*”Physical” incidents were reported in the family home. 

A JUDGE has granted an Emergency Care Order (ECO) for an ‘out of control’ young teen after his parents ‘surrendered’ him to Gardaí at their local Garda station.

At the Family Law Court, Judge Alec Gabbett said that the threshold for the application for the ECO by TUSLA, the Child and Family Agency (CFA) has been met “because the parents have effectively handed him over to the Gardai as they can’t control him”.

Judge Gabbett said that he understood the parents’ predicament and told the boy’s mother in court “you are at your wit’s end” and said she has taken the action because of assaults by her son on her.

Judge Gabbett said that in the case, the parents “have effectively surrendered their son to the Gardaí”.

Judge Gabbett said that the secondary school-going boy “is out of the home because he is out of control. Effectively he has been turned out because the parents say they can no longer manage his behaviour”.

Visibly emotional in court, the mother said, “I would do anything to help him.”

Gardaí invoked special powers under the Childcare Act after the parents handed their son into their local Garda station necessitating the CFA ECO application.

A Garda witness in the CFA application told Judge Gabbett “both parents say they have unwanted people coming to their doorstep because of their son and he is continuously coming to Garda attention in relation to thefts, fighting, sneaking out of the house and not coming back for days”.

The Garda TUSLA Liaison Officer also said that the boy has got physical with his mother concerning her parenting choices such as not allowing him watch TV.

Solicitor for the CFA, Kevin Sherry said that there is “a disturbing social media image going around at the moment” of the teen assaulting another individual.

In evidence, the boy’s mother told Judge Gabbett that she has viewed the video. The woman told the court that she told her son that he “could have killed” the other person in the video.

She said, “And a few seconds later he is asking for money to go to the shop. He doesn’t get the seriousness of anything. It scares me”.

The mother told the court her son “has been quite physical with me a number of times – I have had the Gardaí out”.

A TUSLA Team Lead social worker said that the mother in the case “doesn’t want her son to come back to the family home”.

The mother told Judge Gabbett that she has other children and there are no such issues with them.

Judge Gabbett said an ECO for the boy will mean that the boy is going to be in transit at various TUSLA residential placements for the next few months “and will probably miss half his school year”.

Judge Gabbett said that the situation may arise where the boy is placed in a residential care arrangement “and you have three to four staff available 24 hours a day to make sure that he is not absconding, stealing or assaulting”.

Related News

ukraine flag 1
Ukrainian man (29) claimed Jobseekers allowance in Ireland while living in Scotland for seven months
corofin 26-07-19 6 main street traffic cycling camper van
Corofin man stole €15 bag of coal & presented it to Gardaí 'to be taken off the streets'
Spring_Clean_Galway2
Push for biggest ever spring clean in Galway
jack boddy 1
Missing person search for Jack Boddy to commence in Lahinch
Latest News
Spring_Clean_Galway2
Push for biggest ever spring clean in Galway
jack boddy 1
Missing person search for Jack Boddy to commence in Lahinch
newmarket celtic vs avenue utd 15-03-26 conor mcdaid jamie roche jack kelly 1
Hegarty's strike helps Newmarket Celtic overtake league champions Avenue Utd
shane talty 4
Talty takes aim at TII for 'two finger salute' to North Clare
wexford vs clare 15-03-26 cormac murray 1
Wexford crush Clare's promotion hopes
Premium
Wexford crush Clare's promotion hopes
€10m cost to develop up to 260 homes along Road to Nowhere
Four Clare men charged with Carrigaholt post office robbery remanded in custody for another fortnight
Clare U20s spring into life beating Tipp in championship opener
'You can't shoot 17 wides & expect to win a game' - Bugler rues Flannan's inefficiency

Subscribe for just €3 per month

If you’re here, you care about County Clare. So do we. Did you rely on us for Covid-19 updates, follow our election coverage, or visit The Clare Echo every week for breaking news and sport? The Clare Echo invests in local journalism and we want to safeguard its future in our county. By becoming a subscriber you are supporting what we do, will receive access to all our premium articles and a better experience, while helping us improve our offering to you. Subscribe to clareecho.ie and get the first six months for just €3 a month (less than 75c per week), and thereafter €8 per month. Cancel anytime, limited time offer. T&Cs Apply. www.clareecho.ie.