Gardaí are driving unsafe patrol cars, says Agsi

GARDA PATROL CARS: GARDAÍ ARE being asked to patrol in cars that are unsuitable and unsafe, sergeants and inspectors have claimed…

GARDA PATROL CARS:GARDAÍ ARE being asked to patrol in cars that are unsuitable and unsafe, sergeants and inspectors have claimed.

Delegates at the annual conference of the Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors (Agsi) have been told small cars were being fitted with “blue lights” and were then “masquerading as police vehicles”.

Sgt Séamus Burke representing the Louth Garda division told the conference that Garda members were being sent out to patrol the streets in small cars such as Toyota Yarises and Carollas and Ford Fiestas. Such vehicles were “not fit for the job at hand”.

“Simply placing a set of blue beacons and Garda signs on a vehicle does not make it a patrol car any more than placing a donkey in a stable would make it a racehorse,” he told the conference.

READ MORE

“We are aware that many motor manufacturers supply purpose- built policing vehicles. This precedent should be the benchmark for the Garda fleet.” He said no new vehicles would be provided this year, meaning none of the older vehicles currently in the Garda fleet would be replaced.

Garda cars were not legally required to undergo a National Car Test (NCT) until they were four-years-old. However, some vehicles were running up around 100,000km per annum, meaning they will have reached over 400,000km before they undergo their first NCT.

“Our current fleet is in no way suited to this,” Sgt Burke said. “A taxi cab must undergo an annual NCT. Surely our fleet is no safer and covers no less mileage annually?”

Sgt Dominic Flynn, representing the Longford-Westmeath division, called for changes to the design of extendable batons, known as an Asp, issued to all uniformed members.

He said the current Asp did not have a strap to help gardaí secure it to themselves. This had led to situations where some offenders had taken Asps from gardaí and used the batons to attack officers.

He said some young gardaí had purchased straps for their Asps but there were concerns that modifying the batons would nullify insurance if gardaí were injured in an incident involving the Asp.

Conor Lally

Conor Lally

Conor Lally is Security and Crime Editor of The Irish Times