July-August 2024 21
George Gibney
and the
scandalously
unprosecuted
rape of ‘Stella’
Conjoined Irish and US
failures to combat youth
coach sexual abuse
By Irvin Muchnik
NEWS
22 July-August 2024
national TV eight years later proved equally
challenging. What I thought would be
simple queries to RTÉ were unavailing. Late
in 2017, however, someone presumably
inside the network caused the anonymous
post to me of an envelope containing a
thumb drive with raw video of the Prime
Time segment.
We’re now more than half a year past the
latest of the periodic bursts of reports in
Irish media that gardaí have again
redoubled their Gibney investigation. This
time they are said to be confident they have
both the goods on some of his crimes and
the means to extradite him, and have
forwarded a recommendation to the Director
of Public Prosecutions.
Should the DPP ever break its familiar
template and actually indict and extradite
this time, the deep-past cases of Stella and
of others, documented by past media
reports and Justice Murphy, are unlikely to
figure. The basis would probably be fresh
testimony from entirely new cases, by other
Gibney survivors who were inspired to come
forward – to give full credit where it is due
– by the BBC podcast.
There is an ultimate outrage from the 30
years of American hospitality for George
Gibney – hospitality that has ranged from
the probable arrangement of a job oer by
the American Swimming Coaches
Association, to continued acceptance of an
application for a diversity lottery visa and a
green card, later shown to be fraudulent for
lying about his Irish past. Not to mention
that job itself in Colorado upon landing, a
position requiring certification by USA
Swimming. The ultimate outrage is this: The
climactic Gibney crime had already occurred
several years earlier on American soil.
Schedule 13 of the Mutual Assistance Act
of 2008 outlines protocols for transnational
law enforcement cooperation under the legal
treaty between the European Union and the
US:
The Director of Public Prosecutions…
may, in accordance with the relevant
international instrument and without
receiving a request to that effect,
communicate information… for the purpose
of current criminal investigations or criminal
proceedings or of initiating either of them.
In 2016-17, I was in contact with the oce
The most notorious at-large sex
criminal in sports history also raped
and impregnated a teenage swimmer in
Florida, in 1991, leading to an abortion
O
f the uncountable examples of
the unimaginable wholesale
molestations of young people
by George Gibney – coach of the
1984 and 1988 Irish Olympic
swimming teams, whom I call the most
notorious at-large sex criminal in sports
history – none resonates quite like his rape
and impregnation of a teenage swimmer
during a training trip in the United States
city of Tampa, Florida, in 1991. Let us call
this victim “Stella”. (I know only her first
name and I’ve changed it.)
Stella’s case has been in and out of
historical news media coverage of periodic
eorts to bring about a second criminal
indictment of Gibney and his extradition
from the US, where he has been a resident
alien for nearly 30 years. The original Gibney
prosecution got scuttled in 1994 by an Irish
Supreme Court ruling, under a legal doctrine
that has withered in intervening years, that
Gibneys 27 counts of indecent carnal
knowledge of minors, some of them
stretching back as far as the 1960s, were
too old for him to have a fair chance to
mount a defence.
In his popular 2020 BBC podcast series
Where Is George Gibney?, Mark Horgan of
Second Captains interviewed a member of
Stella’s family. Horgan didn’t get around to
informing listeners that Stella already had
testified to the Tampa incident, in her own
voice, to Clare Murphy of RTÉ television’s
Prime Time in 2006. One suspects such a
disclosure might have made Horgan’s
breathless audio package seem staler than
he wished to portray.
This opacity is part of an overall Irish
problem when it comes to institutional
memory. When I began reporting on all
things Gibney nearly a decade ago, I
assumed that the Murphy Report – a 1998
government inquiry, helmed by Justice
Roderick Murphy, on abuses in youth
swimming programmes – was a basic and
easily accessible public text, analogous to
America’s Warren Commission following the
JFK assassination. Instead, I was able to
track down the 160-page Murphy document
only with great eort. When I asked Irish
journalists and other friends about
acquiring a copy, they responded cagily. A
diligent clerk at the Oireachtas library
finally provided a link to a painstaking
download. (Where Is George Gibney?
likewise had no time for the surrounding
controversies of the dissatisfying Murphy
report – most especially the conflict of its
author, a member of the Glenalbyn
Swimming Club of the Leinster Branch of the
then Irish Amateur Swimming Association,
all three layers of which were investigative
foci.)
Getting my hands on the Gibney piece on
Then
July-August 2024 23
of the county prosecutors in Florida. They
were unaware of the 1991 Tampa incident
but would endeavour to get up to speed via
study of the 2006 RTÉ broadcast, including
the interview of Stella, and other media
coverage.
They told me something else of more than
passing relevance: decades of distance
from the alleged crime didn’t necessarily
preclude prosecution. In general, “there are
statutes of limitations that apply to the
prosecution of sexual battery cases except
for capital oenses” but there were “also
exceptions and circumstances that can
extend the statute of limitations. The
circumstances of a specific case would need
to be analyzed to determine whether its
prosecution would be time barred.
As to Ireland, a source inside Garda
declined to address whether there have
been communications with Florida
prosecutors, nor even to comment on the
theoretical mechanics of how Irish and
American law enforcement might compare
notes under the legal treaty. This source did
say that cooperation “only operates on the
basis of a charge, it is not possible on the
basis of inquiry. The passage of time may
be a factor too or the death of a complainant
by the High Court Taxing Master by two-
thirds. The Minister for Sport, Leo Varadkar,
had urgent meetings with the two sports
organisations about their heartless pursuit
of the girl for legal costs after the Olympic
Council’s lawyer, Giles J Kennedy, attacked
me on national radio nine months ago for
reporting the details of it.
In 2015 in the Times, for which she was
then writing, McCarthy detailed Stella
having discovered, three months after the
1991 rape, that she was pregnant. Stella
told “a high-ranking ocial” in swimming,
who is a professional person and knew
Gibney. Stella added, according to
McCarthy, that “the ocial obtained air
travel tickets and accompanied her to
England. She believes she was taken to an
abortion clinic in London and remembers
the ocial giving her pills that made her
groggy during the trip”.
In our 2012 interview, McCarthy had said
that a key concern in the aftermath of the
Murphy report was that “swim ocials who
played secondary roles in the cover-up have
remained in positions of influence. I think
this was made possible by the restrictive
terms of reference for the Murphy inquiry,
which means nobody was named in the
report (not even Gibney, [Derry] O’Rourke,
et al). The eect was to add to the secrecy
and to allow individuals – such as Dr Moira
O’Brien, the swimming association’s
honorary doctor and a former president who
was personally told about abuse and did
nothing – to elude any accountability.
Was Dr O’Brien the “high-ranking ocial
who chaperoned Stella to her abortion in
England and drugged her along the way?
[O’Brien did not respond to our request for
comment.)]
With or without a legal treaty, the
international coordination of police-agency
information is professionally mandated.
The ways to fight the scourge of youth coach
sexual abuse are two in number.
One way is to hound an individual villain
until he gets the just desserts of wearing bus-
tyre tread marks. The other way is to
understand the accountability of all the
enablers in his orbit, and to expose and change
the organisational dynamics that make abuse
something to hu about on cue but not to
eradicate by the most aggressive means.
George John Gibney is a unique figure
whose narrative connects the dots in a
manner making both paths possible. But
only if we have the will to connect them.
Irvin Muchnicks book Underwater: The
Greed-Soaked Tale of Sexual Abuse in USA
Swimming and Around the Globe, which
includes two chapters on George Gibney in
Ireland and the US, will be published by ECW
Press shortly after the Paris Olympics.
Ways to combat youth coach sexual abuse
are to hound an individual villain or to
understand the accountability of all his
enablers in his orbit, and to change the
organisational dynamics
now
or withdrawal of a complaint.
So what constitutes a ‘charge’ under this
construction? It’s known that Stella had at
one point provided a sworn adavit to
gardaí. Indeed, written armations were
required from all accusers by the publisher
of Johnny Watterson, the reporter who broke
the Gibney scandals in the early 1990s.
Over the years, the traumatised Stella has
moved in and out of lucidity and
hospitalisations. In a 2012 email interview,
another root Gibney scandal reporter,
Justine McCarthy (now, like Watterson, an
Irish Times columnist, and author of the
2008 book ‘Deep Deception: Ireland’s
Swimming Scandals’), told me:
The girl who was raped by [Gibney] in
Florida in 1991 has repeatedly tried to kill
herself, once while on the phone to me. The
High Court civil case she took for damages
against Swim Ireland and the Irish Olympic
Council was struck out on the grounds that
the proceedings were too old. The court
awarded costs to the two organisations. The
girl made an undisclosed out-of-court
settlement with the insurers of her former
solicitor (lawyer) who failed to progress the
case. She appealed the size of the Olympic
Council’s legal bill and it was cut this year

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