Garda had ‘heroic death’, commissioner tells funeral Mass

Garda Tony Golden would be remembered as a special colleague, says commissioner

Thousands of people lined the street of Blackrock village in Co Louth for the State funeral of Garda Tony Golden. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill
Thousands of people lined the street of Blackrock village in Co Louth for the State funeral of Garda Tony Golden. Photograph: Dara Mac Dónaill

Garda Tony Golden may have died a "heroic death" but that would not stop his "Garda family" remembering the life of a special colleague and loving family man, Garda Commissioner Nóirín O'Sullivan told his funeral Mass.

Addressing the 300-strong congregation that filled St Oliver Plunkett's Church in Blackrock, Ms O'Sullivan said the pain and shock at her colleague's murder had been felt not only in the community where he lived, worked and was murdered, but right across the State.

"The pain and sympathy evoked by Tony's death in the wider community has touched every one of us who works with and wears the blue uniform of An Garda Síochána, " she said.

“But the hero he became in death should not wipe from our memories the person he was in life. Above all, Tony was a family man, a man living within a ring of love forged by himself and Nicola.”

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And while the couple’s three children – Alex, Andrew and Lucy, all aged under eight – had lost their father, they had already felt the benefit of his loving and caring nature.

It was “achingly sad” to accept the plans he had made with Nicola and hopes they shared for the future would not happen in the way they had envisaged

Children

“Tony’s three beautiful children will need help to remember the best of what has been taken away” from them.

“To remember being hefted on to the big shoulders of their daddy to get the very best view. And to remember the strong, sure hands of him.”

Her remarks were broadcast live on big screens to 6,000- 7,000 people – some 4,000 of them gardaí – who lined the street of Blackrock.

Uniformed gardaí who came to pay their respects formed a continuous guard of honour on both sides of the village street on the shore of Dundalk Bay.

The lines they formed stretched a kilometre between the home Garda Golden shared with his wife and three children and the church that hosted his funeral Mass.

Cherished memories

Ms O’Sullivan said while Garda Golden first lived with his family in

Mayo

and then in Blackrock, where his wife was from, he was also a member of the Garda family which cherished memories made “when it comes to one of our own”.

“We bring them with us on our journey,” she said of deceased colleagues.

“[They are] in the stories we tell in the dark interiors of patrol cars, when waiting for a kettle to boil in the station, when we are out on lonely checkpoints,” she said.

“We will tell stories about Tony Golden in the months and years to come, and in those stories we will remember the totality of him.

“He was a proud, loving family man, and he was a garda who loved being a garda. He was a hero protecting a frightened woman and her father.

“He laid down his life doing what he had sworn to do. He had sworn to be a guardian of the peace.”

Conor Lally

Conor Lally

Conor Lally is Security and Crime Editor of The Irish Times