Part One is being released tomorrow - the trailer is below.
We will be peeling back the layers - to expose how the SDGs are what's influencing and infecting Ireland. 🇮🇪
@TheEmilySee@GrantSmithEllis Being Irish and a decent human being, I am beyond disgusted at the scale of proctors hate for everyone and everything, nothing or no one is safe from
His despicable views, he has no redeeming qualities in my eyes ! How dare he???
@TheEmilySee@GrantSmithEllis Being Irish and a decent human being, I am beyond disgusted at the scale of proctors hate for everyone and everything, nothing or no one is safe from
His despicable views, he has no redeeming qualities in my eyes ! How dare he???
On the Feast Day of St. Paulinus of Nola, I prayed for you, your personal intentions, and for peace in our world at the Tomb of St. Anthony. I will remember you again this afternoon during the Holy Mass I will celebrate in the Basilica.Peace and all good! Blessings from Padua. 🤗
Come Holy Spirit,
fill the hearts of your faithful and kindle in them the fire of your love.
Send forth your Spirit and they shall be created.
And You shall renew the face of the earth.
Amen🙏🏻
On the 29th July 2025, myself and @Stephen63224725 lost our eldest child Harvey. In the weeks and months that followed we had to put our grief on hold in an attempt to secure a statutory inquiry in to Children’s Health Ireland Spina Bifida and Scoliosis care. We did this because Harvey was failed, and many other children have been and continue to be failed by our health service. We did this to try and see positive change but also to see answers and accountability for the many other children. We held our grief as we marched in protest, as we met with government ministers, as we spoke in the AV room at Leinster House, when we spoke on radio, tv, and newspapers.
@CarrollJennifer and @SimonHarrisTD made agreements in those meetings that they appear to now be refusing to honour.
@CarrollJennifer on more than one occasion stated during those meetings that she ‘wants to still be Minister for Health’ when this inquiry is finished. That’s where her concern lay and appears to continue to lie.
Our concern, as well as @SBH_PAG and @scolionetwork is, and always will be, the children and families at the centre of this. Nothing more, nothing less.
A narrow scope, behind closed doors, without engagement from the families using CHI is a waste of time and tax payer money.
#JusticeForHarvey #NoChildWaiting
After watching Crimecall on RTE where the families of Deirdre Jacob and Jojo Dullard are appealing again, I`m sharing the details of those missing womens, as members of both women's families previously asked me to post about them in the hopes someone who knows will have the strenght of character to come forward with information Crime Call is 1800 40 50 60. Alternately all the other local numbers are below each set of details.
On the 9th of November 1995, 21 year old Josephine “Jo Jo” Dullard set out from Dublin City for home after spending the evening among friends in Bruxelles Bar on Harry Street just off Grafton Street. Her destination was Callan in County Kilkenny, where her family lived.
Having missed the last direct bus, she boarded one to Naas in County Kildare instead around 10pm. After that, she planned to hitchhike the rest of the way.
By modern standards hitchhiking is rightly considered extremely dangerous, but although it was also treacherous on that fateful night back in 1995 it was considered a viable option to get home for young people, especially when public transport was far less frequent or to save a few bob. And so Jo Jo thumbed her way first from Naas to Kilcullen, then from Kilcullen to the small village of Moone.
It was there, outside a public phone box in Moone at 11:37pm, that Jo Jo communicated with her loved ones one last time. She rang her friend Mary Cullinan. Her last call is chilling in highsight. Jo Jo said a car had stopped and she was going to accept a lift.
A witness later told Gardaí they saw a woman matching Jo Jo’s description leaning into the back door of a dark-coloured Toyota Carina soon after her call finished. Then she vanished.
The next morning, when Jo Jo didn’t come home, her sister Kathleen raised the alarm with Gardaí and the missing persons investigation started. Naas Garda Station led the inquiry, but despite combing witness accounts and following countless leads the case went nowhere.
On the 25th anniversary of her disappearance in 2020 cold case detectives and the Garda Serious Crime Review Team formally upgraded the case to a murder investigation, concluding what everyone obviously assumed. That poor Jo Jo most likely met serious harm on that November night.
Following that reclassification nearly 800 recommendations generated fresh lines of inquiry. Investigators reviewed old statements, re-interviewed witnesses, and sought new forensic leads.
In November 2024, Gardaí made the first arrest in the nearly 30 year old case. A man in his 50s from the local area was taken into custody on suspicion of Jo Jo’s murder. He had reportedly admitted to giving her a lift that night but denied any role in her disappearance.
After extensive questioning and the start of forensic searches, he was released without charge while a file was prepared for the Director of Public Prosecutions. Gardaí conducted excavations of open ground on the Wicklow and Kildare border, near Grangecon but they have declined to publicly disclose the outcome for operational reasons.
No one has been charged with Jo Jo’s murder, and her remains have never been found. Gardaí continue to appeal to anyone with information, including sightings of her distinctive Sanyo MGP21 walkman cassette player, which she had on her that night.
Lets not forget with the passage of time that Jo Jo was not just a "missing person". She was a real person. The youngest of five siblings, the daughter of parents who died before their youngest could see her grow into adulthood. If you have any information contact
Naas Garda Station (Investigation Team): 045 884 300
Kildare Garda Station:
(045) 527 730
Garda Confidential Line:
1800 666 111
Crimestoppers: 1800 250 025