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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
Mark O'Brien

Female nurse savagely assaulted by three inmates at Cloverhill Prison, Dublin

A nurse was hospitalised after a “vicious” assault by three inmates at a prison.

The woman was savagely beaten by the prisoners at Dublin’s Cloverhill Prison two weeks ago.

Details of the shocking attack were revealed on Friday by General Secretary of the Prison Officers Association, John Clinton.

Mr Clinton was calling for prison staff to be provided with body cameras to deter criminals from carrying out assaults.

Speaking to RTE’s Today with Sean O’Rourke show, he said: “We had a hugely vicious assault on a nurse officer in Cloverhill prison only two weeks ago.

“Three male prisoners beat a woman in Cloverhill Prison and if she had had a body camera on her they would have had to think about that because there would be no doubt that when a jury saw that, what they would think of something like that.”

The union chief was reluctant to give further details of the attack but confirmed that it was “very serious” and the woman had been hospitalised following the assault.

Cloverhill Prison (Brian Lawless/PA Wire)

Prison gangs spark 'major concerns' for safety of staff and inmates in Irish jails 

The use of drones to smuggle contraband into Dublin prisons is also posing huge challenges for officers.

Mr Clinton said 50 packages were thrown or flown by drone into Wheatfield Prison in the space of just one week in March.

He added: “In recent weeks we had seven of these drones intercepted and one in Mountjoy actually had six mobile phones attached to it and a large package of drugs.

“I’ve been informed that when the drone was being flown in, the prisoners set off an alarm so that somebody could try and fly it in through the vents”.

Prison officers are powerless to stop the operators of the drones as they are flown in from outside the prisons.

Mr Clinton said: “It’s being done in what I would say civilian territory.

“We have no powers there so that’s a matter that the gardai will have to get on top of, get the people that are flying these in and prosecute them because it’s a huge difficulty.”

The Irish Daily Mirror contacted the Irish Prison Service for comment.

'Mismanagement' has caused major shortfall in staffing levels at Irish prisons, officers' association claims 

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