Creche staff may see RTÉ footage

Supreme Court dismisses broadcaster’s appeal against a High Court ruling

A screen grab from the RTÉ Investigations Unit programme Breach of Trust
A screen grab from the RTÉ Investigations Unit programme Breach of Trust

Two childcare workers who claim they were defamed in an RTÉ

Prime Time

programme about creches have secured Supreme Court orders directing RTÉ to give them copies of recordings of the programme in the format shown to some parents prior to the broadcast.

The three-judge Supreme Court yesterday dismissed RTÉ’s appeal against a High Court ruling that the workers were entitled to copies of recordings of the “Breach of Trust” programme both as broadcast on May 28th, 2013, and as shown days earlier to the parents of children cared for by Links Creche, at Abington, Malahide, Co Dublin. RTÉ must also provide any transcripts of what was shown.

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Secret filming
Sandra Kavanagh and Lisa Craddock sought the recordings prior to delivering statements of claim in their defamation actions against RTÉ over the programme which involved undercover reporters secretly filming at a number of creches.

Ms Craddock, Brookwood Glen, Artane, Dublin, and Ms Kavanagh, Hawthorn Park, Forrest Park, Swords, Co Dublin, were both employees of the Links Creche in May 2013 and claim they were devastated by the broadcast. They claim the programme alleged they were involved in the mistreatment of, and were utterly indifferent to, children in their care. Both deny either mistreatment or indifference.


Advance screening
Both accepted they were given a separate advance screening of the programme in the presence of their lawyers but said they had no idea what exactly was shown to the parents of children.

Last October, the High Court ruled RTÉ should hand over recordings of the broadcast programme and of what was shown to the parents. RTÉ appealed to the Supreme Court and, while it later agreed to provide the plaintiffs with recordings of the programme as broadcast, retained its objection to handing over recordings of what was shown to the parents.

Dismissing the appeal yesterday, Mr Justice Nial Fennelly said the “crucial” fact was neither Ms Kavanagh nor Ms Craddock had seen what was shown to the parents. The judge noted that Ms Kavanagh did not appear in the broadcast programme but did appear in the material shown to the parents.

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan

Mary Carolan is the Legal Affairs Correspondent of the Irish Times