Source: Irish Times (Ireland) Contact: ++ 353 1 671 9407 Pubdate: Mon, 06 Apr 1998 Author: Jim Cusack GARDA ARRESTED ON DRUG DEALING SUSPICION A Dublin garda aged 26 has been arrested on suspicion of selling the drug ecstasy in a Limerick night-club. The officer, attached to Sundrive Garda station in Crumlin, Dublin, was taken to Henry Street Garda station in Limerick late on Thursday night. He had earlier been arrested by two gardai investigating claims of drug-dealing in a city-centre disco. He was questioned and released later on Friday, and a file is being prepared for the Director of Public Prosecutions. It is understood the officer has been off work for almost six months, saying he is receiving treatment for alcohol addiction. He is originally from Tipperary but had served in Dublin since leaving the Garda College. Other officers who know him say they are shocked, but said he did appear to have personal problems. The arrest occurs just as another garda, John O'Neill, received 41/2 years for taking bribes from Dublin drug-dealers including members of the Dublin criminal gang which is suspected of having murdered the journalist Veronica Guerin. Officers in the city said O'Neill, too, had personal problems and was addicted to gambling which led him into debt and, finally, to taking bribes. He was given the money by criminals in return for information about investigations into their activities. O'Neill attempted to compromise investigations and drugs searches by alerting the gang members. He had attempted to undermine the Veronica Guerin investigation but was unable to intercept radio messages as the investigating officers used their own mobile telephones for communicating with each other and O'Neill was unable to alert the criminals when they were about to be raided. The investigating officers succeeded in making major drugs and arms seizures by the accidental expedient of using their own telephones. There are concerns that other officers, particularly in Dublin where living costs are significantly higher than in the rest of the country, might resort to crime to clear debt. Dublin gardai say young officers beginning a career in the city have major financial difficulties in trying to establish a home and family in the face of rising property costs. One said that the relative decline in wages for gardai, who had missed out on pay rises given to other public-sector groups such as nurses and teachers, had most seriously affected gardai in Dublin. In the past week when it emerged that the Government had offered gardai significantly less than the other public sectors, one officer with many years of service in the city predicted that more young gardai would resort to part-time work or crime to supplement their incomes.