I presume you mean the release of Frank Connolly's falsified passport application before he travelled to Colombia. Well, McDowell did release this information in a reply to a Dail question from Finian McGrath TD, one of Connolly's supporters. Had McDowell concealed this information in answering the question, McGrath and the SFIRA TDs would have been telling him to "put up or shut up"
This is not true. Here's how the
Irish Examiner described the leaking of the information on Frank Connolly:
"The Justice Minister gave documents to Sam Smyth of the Irish Independent alleging that Connolly had applied for a false passport and went to Colombia, where his brother was jailed as one of the notorious Colombia Three.
The Justice Minister had a right to declassify and release material. He claimed he was putting the information into the public domain and justified this in the national interest. This may well have been true, but the manner he used was judicially cavalier and smacked of political self-interest."
[broken link removed]
He also disclosed the same information to a foreign national, Chuck Feeney, at a private meeting with Mr Feeney.
If McDowell had, as you assert, placed the information in question before the Dáil in the first instance, he might - just - have been able to plausibly argue it was done in the public interest.
In fact, Connolly was beginning, through the Centre for Public Inquiry for which he worked, an investigation into the circumstances of Minster McDowell's department paying millions of Euros over the odds for Thornton Hall. Mr Feeney was funding the Centre and McDowell gave him the information to (successfully) discourage him from doing so. It is fair to infer that McDowell's actions were taken primarily to prevent this investigation going ahead. As a result of his intervention, Mr Feeney withdrew his funding, the Centre closed down, and Frank Connolly lost his livelihood.
Here is how Judge Fergal Flood, retired High Court judge and Chairman of the Centre for public inquiry described McDowell's actions:
- Despite the DPP’s decision in March 2003 not to prosecute Mr Connolly, a private and public blackening of his character has been unleashed by the Minister.
- This shows a signal departure from principles of fair dealing and respect for justice to the individual citizen by the State which are absolute, save in the most exceptional cases and where legislated upon by the Oireachtas.
- The methods adopted by the Minister may well have undermined the status, authority and the statutory independence of the DPP.
Minster McDowell's actions in leaking this information were an absolute disgrace to his office and should have resulted in his immediate dismissal. It is to Bertie Ahern's shame that he did nothing at all in repsonse.