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Former lord mayor Nial Ring told by council he cannot let Dublin rental property

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A rental property owned by former lord mayor of Dublin, Independent councillor Nial Ring, is the subject of an official notice that it cannot be let until improvements directed by Dublin City Council are implemented.

The house, No 7 Caledon Court, East Wall, Dublin 3, is on a list of 156 properties in respect of which prohibition notices have been issued by the council under the Housing (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act.

Landlords are served with such notices when they fail to comply with an improvement notice directing that a particular issue or issues be addressed.

“A landlord may not re-let the private rented dwelling for rent until the contravention(s) to which the improvement notice relate have been remedied,” the council said in a statement.

It would not say what the difficulties are in respect of Mr Ring’s property.

In his declaration of interests after last year’s local elections, Mr Ring, a councillor for the North Inner City ward, disclosed he owned the East Wall property and that the tenant in the house was in receipt of a Housing Assistance Payment.

He also declared part-ownership of a commercial building, 70 Ballybough Road, Dublin 3, and shares in a company called IMC Exploration group Plc, based in the Ballybough building.

In an address to the council earlier this week, principal environmental health officer Michelle McNally explained to councillors that prohibition notices are part of a process where the council’s housing section seeks to have landlords comply with the law.

During the second quarter of this year, the council inspected 4,278 privately rented dwellings, 2,244 of which were found to be non-compliant, she said.

During the period, 657 improvement notices were issued, and 109 prohibition notices. A “reasonable” amount of time is allowed for compliance with an improvement notice before a prohibition notice is issued, she said.

Earlier this year, a receiver placed Mr Ring’s Clontarf home, a detached Victorian house on St Lawrence Road, on the market, with a guide price of €2.75 million.

Earlier this year, a receiver placed Nial Ring’s Clontarf home on St Lawrence Road on the market, with a guide price of €2.75 million. Photograph: MyHome.ie
Earlier this year, a receiver placed Nial Ring’s Clontarf home on St Lawrence Road on the market, with a guide price of €2.75 million. Photograph: MyHome.ie

However, it now appears that Mr Ring has raised new borrowings and agreed a settlement with the receiver in respect of his home.

The five-bedroom house was the subject of a Circuit Court possession order in favour of the Bank of Ireland in 2017, but this was appealed.

The possession order was rescinded in 2019 when financing was secured by Mr Ring and his wife, Joyce, for the settling of approximately €1 million in debts and costs.

That same year, a company called Calvet Properties Ltd, owned by Mr Ring, bought the house from the Rings. A mortgage was registered against the property by Business Capital and Finance (PC) Ltd, a Belfast company owned by Gareth Graham, a non-bank lender to small businesses.

In November 2022, receiver Micheal Leydon was appointed to Calvet by the Belfast company, and in March 2025 Mr Leydon took possession of the Clontarf house and placed it on the market.

However, in a recent filing to the Companies Registration Office, the receiver said a settlement had been agreed as regards possession of the property. No other details were disclosed.

Rear garden of the Clontarf home. Photograph: MyHome.ie
Rear garden of the Clontarf home. Photograph: MyHome.ie

In August, a new mortgage was recorded against the house, which is still registered as owned by Calvet. The mortgage names three companies based in Northern Ireland. Two are associated with Mr Graham’s Business Capital and Finance. The third, Kinora Investments Ltd, of Dungannon, Co Tyrone, is owned by John Patrick Turkington and Paul Francis O’Neill, of Dungannon.

In May, Mr Ring and his business partner, Liam McGrattan, had the charges against them struck out by the Dublin District Court after being found above the Ref Pub, 70 Ballybough Road, in April 2020, during the pandemic, contrary to Covid restrictions.

A request for a comment from Mr Ring met with no response.

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Taxi driver who dropped off Southport killer regrets ‘driving off in panic’

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The taxi driver who dropped off the Southport killer at the dance class where he murdered three children has told a public inquiry he regretted not calling police sooner.

Gary Poland, who did not phone police until 50 minutes after the attack, told the Southport Inquiry he drove away in a panic.

The inquiry at Liverpool Town Hall was told he had believed loud bangs he had heard moments after dropping off Axel Rudakubana were “gunshots”.

Via video-link Mr Poland, who heard screaming and whose vehicle dashcam showed girls running from the venue, said: “I should have called the police earlier. In hindsight I wish I had done and it’s something I think about every day.”

Alice Aguiar, nine, Elsie Dot Stancombe, seven, and Bebe King, six, were killed in the attack, and eight other girls and two adults were also injured.

The inquiry heard that after the attacker refused to pay for the taxi, Mr Poland saw him go into the Hart Space and then heard the loud bangs.

“It was terrifying,” he said.

“You were fearful and in a state of shock. I just thought someone was shooting.”

He said he then went into “panic mode.”

Mr Poland also heard the victims screaming.

He said: “I should have called the police earlier. In hindsight I wish I had done and it’s something I think about every day.

“I did what I did because of fear, shock and panic. These are human emotions which I could not control.”

Nicholas Moss KC, counsel to the inquiry, said in his statement to police Mr Poland described seeing “a massed huddle of children stumble and run in a panicked hurry”.

The statement described the girls “screaming… it was like a stampede for their lives”.

Mr Moss also said dashcam footage from Mr Poland’s taxi shows the girls running alongside his vehicle, and showed him looking in the rear view mirror.

In his statement to the inquiry, Mr Poland said he did not know the children had been injured.

Mr Moss asked Mr Poland if he accepted that he should have stopped on Hart Street as soon as he was out of harm’s way, and called the police.

Mr Poland replied: “Yeah.”

Mr Moss also said a transcript of the phone call he made to his friend had him talking about his belief that the attacker had a gun, but did not show him expressing any concern for the girls.

Mr Moss asked him if it was fair or unfair that the purpose of the call was “guess what just happened to me”.

Mr Poland replied: “Unfair.”

Earlier Mr Poland had said: “I can’t sleep at night. I shut my eyes, I see his [the attacker ‘s] face. He is just there all the time in my head.”

The inquiry continues.

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Trump calls for investigation into UN ‘triple sabotage’

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US President Donald Trump has demanded an investigation into what he called “triple sabotage” after an escalator, teleprompter and sound system malfunctioned while he attended the United Nations General Assembly.

The UN said the events that happened while Mr Trump was at its headquarters in New York on Tuesday were accidental and partly blamed the issues on White House staff.

But in a long social media post, the US president described the string of mishaps as “very sinister”, called for people to be arrested and said the Secret Service was also probing the events.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Mr Trump said: “This wasn’t a coincidence, this was triple sabotage at the UN. They ought to be ashamed of themselves.

“I’m sending a copy of this letter to the secretary general and I demand an immediate investigation.

“No wonder the United Nations hasn’t been able to do the job that they were put in existence to do.”

Donald Trump addresses the United Nations General Assembly
Donald Trump noted that his teleprompter was not working as he began his speech

Footage showed the 79-year-old president and First Lady Melania Trump getting on the escalator at UN headquarters on Tuesday before it stopped with a lurch, forcing them to walk up.

Then, as he began his speech, he noted his teleprompter was not working.

He spent much of the rest of the speech criticising the world body, accusing it of funding illegal migration that was turning Western countries into “hell” and failing to support his peace efforts in Gaza and Ukraine.

But while Mr Trump struck a mostly jovial tone about the escalator, his mood hardened a day later.

“A REAL DISGRACE took place at the United Nations yesterday. Not one, not two, but three very sinister events!” he wrote.

Mr Trump said the escalator stop could have been a “real disaster”.

“It’s amazing that Melania and I didn’t fall forward onto the sharp edges of these steel steps, face first,” he added.

The president then complained that his teleprompter for his speech was “stone cold dark” for the first 15 minutes and that the sound in the UN auditorium was “completely off”.

The US president called for the security tapes for the escalator to be saved, adding: “The Secret Service is involved.”

UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric said the teleprompter is operated by White House staff

UN spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric on Tuesday issued a statement addressing the matter, saying a videographer from the US delegation “may have inadvertently triggered the safety function” on the escalator.

“Regarding the teleprompter, we have no comment since the teleprompter for the US president is operated by the White House,” he said.

A Secret Service official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP the agency was “looking into what the UN said to corroborate it”.

Reached for comment after Mr Trump’s post yesterday, a UN official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, pointed to Mr Dujarric’s earlier statement.

Regarding the alleged sound issues, the official said: “The sound system was designed to allow people at their seats to hear speeches being translated into six different languages through earpieces.”

Mike Waltz, the newly installed US ambassador, said on X that he had formally demanded the “complete results” of the UN’s probe of the escalator incident, as well as a “detailed explanation of the teleprompter failure’s root cause, along with immediate plans to implement robust preventive measures”.

“The United States will not tolerate threats to our security or dignity at international forums,” Mr Waltz said.

“We expect swift cooperation and decisive action,” he added.

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Response to scabies at nursing home ‘lacked coordination’

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A poorly coordinated response to an outbreak of scabies at a Kilkenny nursing home led to non-compliance in infection control, according to an inspection report by the Health Information and Quality Authority (HIQA).

The report says that a significant number of residents and staff had shown signs of a contagious skin infestation since September 2024, almost ten months prior to the inspection.

A clinical diagnosis of scabies was made by a GP, and a dermatologist confirmed crusted scabies, which is a severe and more contagious progression of infestation.

The public health team was notified and an outbreak of scabies was declared at the end of May this year.

The report says the response to the outbreak was “fragmented and lacked coordination and oversight”, which “likely contributed to the persistence of the issue”.

A review of documentation by HIQA indicated that residents showing signs of infestation were not immediately isolated pending clinical diagnosis and for 24 hours after initial treatment.

This, according to the watchdog, may have allowed the infestation to spread between residents, staff and possible visitors.

Two residents had completed their initial course of treatment on the morning of the inspection. However, staff were unclear regarding the required duration of isolation following the initial course of treatment.

The report points out that clothing and bedding were mismanaged after residents received treatment for confirmed or suspected scabies, with unnecessary delays prior to sending for laundering.

Additionally, items that could not be laundered, such as slippers, shoes and soft toys, were not appropriately managed when residents were treated, according to the report.

Bedrooms were also not routinely deep cleaned when residents were treated for the condition.

The provider was required to take urgent action following this inspection to ensure there was local oversight, supervision and assurance mechanisms in place to ensure that the outbreak was effectively managed.

The inspection report is one of 50 published today.

Evidence of good practice and compliance with regulations and standards were found in a number of inspections.

However, 19 centres were non-compliant with three regulations or less, and seven centres non-compliant with four or more regulations.

In a South County Dublin nursing home, the registered provider failed to take all reasonable measures to protect residents from all forms of abuse.

Some had a history of responsive behaviours, which were a known safeguarding risk to other residents and had measures documented to mitigate risk.

However, the measures had not always been effective and had failed to protect residents from abuse, according to the report.

When inspectors visited the home in June, multiple residents, visitors and staff reported that the temperature in the centre, including some bedrooms and communal areas, was excessively warm.

This was a significant issue during the inspection, according to HIQA.

The inspectors were informed that the central heating could not be switched off, nor could the settings be adjusted to account for the outdoor temperature.

A number of instances where residents were not adequately supervised were also observed.

A resident who had been assessed as being at high risk of falls was seen standing on a chair with no staff present.

Three residents in the sitting room were also seen sitting for 20 minutes without staff supervision and without access to a call-bell for assistance if required.

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