Members of the Commission

 

Ms. Kathleen O’Toole, Chairperson

 Ms. Kathleen O

Kathleen O’Toole is a career police officer and lawyer who rose through the ranks of policing in the United States. She is former Chief of the Seattle Police Department, and previously served as Boston Police Commissioner and Chief Inspector of the Garda Síochána Inspectorate.  She is Treasurer of the Police Executive Research Forum and a member of the Board of Directors of the International Association of Chiefs of Police.

 

 

Ms. Noeline Blackwell

 Ms. Noeline Blackwell

Ms Noeline Blackwell is a human rights lawyer who is Chief Executive of the Dublin Rape Crisis Centre. She was formerly the Director General of the Free Legal Advice Centre (FLAC), and before that, was the principal of a solicitor's practice in Dublin.  Noeline sits on the Citizens Information Board, the board of the Immigrant Council of Ireland and on the board of Front Line Defenders. She has previously been a member of the boards of the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH) and Amnesty International, Ireland. She was awarded an honorary doctorate of laws by UCD in 2014.

 

Dr. Johnny Connolly

 Dr. Johnny Connolly

Dr Johnny Connolly is an Irish Research Council Fellow in the Centre for Crime, Justice and Victim Studies at the School of Law, University of Limerick. His current research project is titled: Developing a comprehensive human rights based response to drug and gang-related crime and community violence. He is also managing a research project titled Building community resilience – responding to criminal networks in Dublin South Central. Another project in which he is currently engaged as part of the National Drugs Strategy involves the development of a Community Crime Impact Assessment. Prior to joining UL, Johnny was a Visiting Fellow at the School of Social Work and Social Policy in Trinity College, Dublin. Prior to that he spent ten years as a Research Officer with the Health Research Board. As part of this role he was Ireland’s National Correspondent to the European reference group on illicit drug markets and drug-related crime and the National Legal database on drug law and policy, based at the European Monitoring Centre on Drugs and Drug Addiction in Lisbon, Portugal. From 2005-2007 he was Vice Chairman of the Criminal Justice Platform of the Pompidou Group of the Council of Europe. He was a member of the Advisory Group of the Drug Treatment Court for five years. He has managed a number of innovative and multi-disciplinary research projects, including a five-country study on drug seizures in 2012 and the first national study on illicit drug markets in Ireland. He has been a visiting lecture at Trinity College, Dublin, University College Dublin, Dublin Institute of Technology, New York University and the Mater Dei Institute in Dublin where he has taught courses on criminology, policing, youth justice, and society and politics. He was a founding member of Ireland’s first ecological village in Cloughjordan, Tipperary and a member of the Board of the Irish Penal Reform Trust from 2010-2016.

Dr. Vicky Conway

 Dr. Vicky Conway

Dr Vicky Conway is a lecturer in law in the School of Law and Governance in DCU where she teaches criminal law and criminology. She has previously held positions at the University of Kent, Queen's University Belfast, the University of Limerick and the University of Leeds. Vicky is a graduate of UCC (BCL, LLM), the University of Edinburgh (MSSc Criminology) and Queen's University Belfast (PhD, PGCert Higher Education). Dr Conway is a leading researcher on policing in Ireland with an emphasis on the intersection between social change, police culture and police accountability. She has published two monographs on policing in Ireland (The Thick Blue Wall: The Morris Tribunal and Police Accountability in the Republic of Ireland and Policing Twentieth Century Ireland: A History of an Garda Síochána), edited a book on criminal procedure and written numerous articles on policing. Her research has been funded by the British Academy and the European Commission. She was appointed a member of the Policing Authority in December 2015. She has held visiting scholar positions in North America, Australia and Ireland. Vicky is a member of the board of the Association of Criminal Justice Research and Development and has previously been a board member of the award winning Committee on the Administration of Justice in Northern Ireland.

 

Mr. Tim Dalton

 Mr. Tim Dalton

 

Retired Secretary General of the Department of Justice and Equality.

 

Sir Peter Fahy QPM., MA

 Sir Peter Fahy QPM., MA

Sir Peter Fahy has served in 5 UK forces spending 5 years as Chief Constable of Cheshire and 8 as Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police with 13,000 staff under his command. In his time as a police chief he championed Neighbourhood Policing and drove through significant change programmes. For 8 years he was director of the Strategic Command Course at the police staff college Bramshill. He held national positions in charge of race and diversity and workforce development and was national police lead for the Prevent counter terrorism programme. He is a life member of the US Police Executives Research Forum having previously served on their board. ‎When he left policing in November 2015 he took up a post as chief executive of the street children charity Retrak and among other responsibilities works with African police forces on how they deal with vulnerable children. He is also Chair of the Plus Dane Housing Association and a trustee of the Catholic Diocese of Salford along with a number of other trustee positions.  He is an honorary professor at the University of Manchester.

 

Dr. Eddie Molloy

 Dr. Eddie Molloy

 

Dr Eddie Molloy is Independent Management Consultant, Director Advanced Organisation. He specialises in strategy, large-scale organisation change and innovation. Over a 40 year period he has consulted to most Government Departments, the Revenue Commissioners, the C&AG, the Central Bank, and numerous other State agencies, including An Garda Síochana. He is a board member of the Public Appointments Service. He has advised IDA Ireland on its own strategy and worked on the strategic development of many multinational companies. He has worked extensively abroad and is joint author of number of books on job satisfaction and productivity.

 

Ms. Tonita Murray

 Ms. Tonita Murray

 

Ms Tonita Murray is an international police development consultant with over 40 years as a civilian in government ministries directing the police and in the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). She has specialised in police reform, policy development, training, leadership and management. During her career in the RCMP she was one of the leaders of organisational change and a Director General of the Canadian Police College. From 2003 to the present, she has been engaged in police reform in Afghanistan and Kenya, including gender mainstreaming and gender sensitive policing. She has published on police management and reform, accountability and governance, women in policing and on the Afghanistan police reform effort.

 

Dr. Antonio Oftelie

 Dr. Antonio Oftelie

 

Dr Antonio M. Oftelie is Executive Director, Leadership for a Networked World and Fellow, Technology and Entrepreneurship Center at Harvard. Dr Oftelie conducts research, teaches, and advises on how law, policy and technology can be aligned to create exceptional environments for organizational innovation and adaptation. Based in the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at Harvard University, Antonio administers the Harvard Innovation Award program, is faculty lead for the Public Safety, Health and Human Services, Chief Financial Officer, Next Generation Operations, and Public Sector for the Future summits, and since 2004, has developed and taught in more than forty Harvard executive education programs. As an application of his research, Antonio advises senior government and business executives on organizational transformation by helping them to adapt their mission and strategy, ideate new business and service models, build dynamic capacity, and create performance and value measures. 

 

Professor Donncha O'Connell

 Professor Donncha O’Connell

 

Professor Donncha O’Connell is an Established Professor of Law at the School of Law, NUI Galway where he has just completed a four year term as Head of School. He is also a Commissioner of the Law Reform Commission and was, for four years, a board member of the Legal Aid Board. Professor O’Connell was a Visiting Senior Fellow at the Centre for the Study of Human Rights, London School of Economics in the academic year 2009-2010. From 1999-2002 he was the first full-time Director of the Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL). He has also served on the boards of the following human rights NGOs: INTERIGHTS; Free Legal Advice Centres (FLAC) Ltd; and Amnesty International – Ireland. He was a member of the EU Network of Independent Experts on Fundamental Rights that advised the EU Commission on a wide range of human rights issues from 2002-2007 and, latterly, the Senior Irish member of FRALEX, a legal expert group that advised the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) in Vienna from 2007-2011

 

Ms. Helen Ryan

 Ms. Helen Ryan

 

Ms Helen Ryan was the Chief Executive Officer of Creganna-Tactx Medical from 2005 – 2013, a global supplier to the medical device industry specialising in products, technologies and solutions for minimally invasive therapies. The company is currently ranked among the world’s top 10 medical device outsource providers. During Ms Ryan’s time as CEO, the company grew five-fold to become the largest indigenous medical device company. The expansion included three company acquisitions, a strategic joint venture in Asia, and the raising of significant debt and equity financing. The organisation grew from 100 people at a single site in Galway to over 1,250 people across a global network of four sites in Ireland, the USA and Singapore. Prior to joining Creganna-Tactx in 2003, Ms Ryan worked with Medtronic and Tyco Healthcare (Covidien) in Product Development and R&D functional management roles. She is a fellow of the Institute of Engineers of Ireland and a member of the Boards of Enterprise Ireland and of the Galway University Foundation. She is a past Chair of the Irish Medical Devices Association, and serves as a non-executive director of a number of companies.