Eminence Grise
27/06/2012, 6:05 PM
A former Fine Gael deputy mayor of Dungarvan has been sentenced to six years in prison after being found guilty on six counts of having received corrupt payments from a property developer.
http://img.rasset.ie/0005dea4-314.jpg
Fred Forsey Junior, 43, was convicted last month of making representations to officials and members of Waterford County Council to get lands rezoned and receiving corrupt payments of €80,000.
From: http://www.rte.ie/news/2012/0627/fred-forsey-court.html
There was a time up to very recently when a prison sentence for corruption handed down to a politician, current or former, would have been simply unthinkable. Add to this the court ruling yesterday regarding Sean Quinn and others regarding Anglo-Irish bank, and the judge's statement that she was considering both a coercive and punitive sentence, are we we seeing the advent of an era when corruption and malfeasance will no longer be tolerated?
Personally, I believe that the public want their pound of flesh. They want to see the people responsible for building shoddy apartments, for embezzling public funds, for flagrant breaches of company law, for croneyism and nepotism brought low. One swallow doesn't make the proverbial, but tonight there may well be other public figures who will sleep just a little less soundly.
http://img.rasset.ie/0005dea4-314.jpg
Fred Forsey Junior, 43, was convicted last month of making representations to officials and members of Waterford County Council to get lands rezoned and receiving corrupt payments of €80,000.
From: http://www.rte.ie/news/2012/0627/fred-forsey-court.html
There was a time up to very recently when a prison sentence for corruption handed down to a politician, current or former, would have been simply unthinkable. Add to this the court ruling yesterday regarding Sean Quinn and others regarding Anglo-Irish bank, and the judge's statement that she was considering both a coercive and punitive sentence, are we we seeing the advent of an era when corruption and malfeasance will no longer be tolerated?
Personally, I believe that the public want their pound of flesh. They want to see the people responsible for building shoddy apartments, for embezzling public funds, for flagrant breaches of company law, for croneyism and nepotism brought low. One swallow doesn't make the proverbial, but tonight there may well be other public figures who will sleep just a little less soundly.