The unarmed and uniformed majority of the Dublin Metropolitan Police played a relatively neutral role during the troubles of 1919 and restricted their functions to such traditional roles as criminal investigation and traffic control. However, an expanded G Division was employed as an active intelligence agency against the IRA. In his book "The Spy in the Castle",
David Neligan, an IRA
double agent who infiltrated G Division, suggests that much of their activity was unprofessional and dependent upon casually-recruited local informers plus conspicuous English officers whose wartime experience in Cairo and elsewhere had little relevance to Dublin conditions. Several DMP officers actively assisted the IRA during the
Irish War of Independence (1919-1921), most famously
Edward Broy, who passed valuable intelligence to IRA leader
Michael Collins throughout the conflict. Broy was a
double agent with the rank of
Detective Sergeant (DS) and worked as a
clerk inside the G division branch. There, he copied sensitive files for Collins and passed this material on to the latter through
Thomas Gay, the librarian at Capel Street Library. On 7 April 1919, Broy smuggled Collins into G Division's archives in Brunswick Street, enabling him to identify "G-Men", seven of whom would be killed by the Collins'
"Squad" IRA unit. • 30 July 1919 – the first assassination authorised by Collins was carried out when Detective Sergeant Patrick Smyth, "the Dog", was shot near
Drumcondra, Dublin. • 12 September 1919 – Detective Daniel Hoey of DMP "G" Division killed by Michael Collins' "The Squad" • 19 October 1919 – Detective Michael Downing of DMP "G" Division killed • 29 November 1919 – Detective Sgt John Barton of DMP "G" Division killed by Michael Collins' "The Squad" • 21 January 1920 – RIC District Inspector William Redmond of DMP "G" Division killed by Michael Collins' "The Squad" • 14 April 1920 – The shooting of Detective Constable Harry Kells in Camden St
Portobello, Dublin. He was rushed to the Meath Hospital where he died. Kells had been carrying out identity parades among the many republican inmates in
Mountjoy Prison. Over 100 people were arrested as a result. • 20 April 1920 – Detective Laurence Dalton of "G" Division shot and killed In November 1923, the division was merged with
Oriel House, the
Irish Free State Intelligence Department. The new Detective Branch was put under the control of Colonel David Neligan (see above). Neligan was by then the Director of Intelligence in the
Free State Army. ==References==