Paul Appleby, Director of the Office of Corporate Enforcement, slips off quietly at the end of the month.
Back in the mid-1990s, when journalist Sam Smyth’s report about Ben Dunne’s dealings with Michael Lowry led, in time, to the establishment of the McCracken (Dunnes Payments) Tribunal, Appleby was one of two or three civil servants involved in the administration of company law in Ireland.
The explosion of company law inquiries that flowed from the unveiling of the secretive Ansbacher Deposits system, as well as the disclosure by RTÉ of outrageous practices at NIB, led the then Tánaiste and Minister for Enterprise, Trade and Employment, Mary Harney to establish the ODCE, with Appleby as the first director.http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/...322852695.htmlIn its 2011 annual report, the office reviewed the fruit of its first 10 years, pointing out that it had prosecuted more than 100 companies and company directors on approximately 300 criminal charges as well as being involved in the disqualification and restriction of a large number of people from acting as company directors.
This punitive element of the work has been matched by an advocacy role that has involved the publication of company law guidance notes and the attendance of staff at more than 600 conferences and such events.



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Given the performance of civil servants such as Appleby and despite his staff's sterling 'attendance at over 600 conferences' your assumption that he would have survived in the private sector is an assumption too far.

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