I refer to the operation of the Leaders Allowance Account and the practice that had progressively evolved for administrative reasons of pre-signing cheques. I accept the view expressed in the Report that the practice was undesirable.  I am happy, however, that the Tribunal accepted my evidence and were satisfied that I had no reason to believe the account was operated otherwise than in an orthodox fashion.  I am also pleased that the Tribunal said in their report that it is “noteworthy” that at my insistence amendments have since been made to the governing of the Leaders Allowance Accounts. 

The important point to emphasise is that the issues, which arose in respect of that account, arose more than 15 years ago.  Even before the introduction of statutory controls in 2001, the operation of the account within Fianna Fáil was reformed in 1992 by my colleague Albert Reynolds and was further reformed in 1994 when I became party leader.  For example, I arranged for the party’s auditors to present the audited accounts to the party’s National Trustees, its National Treasurers and senior party officials.  This further increased the transparency of the account.

In Government, Fianna Fáil has changed the legislation governing such accounts.  Under the old system, a party leader had a large amount of discretion as to how the account was to be used, and this gave rise to an ambiguity about what was permissible. 

The 2001 amendment set out with greater clarity the purposes for which the leader’s parliamentary allowance are to be applied. The categories of expenditure which are to be included in the meaning of ‘expenses arising from parliamentary activities’ have now been clearly defined.

In addition, the new legislation requires a parliamentary leader to prepare a statement of any expenditure from the allowance.  It requires that such a statement be audited by a public auditor.  This audited report is then required to be furnished to the Standards Commission.  

The Standards Commission:

– considers the statement and the auditor’s report;

– can consult with the Parliamentary leader;

– furnishes a report in writing on the statement and the auditor’s report       to the Minister for Finance; and

– causes a copy of that report to be laid before each House of the Oireachtas. 

Since the reforms by the Fianna Fáil / PD Government in 2001, the system is far more robust.  We did not wait for the Moriarty Tribunal to conclude; we went ahead and changed the system.  There are now a large number of restrictions and guidelines as to how this money can be used.  We will closely study the Report of the Tribunal to establish whether there are any further improvements that might now need to be made.

On the issue of the pre-signed cheques, it is important to recognise that this was not an uncommon feature of life in past decades.  It was done for convenience and to save time.  There was no reason for me to believe that any unusual use was being made of any of these cheques, and indeed the vast majority of the cheques drawn on the Fianna Fáil Leader’s Account were put to proper use. A very small number were used otherwise.  Because of the reforms introduced by me, first within the Fianna Fáil system and later by legislation, this practice – which ended 15 years ago – cannot be repeated.

We have learned much from the work of this Tribunal, from its predecessor the McCracken Tribunal and from other Tribunals and Inquiries.  We have developed a greater awareness and understanding of the need for explicit measures to underpin the high standards of governance that the public deserve and expect.  As I already noted, many important legislative and other initiatives have been taken to address this. 

In addition to the measures I have already referenced, actions have been taken in relation to:

– individual issues of tax evasion;       

– a major reorganisation of structures in the Revenue Commissioners, including the strengthening of anti-evasion operations through the creation of a dedicated Investigations and Prosecutions Division to manage and advance all Revenue prosecutions in cases of tax and duty evasion;

– conferring of substantial additional statutory powers on the Revenue Commissioners;

– development of Codes of Practice and other procedures to guard against conflicts of interest;

– strengthening of the financial regulatory and supervisory framework.  The establishment of the Financial Regulator as a Single Financial Regulatory Authority with an explicit mandate for consumers has placed the Irish regulatory system at the forefront of best international practice;

– sharing of information by State agencies.  Legislation now allows the Financial Regulator to report suspicions of money laundering (which includes the proceeds of tax evasion) directly to the Gardaí and the Revenue Commissioners.  The Regulator is also obliged to report any suspected criminal offences to the appropriate enforcement authority, for example, the Director of Corporate Enforcement;

– the creation of independent regulatory authorities for the enforcement of company law and for the supervision of the accountancy and auditing profession.  In this regard, also we are undertaking an ambitious programme of reform of the existing Companies Acts, led by the Company Law Review Group, in order to keep our Companies legislation up to date and appropriate for the needs of our economy; and

– strengthening the prevention of corruption legislation, including a presumption of corruption for non-disclosure of a significant political donation in particular circumstances.

We will continue to apply the lessons learned from the work of the Moriarty Tribunal and other inquiries. 

However, the overarching lesson is that the achievement of high standards cannot be taken for granted.  They must be promoted, through legislation, through changes in our political culture and, above all, through constant vigilance of which the independent Standards Commission is the ultimate guarantor.

ENDS

Corrupt Risks to Credit Unions in Ireland.

There are very serious risks for the wider credit union movement in Ireland.  

Even the biggest, strongest and safest credit unions – positions earned and achieved from decades of hard work, prudent management and massive support from credit union wide members, will only be insulated from the risks for longer than most others.
It is a dastardly apparent corrupted situation that even the strongest credit unions can realistically expect to prosper in the light of substantial and in many cases, UNWARRANTED obstacles being placed in their way by legislators and regulators.  
Changes introduced in 2011 relate to how a credit union is governed. Most credit unions have embraced these changes without reservation as being essential to maintaining a safe and secure movement.  
In a more critically untoward way however, there have also been changes IMPOSED which leave credit unions at a DISTINCT DISADVANTAGE to other regulated lenders. Excessive restrictions enforced through regulation is like a #cancer – #KILLING #CreditUnions and is making it IMPOSSIBLE for even the biggest and strongest credit unions to function in a commercial manner.  
These unnecessary, questionable untoward restrictions are putting credit unions at a serious competitive disadvantage to #BANKS by forcibly making it harder for credit unions to take in and retain #DEPOSITS and preventing them from meeting credit union members’ demand for the type of loans they require, which many credit unions clearly have the capacity and ability to provide.  
The weaker credit unions will suffer the consequences first, but eventually the strongest will also suffer. This means that even the biggest and strongest credit unions will eventually have to succumb to the Banks. Bear in mind these actions are being taken by the people you have elected as politicians to represent you.  
All members of credit unions need to take serious urgent action to safeguard their future.
During 2016 two striking examples of how excessive, unjustified unfair regulation hindered the business of some bigger credit unions. This regulation effects growth potential and therefore credit union services for members in the coming years.
1. Firstly, some of the bigger credit unions are now able to offer #mortgages to their members. The members responses to the initiative was overwhelmingly positive. However it rapidly became apparent that, with the level of demand from the members, the credit union would require significantly more latitude from the #Regulator to meet the demand. It can be confirmed that application to the #Regulator to increase the mortgage lending to meet the demand from credit union members has gone unanswered. Are we surprised? The regulations as they stand means that credit unions can only lend out 15% of their total loan book for loans of greater than 10 years. This equates to just 5% of what some of the bigger credit unions have in shares. It is INCREDIBLE that these credit unions can in theory lend 95% of their shares in unsecured lending and only 5% secured on the members homes. This is also clearly counterintuitive when considered in the context of the HIGH DEMAND such credit unions have from their members, as well as the worsening housing crisis for credit union members. Discussions with the Central Bank are ongoing, with a view to having the unfair restrictions adjusted.
2. Secondly, almost all credit unions in Ireland are now restricted to a ceiling of €100,000 in deposits per member. This has been brought about to bring the limits in credit unions in line with the guarantees that apply. ALTHOUGH THE SAME GUARANTEES APPLY TO ALL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, NO SUCH LIMITS OR RESTRICTIONS APPLY TO #BANKS. This is blatantly, indiscriminately, unfairly putting credit unions at a serious disadvantage, illegally, unjustly damaging the reputation of credit unions and effectively coercing and forcing credit union members to place their funds elsewhere.
3. So in essence, credit unions are not permitted to meet the demand for mortgage loans for their members. At the same time, credit unions are being restricted in the level of new funds they are permitted to accept from members.
4. These restrictions have been gradually introduced since 2011 at a time when the state held and still holds a declared interest in ensuring that Irish #Banks remain viable and profitable – YOU CAN DRAW YOUR OWN CONCLUSIONS FROM THIS. Unfortunately however, ONE THING IS VERY CLEAR, the future for Credit Unions in Ireland has never been more uncertain. The Director’s and leadership in credit unions are very deeply concerned about this and are engaging with various stakeholders in order to try and influence a positive future for credit unions.
The Irish central bank has nothing to be proud of and cannot be trusted. It is a pity they did not take required actions against the main banks when they should have.
People need to wake up and take strong action to protect their credit unions against the major untoward actions being taken against credit unions in favour of banks.
Anyone that can should collect and collate intelligence of all forms – digital, voice and paper based on all interactions between the Banks and any representative of governance in Ireland, legal firms, accountants and judiciary and be prepared to furnish same to any organisation that can take the necessary steps to bring obviously corrupted collusion between the Banks and the powers that be to justice.  

  • Obvious nefariousness must never be allowed to succeed to the benefit of banks and their greedy shareholders.

Missing Person – Deirdre Jacob Newbridge Co Kildare.

Deirdre Jacob has been missing for the past 18 years from her home in Newbridge, Co. Kildare. 
In 1998 Deirdre who was attending Teacher Training College in the U.K. was home on summer holidays. 
On 28th July she left her home to walk a 25 minute journey to Newbridge, she visited her grandmother, A.I.B., and the Post Office. At around 2:30 p.m. she left Newbridge to walk home. Deirdre was sighted a number of times on her journey home, the last sighting was at the gateway to her home, just after 3:00 p.m. 
No further trace was found despite a long and exhaustive search by Gardaí, supported by many people in the surrounding area. 
Gardaí believe that there is someone yet to come forward with vital information. 
The Lions Club are now launching a new poster campaign to include a larger catchment area. 
We seek your assistance at this time to coincide with National Missing Persons Remembrance day on 07.12.16. 
All we ask is to distribute posters in high profile shops, public areas etc.  
Attached is a copy of an example of the poster.  Please print off on A4 size paper and display.