Such an evil family, and given time to get their affairs in order, they should be treated with the contempt they deserve.
TurfMilkshake on
20 people living in one house, doubt there’s a job between them.
Leeches, shouldn’t have even been here abusing our welfare system and adding absolutely nothing to society.
Imaginary-Taste-2744 on
Scum.
Also how many of them were living in that house?
“All four family members were living with Jozef Puska, his wife Lucia, and 14 children “
Pension_Alternative on
These parasites should just be deported now.
They’ll cost us even more if they are sentenced to jail time; and that’s a big if – knowing our justice system.
There’s many more like them as well. There needs to be a thorough investigation as to how entire families- EU citizens or not, can come here and contribute nothing and instead live off taxpayers money.
It sickens me.
HonestRef on
How have these scumbags not been deported?
Lord_of_Blackhaven on
That’s nice of them.
leavemealonethanks on
I don’t want my tax paying for this stuff but youse keep voting then in!
MakingBigBank on
Is there any party that’s floating introducing ways to deport scum like this? If there was I’d vote for them.
Separate-Sand2034 on
Normally I wouldn’t be the type but they should either be deported or locked up. They are complicit in murder
jdoyle87 on
I asked ChatGPT
>Ireland. A household of 6 adults and 14 children. All 6 adults on jobseekers allowance, 2 on disability allowance. What is their total annual income? Just the total.
The answer was €125k per year.
Wild, absolutely wild.
honey11uno on
Should be deported But I doubt it , Social welfare payments need to be stopped at a minimum they haven’t paid into the system in yrs if ever they’re just leeching off the rest of us
I prepared this a few weeks ago when they were convicted, feel free to edit it and send it out to your local rep. There is absolutely no good reason for these people to remain in our country.
> Dear []
>
>I am writing to request that you press the Minister for Justice for urgent clarification and action regarding the future immigration status of Jozef Puska, Ľubomír Puska, Marek Puska, Viera Gaziova and Jozefina Grundzova, who were recently convicted of serious offences in connection with the murder of Ashling Murphy.
>
>As non-Irish nationals found guilty of extremely serious crimes ranging from murder to impeding justice and withholding information, their continued presence in the State after serving custodial sentences raises profound public concern. Particularly in the case of Jozef Puska’s family, who actively made efforts to frustrate the investigation of a brutal murder. Irish society cannot be expected to tolerate such actions without decisive legal consequences beyond imprisonment.
>
>I am aware that under Directive 2004/38/EC (the “Free Movement Directive”), EU nationals may face exclusion from another Member State on grounds of public policy or public security, particularly where serious criminality is involved. Irish transposition of this directive permits the Minister for Justice to issue deportation or exclusion orders where warranted. The threshold is high, but this case certainly meets it.
>
>I therefore ask that you raise the following:
> 1. What concrete steps has the Department of Justice taken to assess the eligibility of these individuals for deportation or exclusion from the State after sentence completion?
> 2. If no such plan exists, why not?
> 3. Will the Minister publish the Department’s policy on the deportation of EU nationals convicted of serious offences that undermine public safety and the administration of justice?
>
>The public deserves clarity on this. If the State cannot remove foreign nationals who commit murder and assist in concealing it, then we must ask what level of criminal conduct would justify exclusion. Failure to act undermines faith in both the immigration system and the justice system, as well as the Department’s duty to protect both.
Kevnmur on
People talk about deporting them, what’s to stop them coming back ?
13 commenti
Such an evil family, and given time to get their affairs in order, they should be treated with the contempt they deserve.
20 people living in one house, doubt there’s a job between them.
Leeches, shouldn’t have even been here abusing our welfare system and adding absolutely nothing to society.
Scum.
Also how many of them were living in that house?
“All four family members were living with Jozef Puska, his wife Lucia, and 14 children “
These parasites should just be deported now.
They’ll cost us even more if they are sentenced to jail time; and that’s a big if – knowing our justice system.
There’s many more like them as well. There needs to be a thorough investigation as to how entire families- EU citizens or not, can come here and contribute nothing and instead live off taxpayers money.
It sickens me.
How have these scumbags not been deported?
That’s nice of them.
I don’t want my tax paying for this stuff but youse keep voting then in!
Is there any party that’s floating introducing ways to deport scum like this? If there was I’d vote for them.
Normally I wouldn’t be the type but they should either be deported or locked up. They are complicit in murder
I asked ChatGPT
>Ireland. A household of 6 adults and 14 children. All 6 adults on jobseekers allowance, 2 on disability allowance. What is their total annual income? Just the total.
The answer was €125k per year.
Wild, absolutely wild.
Should be deported But I doubt it , Social welfare payments need to be stopped at a minimum they haven’t paid into the system in yrs if ever they’re just leeching off the rest of us
Email your TD **TODAY** : https://www.contactyourtd.ie/
I prepared this a few weeks ago when they were convicted, feel free to edit it and send it out to your local rep. There is absolutely no good reason for these people to remain in our country.
> Dear []
>
>I am writing to request that you press the Minister for Justice for urgent clarification and action regarding the future immigration status of Jozef Puska, Ľubomír Puska, Marek Puska, Viera Gaziova and Jozefina Grundzova, who were recently convicted of serious offences in connection with the murder of Ashling Murphy.
>
>As non-Irish nationals found guilty of extremely serious crimes ranging from murder to impeding justice and withholding information, their continued presence in the State after serving custodial sentences raises profound public concern. Particularly in the case of Jozef Puska’s family, who actively made efforts to frustrate the investigation of a brutal murder. Irish society cannot be expected to tolerate such actions without decisive legal consequences beyond imprisonment.
>
>I am aware that under Directive 2004/38/EC (the “Free Movement Directive”), EU nationals may face exclusion from another Member State on grounds of public policy or public security, particularly where serious criminality is involved. Irish transposition of this directive permits the Minister for Justice to issue deportation or exclusion orders where warranted. The threshold is high, but this case certainly meets it.
>
>I therefore ask that you raise the following:
> 1. What concrete steps has the Department of Justice taken to assess the eligibility of these individuals for deportation or exclusion from the State after sentence completion?
> 2. If no such plan exists, why not?
> 3. Will the Minister publish the Department’s policy on the deportation of EU nationals convicted of serious offences that undermine public safety and the administration of justice?
>
>The public deserves clarity on this. If the State cannot remove foreign nationals who commit murder and assist in concealing it, then we must ask what level of criminal conduct would justify exclusion. Failure to act undermines faith in both the immigration system and the justice system, as well as the Department’s duty to protect both.
People talk about deporting them, what’s to stop them coming back ?