Sam Smyth

Sam Smyth is an investigative reporter, columnist and broadcaster. He works for the Irish Mail on Sunday and formerly worked for Irish Independent, Sunday Independent, Sunday Tribune newspapers.

He is the only Irish journalist to twice win journalist of the year honours: in 1991 for his investigation into business scandals, and in 1997 for his exposure of a political scandal that led to the resignation of government minister Michael Lowry. Smyth revealed that multimillionaire businessman Ben Dunne financed an extension to the home of the Transport, Energy and Communications minister' The minister resigned 36 hours after the story broke. He wrote a book Thanks a Million Big Fella based on this story.

In addition to his journalism awards, Smyth was voted the "Journalists’ Journalist" in a February 1997 poll of more than 250 Irish newspaper reporters, organized by In Dublin magazine.

Personal life

He was born in Belfast and raised as a Methodist.

Career

In the late 1960s Smyth was a club promoter and band manager, sometimes known as Lord Turk. He had adopted this name in his role as manager of Romano's Ballroom.[1] He got into journalism through writing for the Spotlight music magazine after he moved to Dublin. He worked with the Sunday World in Dublin in the 1970s. [2] He deputised for Vincent Browne on the current affairs show.

In his book "Thanks a Million Big Fella", He wrote about the story he uncovered regarding multimillionaire Ben Dunne, head of Ireland's richest family, who financed an extension to the home of minister Michael Lowry in the governing Fine Gael party. Thirty-six hours after the story broke, the minister resigned. A subsequent government investigation into the affair discovered that Dunne had also given 1.3 million pounds to former Taoiseach Charles Haughey over the years.

He has stated that he is interested in how figures in authority use and abuse their patronage and power. He believes that a reporter's trustworthiness and reputation for integrity is his or her greatest asset.[3]

Controversies

Michael McDowell and Centre for Public Inquiry leak

On 13 December 2005, using Dáil privilege,[4] Michael McDowell claimed that Frank Connolly, an investigative journalist and a brother of one of the 'Colombia Three', had travelled to Colombia under a false passport.[5] McDowell subsequently leaked the alleged faked passport application to a friend, the journalist Sam Smyth of the Irish Independent. McDowell was widely accused of abusing his power as Minister for Justice for political purposes,[6] and prejudicing any potential police investigation. Although Connolly denied McDowell's accusations, the controversy led to Irish American private donor Chuck Feeney withdrawing funding from the Centre for Public Inquiry, an investigative organisation which had published two reports embarrassing the government, of which Frank Connolly was the director,[5] after McDowell met with him.

Lowry v. Sam Smyth

In 2010, Lowry launched a defamation lawsuit against Irish Independent journalist Sam Smyth, over an article Smyth had written regarding the Moriarty Tribunal,[7] as well as comments Smyth had made on a TV3 show describing Lowry as having been "caught with his hand in the till."[8] Smyth defended the defamation claim, stating he had "did not call Michael Lowry TD a thief, but did believe he was a liar and a tax cheat".[9] Lowry's defamation lawsuit was thrown out in the Circuit court,[10] and again on appeal to the High Court.[11] High Court Justice Nicholas Kearns noted that Lowry "did not dispute that he engaged in tax fraud",[11] and ordered Lowry to pay Smyth's legal costs.[12]

Today FM

On 15 October 2011, Today FM confirmed Sam Smyth's Sunday radio show was being dropped. He had been presenting it for 14 years. Smyth had previously offended his bosses by commenting in a newspaper and on television about the Moriarty Tribunal which criticised Today FM owner Denis O'Brien. Smyth said on air the next morning that he had been told not to talk about the end of his show and stopped one of his guests from talking about it too "before someone comes downstairs and pulls a wire we better move onto something else."[13] The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) said it was concerned at the development.[14] The Irish Independent, of which Denis O'Brien is a leading shareholder, reported that Anton Savage was being lined up to replace Sam Smyth.[15] Eamon Dunphy subsequently resigned from Today FM's sister station Newstalk, in solidarity with Smyth and because, he said, the radio station's management wanted "dissenting voices" such as Constantin Gurdgiev off the airwaves.[16] [17] [18]Senator lashes lack of media solidarity for Sam Smyth O'Brien 'not fit to control INM' - Irish Times columnist

Irish Independent

Browne later wrote a piece for The Irish Times on why O'Brien "is not a fit person to control INM [Independent News & Media]". In it he questioned O'Brien's previous threats to personally sue Sam Smyth and asked "[H]ow plausible is it that the removal of Sam Smyth from a Sunday morning radio programme on Today FM, which Denis O'Brien controls, and his ostracisation now within the Irish Independent to which he is contracted (not one article by him has been published for some months), isn't part of the same campaign which Denis O'Brien and [one of his then representatives on the board of INM] Leslie Buckley, conducted against Sam Smyth in 2010?"[19]

Works

  • Riverdance: The Story 1996 ISBN 0-23399-058-5
  • Thanks a Million Big Fella 1997 ISBN 0-86121-952-X
  • Absurdly Yours – The Michael Nugent Letters, (with Michael Nugent) 2004 ISBN 1-84131-671-7

References

  1. "Profile: Sam Smyth- Writer who found that truth does hurt". The Sunday Times. Retrieved 12 January 2015.
  2. "Search for Guest Speakers | Speaker Solutions Speaker Bureau - Browse for Guest Speakers".
  3. This means one cannot be sued for defamation due to any speech made in either house of the Oireachtas.
  4. "US backer withdraws funding for CPI". RTÉ News. 7 December 2005.
  5. "McDowell says he gave papers to Independent". RTÉ News. 12 December 2005.
  6. "Tribunal will reveal findings on money trail to ex-minister". Irish Independent. 27 May 2010. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
  7. "Lowry loses High Court action". The Irish Times. 10 February 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  8. "Journalist says he called TD a tax cheat not a thief". The Irish Times. 12 December 2010. Retrieved 12 December 2010.
  9. "Sam Smyth awarded legal costs against Lowry". RTÉ News. 6 October 2011. Retrieved 6 October 2011.
  10. "High Court dismisses Lowry defamation appeal". RTÉ News. 10 February 2012. Retrieved 10 February 2012.
  11. McDonald, Dearbhail (11 February 2012). "'A good day for journalism' as Lowry loses libel appeal". Irish Independent. Retrieved 11 February 2012.
  12. "Today FM’s Smyth changes topic during discussion about his own sacking" Archived 5 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine. thejournal.ie, 16 October 2011.
  13. Taylor, Charlie. "Smyth show to end on Today FM", The Irish Times, 16 October 2011.
  14. Quinlan, Ronald. "Savage to replace dropped Smyth on Today FM slot", Irish Independent, 16 October 2011.
  15. "Eamon Dunphy leaving Newstalk with a bang". JOE.ie. 30 October 2011. Archived from the original on 5 March 2015. Retrieved 30 October 2011.
  16. Quinlan, Robert (16 October 2011). "Savage to replace dropped Smyth on Today FM slot". Irish Independent.
  17. Buckley, Dan (22 August 2012). "Smyth writes back in row over departure". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 11 January 2015.
  18. Browne, Vincent (15 August 2012). "Why I think O'Brien is not a fit person to control INM". The Irish Times. Irish Times Trust. Retrieved 15 August 2012.
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