Child sexual assault and indecent exposures among 4,300 complaints made to Irish Rail last year
A government TD is now calling for a dedicated public transport unit of An Garda SĂochĂĄna. File picture
Irish Rail received nearly 4,300 messages to its dedicated text line for reporting antisocial behaviour on train services last year, with passengers complaining about drug use, violence, sexual assault, and indecent exposure.
Among the incidents reported in 2024 include a man defecating in the middle of a carriage, a fist-fight involving a man and a woman, a passenger brandishing a sword, and a child allegedly being sexually assaulted.
A government TD is now calling for a dedicated public transport unit of An Garda SĂochĂĄna.
Records released under freedom of information laws suggest that drugs are regularly being openly abused on train services, with children even observed smoking cannabis on the Dart in January of last year.
In February, one commuter texted Irish Rail to report a couple openly using cocaine on a train service with their baby in a pram in front of them, while a man on a train near Killiney last May was reported to have removed his trousers while smoking cannabis.
Alcohol consumption was also a recurring problem. On February 29, a âviolent, aggressive drunk manâ was removed from a train at Clara, after which distressed passengers watched him âvomiting and trying to fightâ.
In July, a passenger contacted Irish Rail to report that a 75-year-old man had exposed himself to a young girl on an afternoon train service. She was âvisibly upsetâ, they said.
Similarly, a man on a train heading for Sydney Parade in Dublin last June was reported for âexposing his d**kâ, and a man on a train at Booterstown was âexposing his bare arse to young girlsâ in January.
There were a number of complaints about couples engaging in âsexually explicit actsâ on trains. On October 11, an individual reported that two fellow passengers were âopenly fingering each other and making outâ.
In August, a troubling text message reported that a child had been sexually assaulted by a group of adolescents on a train early in the evening. The child disembarked at Bayside station, according to the report.
Also in August, a passenger was made to feel very uncomfortable by a man who was walking up and down the train dressed as a clown. In March, a man boarded a train to Maynooth with a sword, according to two reports.
In late July, a passenger reported that a man and woman were punching each other on board a train, noting that âshe had him in a headlock at one pointâ.Â
On April 9, a knife fight was reported on the Sligo-Dublin service around 11am, while a man âslappedâ a girl during a âloversâ quarrelâ on the Howth train near Connolly Station in January.
There were frequent instances of racist abuse on train services last year. In March, it was reported that two males were racially abusing âa little boyâ on a train, while a woman and her child were the targets of racist abuse near Connollly Station in September.
In May, passengers on a train at Howth Junction had a rock thrown through the window, while one commuter reported that a group of âyoung ladsâ had been travelling on the outside of the train before jumping off at Lansdowne Road.
A man was reported to have defecated on a train in January and, in an unrelated incident, a passenger discovered âan actual bag of faecesâ in the middle of a carriage in September while travelling to Bray.
There were several complaints about the presence of blood on walls, windows and seats on carriages, as well as âpuddlesâ of vomit on floors, and âdog pooâ on some of the seats.
A number of passengers who reported antisocial or criminal behaviour to Irish Rail via the text line said they had to get off the train for their own safety.
Fianna FĂĄil TD Cormac Devlin described the incidents described in the text messages as âawfulâ, and said there was a need to expedite plans for public transport policing contained in the Programme for Government.
âWhatâs proposed at this stage is a standalone public transport service. My own preference would be that it would be a unit of An Garda SĂochana,â he said.
âThis is why we definitely need to have more monitors, more proactive and visible deterrents on public transport â on carriages and platforms. Nobody wants to see these awful elements, particularly for youngsters. We need to ensure they are safe.âÂ
A spokesman for Irish Rail said antisocial behaviour was a societal issue to which train services were not immune, but added that there were a range of proactive and preventative measures in place to address it.
âThe text line allows people to discreetly alert us to issues of concern, and is live monitored through our central security hub, who are in direct contact with our security teams on the network to co-ordinate response,â he explained.
âThe vast majority of 50.1 million journeys on our network take place without incident, but we will continue to prioritise prevention of incidents, and rapid response working with our partners.â





