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00:01He was a young man in the Senate in 18-19.
00:05He was a young man to leave the country...
00:08...he was a young man to do the same thing.
00:11...and he was a young man to do the same things he was.
00:15I didn't think I was a young man to do it.
00:20I was a young man to look for a young man to do it.
00:25It was the first time he was born.
00:27There was no one after him.
00:29When he was a man in the нуля...
00:37There were many people around the world...
00:39...which were very difficult for the first time.
00:42There was a lot of pain...
00:43...the first time he was born.
00:50There were many people...
00:52the year he was winning.
00:54And then he went for a while.
01:03He was winning in a while...
01:06...and at that point he still was earning...
01:08...8 million euros.
01:15That's it, not even if he had it there...
01:17...by the end of the year.
01:19In the end, the title of the year was the first year of the year.
01:23They were the first year of the year and the year of the year.
01:32The school was very good.
01:34I was very proud of the school,
01:37and I was very proud of the school.
01:39The school was very good.
01:41It was not that good of the year
01:44that it was a great year
01:46to the culture of the country.
01:49.
02:07With his father, Ralf Lyon...
02:09...was in the middle of the year.
02:12I learned a lot about him.
02:14He was a cadre...
02:16It was a great day and it was a great day.
02:20It was a day when I was young and I was young.
02:26The sort of way people with money and power had operated in Irish society.
02:31They felt that they could do these things and it would never be discovered.
02:36When I was young, I was young and I was young and I was young and I was young and I was young.
02:44Charles Hawley would come to an open experience with a new player in the city.
02:50My boss, I feel like I was young and I was young at the same time when I was young.
02:57I knew I was young and I felt was young.
03:02I knew I was young, I was young and I was young...
03:08...to be with me and I sensed myself.
03:11But I think it's a good thing to do with that.
03:16In the middle of the film,
03:18it was a very good thing to do with it.
03:21It was a very good thing to do with Ben O'Donnell.
03:32There was a lot of golf.
03:34It was a lot of fun.
03:36It was a lot of fun.
03:38It was fun.
03:39..and it was a big deal.
03:42It was a big deal for me.
03:53In 2019, Michael Lowry had a great job...
03:56..and a great job of Michael Lowry...
03:58..and a great job of doing it.
04:05I think Michael Lowry had a great job.
04:08There was no doubt in 1986.
04:11And it was a big deal...
04:13..and it was a big deal for the rest of the country.
04:17I was in the middle of the year and I was in the middle of the year.
04:20In the year's year, I was in the middle of the year...
04:23..and I was in the middle of the year.
04:25When the Albert Reynolds government collapsed in late 1994...
04:29..John Bruton found himself in the middle.
04:31In the year's year and year's year...
04:35..and Michael Lowry was in the middle of the year.
04:38The Rainbow Coalition of Fine Gael Labour and Democratic Left...
04:42..committed itself to legislation...
04:44..which would lay down strict criteria...
04:46..for the behaviour of politicians and the funding of political parties.
04:50And it was a great deal for Gultr in the middle of the year.
04:54It was a great deal for the rest of the year.
04:58This wasn't just a cosy cartel. This was a sweetheart deal.
05:04There was Michael Lowry in the middle of the year.
05:08And it was a great deal.
05:10It was a great deal.
05:12It was a great deal.
05:13It's an absolute disgrace.
05:15It's an absolute disgrace.
05:17As Ireland is the last country in the European Union...
05:20..to relinquish the state monopoly on the mobile phone market.
05:23I was in the middle of the year and the year and the year and the year...
05:25..that's not very important.
05:27But Michael Lowry is a great deal for the future.
05:29Up to now...
05:30..the mobile telephone was seen as a yuppie piece of equipment.
05:34..but I believe that a mobile telephone...
05:36..certainly will become the norm in the not-too-distant future.
05:39It's a great deal for the future.
05:41It's a great deal for the future.
05:43It's a great deal for the future.
05:45It's a great deal for the future.
05:47It's a great deal for the future.
05:49It's a great deal for the future.
05:50Irish Cellular Telephones...
05:52..a consortium in which Tony O'Reilly's Independent Newspapers is a shareholder...
05:56..and Motorola have all thrown their hats in the ring.
05:59In the middle of the year, Dennis O'Brien...
06:02..is going to La Cooleachta Sanurua...
06:04..Telenor and ESA Digifone.
06:07Housewives will have them, farmers will have them.
06:10Everybody will have a mobile phone.
06:12I was not afraid of my mother.
06:16I was hoping to get married to her...
06:21..and I was really happy to get married to her husband.
06:24I was hoping to get married to her husband...
06:27..and I would like to meet him again...
06:29Well, I was Michael Lowry.
06:31He wasn't the only one who was a friend...
06:33..he was a friend of mine and he was not the other way.
06:35Yes, that's why it's new.
06:45He was 18 years old.
06:54But then, it's time for him.
06:57The group was in the group of people in the country,
07:02and they were in the country,
07:05and they had to be the only one who was going to be a leader.
07:08They were in the country with the other country.
07:11But I'm not sure what Michael Lowry is doing.
07:15He's doing the same thing as he's doing.
07:19You can see in the real world,
07:20because maybe any government minister doesn't want problems.
07:24We don't want to start all over again.
07:25..I don't want, I need last-minute hitches. Get on with it.
07:29Laryl was very close to the St. Sherbyshine...
07:32..and at the end of the day, he had three rounds...
07:35..and he had three rounds in the first round.
07:39John Bruton was the first round of two rounds...
07:43..and he was the first round of two rounds...
07:47..and he was the first round of two rounds.
07:55..an Irish-Norwegian consortium has won the state's second licence...
07:59..to operate a mobile phone service.
08:01The successful winner is the Irish company, EFAT Telecom.
08:04Rina RTI Curshías...
08:06..in the press conference for a hastily convened press conference Eganam.
08:15I think it was a good time...
08:17..but it wasn't a good time.
08:25..by awarding the licence without referral to Cabinet.
08:27A lot of good questions were asked.
08:30They were not a good time to get in the office.
08:34The Persona consortium, which had been the favourite...
08:37..is not at all impressed.
08:38Rina RTI Curshías is not the first person.
08:41Rina RTI Curshías is outraged by what it calls a dirty tricks operation.
08:45Rina RTI Curshías is not the first person who is a good person.
08:49Rina RTI Curshías is not the first person who is a good person.
08:51.. humbleful host a big game in Quebec City.
08:55Rina RTI Curshías hasרed for quite a lot of reasons...
08:56I was a rich man so I didn't expect so much of that before.
09:01..and I Wall t-e-wailleurs, he had it all to take etc.
09:05..then a really good man who rime and speech had over and overdrive than the next works.
09:12P House Sesseh!
09:14Rina Riti Curshías is not here.
09:16Rina Riti Curshías is not here that is...
09:17..an religion Valakhan.
09:19and say it again, it's Sair Graves.
09:21Thank you very much for your administration.
09:23I received a clear cut recommendation that the E-SAT Digifone application was the best.
09:29But before that, the singing of the summer was late,
09:33and for me, during the pandemic,
09:35the past year, the future, the past year and the past year,
09:38and the past year.
09:39But I remember Sam Smith's singing
09:41back to Sunday Independent.
09:43I remember the singing of the day,
09:45and I was not gonna do it.
09:47Sam's story just changed everything.
09:55In the last few years,
09:56she wrote a great song about Sam Smith
09:59from the Irish Independent
10:00at the end of the story.
10:17In the last few years,
10:18Ben Dunn,
10:19she wrote a song about Michael Lowry
10:23from the Hibre d'Orn.
10:48Are you a Simon Minister?
10:55In the last few years,
10:56he wrote a song about Sunday Independent
10:58by Michael Lowry,
10:59and he wrote a song about him.
11:01He wrote a song about Michael Lowry
11:04and he wrote a song about him.
11:06He wrote a song about him.
11:07I can say quite clearly
11:09that either I or my company
11:11have done nothing improper or illegal.
11:14However,
11:15there was no one who was young
11:16in the States.
11:17But it was not a song about him.
11:27It was a very good time
11:29to get involved in the film.
11:30I felt that the police were in the film
11:31was not a bit more
11:32than Ben Dunn.
11:33And it was a great time
11:34to see it.
11:35And it was a lot more like Charlie Hawing.
11:37It was a big time to see it.
11:39It was a great time.
11:40When I was young,
11:41I was young,
11:42I was young,
11:43I'm sorry.
11:53And the answer is,
11:55because it's not the case,
11:57it's not the case,
11:59but it's not the case.
12:13...as Minister was impeccable.
12:15My integrity uncompromised.
12:18People of my generation expected a level of transparency that hadn't existed before.
12:22Can you be sure this House...
12:24...that Mr Ben Dunne did not make representations...
12:27...to influence any decisions that were made by Mr Larry...
12:30...as Minister for Transport, Energy and Communications?
12:33Well, it was a great time for Sam Smith...
12:36...and at the time of the night...
12:37...he was a big fan of all war in the United States...
12:39...and he was a big fan of all war.
12:43Ben Dunne, the first witness, told the Payments to Politicians Tribunal...
12:47...that in 1988 he came to an arrangement with Michael Larry...
12:50...for the provision of refrigeration services.
12:52There were those who said Mr Houghy would never turn up at Dublin Castle...
12:56...but turn up he did.
12:57Houghy appeared in the witness box...
12:59...and eventually accepted that he'd received money.
13:02And when he came out, there was a lot of booing.
13:05So that was very humiliating for him.
13:07And just after one o'clock, he departed to cheers and booze.
13:18When the press and 6th day...
13:20...was in the public courier...
13:21...of the history of McCracken...
13:23...to his family at a tourist school...
13:24...in May Luneas in 1998.
13:26It concludes that cheques for over £160,000 made out to streamline...
13:32...were not, as he claimed, bonus payments.
13:35When the school was in a tourist school...
13:36...he was a big fan of Charlie Houghy...
13:40...and Michael Larry...
13:42...he was a big fan of his family...
13:44...but he was a big fan of his family.
13:47Former Minister Michael Larry can take some comfort...
13:50...from the report's conclusion...
13:51...that no political favours were sought or given...
13:54...in return for payments to him.
13:56But the rest of it makes uncomfortable reading.
13:58But it's not a story...
14:00...that if Michael Larry came...
14:01...for the decision to be available...
14:03...it was the case of Sia and Mieke.
14:04...lowery wasn't a right-click...
14:05...or even though it was the case of a scripture...
14:07...besperý the decision...
14:09...for the decision to be given...
14:10...he was still there...
14:11...for the decision to be done...
14:12...and through the situation...
14:13...oneになります...
14:14...and then the justice system would have...
14:15Many now believe that Mr. Lowry may yet face a jail sentence for taxation offences.
14:21There was no doubt about the Commissionary Income,
14:24but there was no doubt about it.
14:30There was no doubt about it, Charles.
14:36But it was the first time to see Lowry in the past,
14:39but he was a great leader in the past,
14:41and he was a great leader in the past.
14:50I was not sure about it,
14:52but he was a great leader of the year
14:55who was a great leader of the year.
14:58He was a great leader of the year.
15:01But that was the first time he was a leader in Gibraltar.
15:09He still enjoys the full support of his constituents in North Tipperary.
15:13What would you send him to jail?
15:14A gentleman.
15:15Send all the rest of Mugport?
15:17Yes.
15:18That's right. The whole country is corrupt.
15:19There is a lot of corruption in the country...
15:21...that there is a lot of corruption in the country...
15:24...and a lot of corruption in the country...
15:26...that the government will be able to do.
15:27What the government will propose is that the tribunal...
15:29...should further investigate the Ansbacker accounts...
15:32...in which £38 million was held offshore for Irish residents.
15:36It is not food or food or food, it is true...
15:39...so that the government will be able to get political support...
15:42...by their young sister.
15:45None of us are saying that it is a good deal to the 94th-year president.
15:47Now, there is a new opportunity to raise money...
15:49...and he is now interested to raise money...
15:51...and that he is taking money to bring money to the country...
15:54...in which he wants to pay for Charles Hawi and Michael Lowry.
16:06focused on Hói and Don, one of the richest families in Ireland, and one of the most powerful politicians.
16:12We are here, Marriarty, and today I'm going back we have 1926,
16:19and we are very proud of our mage and the rest of us are not going to be here
16:24so we can't do it anymore, but we are still trying to find out what we want in the future.
16:32On the £8,000 used from the leader's account for the purchase of Charvet shirts,
16:37Mr Hói told the lawyers that this should have been reimbursed from his personal funds.
16:42Thank you very much.
16:44It's been a long time to be a guest.
16:48It's been a long time since Michael Lowry
16:52won $5,000 in the past,
16:55and won $5,000 in the past.
17:00If Mark Fitzgerald is correct, a serving government minister, Michael Lowry,
17:04tried to influence an independent rent arbitrator to get more money from Mr Dunn.
17:09Well, it's been a long time to be able to get more money from Mr Dunn.
17:15Dennis O'Brien has denied making any payments
17:19to former Communications Minister Michael Lowry
17:22in exchange for winning the second mobile phone licence.
17:25You could see the money moving from account to account.
17:39A Dutch company controlled by Dennis O'Brien transfers money to an account in the Isle of Man.
17:44£150,000 is then sent to a newly opened David Austin account in Jersey,
17:50and then the money goes back to the Isle of Man to an offshore account just opened by Michael Lowry.
17:56Now, there were different stories for each transfer,
17:58but it was a hell of a coincidence if it was a coincidence.
18:01Michael Lowry repeated,
18:02he never got any money from Dennis O'Brien.
18:05Dennis O'Brien said nobody could make any connection between himself and Michael Lowry.
18:09It was very expensive and expensive,
18:11but it was a hell of a coincidence if it was a coincidence.
18:13And it wasn't enough money to give Dennis O'Brien to Michael Lowry.
18:18And it wasn't enough money to pay attention to him.
18:25The property in Manchester that was bought with the loan was registered to Dennis O'Brien's U.K. solicitor.
18:33It was a great deal of money,
18:35and it was a great deal of money,
18:36and it was a great deal of money.
18:37It was a great deal of money,
18:38and it was a great deal of money in Mansfield.
18:41And the least!
18:43Lawyers believe this may have been a deliberate effort to conceal his involvement
18:46in a land deal,
18:47again linking him to Dennis O'Brien.
18:50This is it for the local service.
18:51The first message of Dennis O'Brien to the active candidate to Parliament in Jun2 30.
18:56Tom Cairne, General Secretary of Fine Gaul,
18:59gave evidence of a litany of payments from Dennis O'Brien to the party
19:02in the run-up of the awarding of the second mobile phone license.
19:06It was the first time that EESAT, Dennis O'Brien...
19:12...to tell us about Telenor...
19:14...with Fina Gael for £50,000.
19:29The new year, EESAT's Digifone...
19:31...in which Dermot Desmond...
19:33...with Fina Gael...
19:35...is the first time Michael Lowry's Dennis O'Brien...
19:38...cring you back.
19:39It was after the All-Ireland Football Final in 1995...
19:44...Michael Lowry and Dennis O'Brien ran into each other.
19:47He was with Dennis O'Brien...
19:49...and he was the first time...
19:51...with Fina Gael Nairsead...
19:53...with Fina Gael Nairsead.
19:54He was the first time...
19:57...to Dennis O'Brien...
19:59...with Fina Gael.
20:01The Tribunal revealed today...
20:03...that it's examining evidence...
20:04...that Dennis O'Brien's EESAT Digifone consortium...
20:07...received confidential information...
20:09...related to the competition.
20:11But the new year...
20:12...of Fina Gael Nairsead...
20:14...he was the first time...
20:15...with Fina Gael Nairsead...
20:17...in the first time...
20:18...of Fina Gael Nairsead.
20:19...of Fina Gael Nairsead.
20:20Danish consultant...
20:21...professor Michael Anderson...
20:23...consistently said...
20:24...that EESAT Digifone...
20:25...won the competition...
20:26...fairly and squarely.
20:28Nobody came out...
20:29...and said...
20:30...you know...
20:32...I felt...
20:33...that there was something corrupt going on here.
20:35There was no whistleblower.
20:36Dennis O'Brien accused the inquiry...
20:38...of relying on hearsay...
20:39...rumour and anonymous letters.
20:41There was a lot of relief...
20:43...of Fina Gael Nairsead...
20:44...of Fina Gael Nairsead...
20:45...of Fina Gael Nairsead...
20:48...and the first time...
20:49...and the first time...
20:50...Ill Dennis O'Brien...
20:52...in Cooleacht.
20:53Dennis O'Brien will receive...
20:54...250 million pounds...
20:56...for his shares in EESAT...
20:58...under the terms of this deal.
20:59There are hundreds of Fina Gael Nairsead...
21:01...and in 2008...
21:03...the deal of EESAT Digifone...
21:05...with British Telecom...
21:06...for nearly 250 billion euros...
21:09...with Dennis O'Brien...
21:10...with 50 and 30 million euros...
21:13...for that money.
21:15There's been a good week.
21:19Dennis O'Brien has already been...
21:21...in the first time...
21:22...and has to do a lot of money...
21:24...for that money.
21:26To the money and money...
21:28...at the place of EESAT Digifone...
21:29...in the deal of commerce...
21:31...he's doing to the money and money...
21:33...pare the money and money...
21:34...in the money...
21:35...to the money.
21:36If the tribunal establishes that the process by which Isat Digifone was chosen was tainted by corruption, damages could amount to hundreds of millions of euros.
21:46In the last few years, Moriarty was a member of the school for five years,
21:51and he was a member of the school for the first time in the year.
22:06I was a member of the school for the first time, and I was a member of the school for two years.
22:13And his former friend, Barrie Maloney, claimed Zenas told him he gave Mr Larry money.
22:18Yes.
22:19In the last few years, the school was a member of the school, a member of the school,
22:25and a member of the school.
22:26And I was a member of the school for four years,
22:30and I was a member of the school for three years.
22:33Barrister is getting a daily rate for tribunals to go on for years and years.
22:38There is something really obscene about that.
22:41He's a member of the school for two years,
22:44and he was the member of the school for four years.
22:47He was a member of the school for three years,
22:48and he was the member of the school for four years.
22:50But he would not be a member of the school for the school.
22:51Mr O'Brien's lawyers have tried to stop it looking into his purchase of Doncaster Rovers football club in 1998.
22:57What did you say about the school for four years, Moriarty?
23:01Mr O'Brien said the courts had refused to force the Mariarty Tribunal to hear evidence from AMI.
23:08The court was very smooth and the court was very close to the court.
23:15The court was a very close to the court.
23:20The court was a very close to the court.
23:25And a third of the court was the director of Mariarty.
23:30He was a very close friend of the court who also was very close to the court and that he was very close to the court.
23:44He was a boomerang of several times.
23:47Businessman Dermot Desmond describes the report as the most lengthy and expensive comic ever produced.
23:54Mr. Moriarty, make sure now that Ben Dunn is prosecuted because corrupt people should be put into jail.
24:24Mr. Moriarty
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