Missing Women in Ireland

Pacteau’s neighbours in Dorchester Avenue said detectives had been asking questions about a silver car parked outside the flat. It was later towed away.
IT student Louis Kolodziej said: “The police first turned up around 6pm on Monday.
“They taped off a silver car and asked me if I knew anything about it and whether I had seen anything strange in the early hours of Sunday.
“The police then came back a few hours later and were asking more about the car.
“Forensics guys in white suits then turned up and started looking at the vehicle and it was towed away at around 4am on Tuesday.”

https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTpfQXLlbsX2GD-bcKULSE1MuLQrDFXwAxIwZoYzctVe9j_DW0M

that actually looks like the nightclub in trainspotting…

[QUOTE=“scumpot, post: 1123967, member: 182”]https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTpfQXLlbsX2GD-bcKULSE1MuLQrDFXwAxIwZoYzctVe9j_DW0M

that actually looks like the nightclub in trainspotting…[/QUOTE]
The area it’s in is actually pretty nice by Glasgow standards.

[QUOTE=“scumpot, post: 1123967, member: 182”]https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTpfQXLlbsX2GD-bcKULSE1MuLQrDFXwAxIwZoYzctVe9j_DW0M

that actually looks like the nightclub in trainspotting…[/QUOTE]
http://www.movie-locations.com/movies/t/Trainspotting_Volcano.jpg

[QUOTE=“scumpot, post: 1123967, member: 182”]https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTpfQXLlbsX2GD-bcKULSE1MuLQrDFXwAxIwZoYzctVe9j_DW0M

that actually looks like the nightclub in trainspotting…[/QUOTE]

@glasagusban will be along to confirm that it looks like the nightclub called “rectum” in the film Irreversible

By the time Joe O’Reilly went on The Late Late show was he deemed by the Gardai (publicly at least) “not be a suspect”?

Strange that this chap has been said to not be a suspect as they continue to turn his gaff upside down and tow away his car…

The night club looks more like a jail. And then you have fella’s who look like that hanging around the jacks. Sounds like hell.

[QUOTE=“dodgy-keeper, post: 1124015, member: 1552”]By the time Joe O’Reilly went on The Late Late show was he deemed by the Gardai (publicly at least) “not be a suspect”?

Strange that this chap has been said to not be a suspect as they continue to turn his gaff upside down and tow away his car…[/QUOTE]

It’s pretty clear at this stage they were just being careful in case he wasn’t the guy. I’d say they aren’t looking too hard at anyone else

interesting to compare the scottish operation for a missing person to the irish one.

the lads in harcourt st would have had this written off as a suicide and been having celebatory doughnuts by this stage

[QUOTE=“artfoley, post: 1124020, member: 179”].

the lads in harcourt st would have had this written off as a suicide and been having celebatory doughnuts by this stage[/QUOTE]

or maybe just arrested him by now…

yeah, cos theyve got such a great track record on missing persons.

unsurprising to see resident blueshirts @TreatyStones[/USER] and [USER=80]@The Selfish Giant defending the honour of AGS. the paul kehoes of the board

well she supposedly refused a taxi and a lift home , so i mean what can you do there, the guy in fairness to him came forward to the police very quiclky

Did he?

FFS HE DID NOT COME FORWARD.

THE COPS TRACKED HIM DOWN. HE HAS A RECORD FOR PRINTING FAKE MONEY (Apparently).
WHATS THIS SHIT THAT HE CAME FORWARD.

I’ll stop shouting now.

[QUOTE=“artfoley, post: 1124027, member: 179”]yeah, cos theyve got such a great track record on missing persons.
[/QUOTE]
what’s the stats, pal ?..

[QUOTE=“dodgy-keeper, post: 1124015, member: 1552”]By the time Joe O’Reilly went on The Late Late show was he deemed by the Gardai (publicly at least) “not be a suspect”?

Strange that this chap has been said to not be a suspect as they continue to turn his gaff upside down and tow away his car…[/QUOTE]

I presume he can’t be a suspect as at the moment no crime has been committed. All they can do is question him at this point?

Every year, there are nearly 8000 people reported missing to the Gardai. The majority of these cases are resolved. For the 100+ cases that are not resolved , their families must live with the uncertainty. Where a person over 18 has made obvious plans to leave, are not suffering from any mental or physical disability and are not in any apparent risk, then there is no guarantee that their case will be accepted by the Gardai as a missing persons report.
A distinction was made up to Autumn 2003 between “acceptable” and “unacceptable” cases. The terms “acceptable” and “unacceptable” were used to distinguish betwen two categories of missing persons. The term “acceptable” referred to a) persons under 18 years, b) aged persons, c) physically or mentally disabled persons, or d) persons whose disappearance takes place in circumstances which give rise to fears for the person’s physical or moral safety. After 2003, these classifications changed to Categories A, B, and C.
“Category A” (High Risk) covers the reports which require immediate action on the assumption that the missing person is at serious risk, such as child abduction or possible suicide threats."
“Category B” (Medium Risk) refers to persons who may have disappeared of their own volition and are asumed not to be at any immediate risk such as persons who have a reason to leave or have left a note stating that they do not intend to return.
“Category C” (Low Risk) includes reports where there is no apparant threat of danger to the missing person or the public such as a person over 18 who has decided to start a new life.
The statistics from the Garda Annual Reports are below:
Year
Acceptable
Unacceptable
Untraced
1999
1800
691
20
2000
1806
673
22
2001
2123
612
67
2002
2337
446
74
Reported Missing
2003
3987
76
YearAUntracedBUntracedCUntracedTotalUntraced
200426124415312291717506083
2005327737155921116117599775
2006383050161114137018681182
2007451451175817172030799298
2008440839178211179020798070
2009477665128612168714774991
20106059388699141122833969
2011655624770511859851138
20126914327047116712881551
20135980106946107912775328

[QUOTE=“artfoley, post: 1124040, member: 179”]
The statistics from the Garda Annual Reports are below:

YearAUntracedBUntracedCUntracedTotalUntraced
200426124415312291717506083
2005327737155921116117599775
2006383050161114137018681182
2007451451175817172030799298
2008440839178211179020798070
2009477665128612168714774991
20106059388699141122833969
2011655624770511859851138
20126914327047116712881551
20135980106946107912775328[/QUOTE]

Hard to argue with those figures

[QUOTE=“artfoley, post: 1124040, member: 179”]Every year, there are nearly 8000 people reported missing to the Gardai. The majority of these cases are resolved. For the 100+ cases that are not resolved , their families must live with the uncertainty. Where a person over 18 has made obvious plans to leave, are not suffering from any mental or physical disability and are not in any apparent risk, then there is no guarantee that their case will be accepted by the Gardai as a missing persons report.
A distinction was made up to Autumn 2003 between “acceptable” and “unacceptable” cases. The terms “acceptable” and “unacceptable” were used to distinguish betwen two categories of missing persons. The term “acceptable” referred to a) persons under 18 years, b) aged persons, c) physically or mentally disabled persons, or d) persons whose disappearance takes place in circumstances which give rise to fears for the person’s physical or moral safety. After 2003, these classifications changed to Categories A, B, and C.
“Category A” (High Risk) covers the reports which require immediate action on the assumption that the missing person is at serious risk, such as child abduction or possible suicide threats."
“Category B” (Medium Risk) refers to persons who may have disappeared of their own volition and are asumed not to be at any immediate risk such as persons who have a reason to leave or have left a note stating that they do not intend to return.
“Category C” (Low Risk) includes reports where there is no apparant threat of danger to the missing person or the public such as a person over 18 who has decided to start a new life.
The statistics from the Garda Annual Reports are below:
Year
Acceptable
Unacceptable
Untraced
1999
1800
691
20
2000
1806
673
22
2001
2123
612
67
2002
2337
446
74
Reported Missing
2003
3987
76
YearAUntracedBUntracedCUntracedTotalUntraced
200426124415312291717506083
2005327737155921116117599775
2006383050161114137018681182
2007451451175817172030799298
2008440839178211179020798070
2009477665128612168714774991
20106059388699141122833969
2011655624770511859851138
20126914327047116712881551
20135980106946107912775328[/QUOTE]

Is this some sort of sick encryption message?

1000011110000001