Senan Molony

Senan Molony is an author and Political Editor of the Irish Daily Mail. He has also been Deputy Political Editor for the Irish Independent.[1]

Molony was educated at Belvedere College in Dublin, and studied journalism in Rathmines College of Commerce.

Molony broke the news of politician Michael Healy-Rae's Celebrities go Wild voting scandal, receiving the award for Scoop of the Year at the National Newspapers of Ireland's Journalism Awards.[2][3] He also covered the Aengus Ó Snodaigh printer cartridge scandal.[4]

Books

His first book, Celtic Mists (Phoenix, 1987) is a parody of Irish history. The Phoenix Park Murders: Conspiracy, Betrayal and Retribution (Mercier, 2006) investigates the assassinations of Cavendish and Burke in the park in 1882.

Molony also is the author of The Irish Aboard Titanic (Mercier, 2000, 2012), A Ship Accused (Cedric, 2002); The Titanic and the Mystery Ship (Mercier, 2004); Titanic: Victims and Villains (Tempus, 2008), RMS Lusitania: An Irish Tragedy (Mercier, 2004) and Titanic Scandal: The Trial of the Mount Temple (Amberly, 2010).

Theories

  • RMS Titanic alternative theories#Fire in coal bunker
gollark: Maybe you should sort a list of integers in O(n³) time then.
gollark: Do they actually check if you're there and/or listening somehow? Surely this could be automated.
gollark: You people get notifications from all of them?!
gollark: Why even have separate chats for time of day?
gollark: YOU should listen to the FTL: Faster than Light soundtrack for purposes.

References

  1. Molony, Senan (10 October 2008). "Humiliation for Gormley over posts". Irish Independent. Independent News & Media. Retrieved 10 October 2008.
  2. "Irish Times biggest winner at national newspaper awards". The Journal. 27 October 2011. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  3. McGreevy, Ronan (27 October 2011). "'Irish Times' journalists win top awards". The Irish Times. Retrieved 27 October 2011.
  4. "Sinn Féin TD urged to 'come clean' over €50,000 use of Dáil printer cartridges". The Journal. 28 February 2012. Retrieved 28 February 2012. Senan Molony's report in today's Irish Daily Mail adds that new rules introduced for 2009 – when Ó Snodaigh remained the most prolific printer, using 54 cartridges – mean TDs have to pay for any cartridges after an annual allowance of €2,000.
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