The death has been announced of wrongly convicted former nightclub owner, Frank Shortt.
He was 88.
The Inishowen publican was falsely jailed for drugs offences, however, his family agreed a massive compensation settlement with the State in 2006.
His death was announced within the past hour by his son, Kristian, on his Facebook page.
“My father passed away last night, my hero is gone, an 88 year life well lived,” he wrote.
A well known businessman, Mr Shortt was set up by rogue gardaí and framed for allowing ecstasy to be sold in his popular nightclub, the Point Inn, in the mid-1990s.
He languished in jail for over two years before being freed in 1998.
But Mr Shortt had to wait until 2002 for his name to be fully cleared.
His wife Sally and five children, aged between 24 and 34, were compensated for the distress and suffering caused by their father’s wrongful imprisonment.
The settlement is believed to have been a six figure sum and comes after €1.9m was awarded to Mr Shortt in 2005.
Outside the Four Courts in Dublin, Jalisco Shortt, the eldest son, said at the time the family were happy the matter had been resolved.
“No amount of money could ever reflect the trauma that we have went through really,” he said.
“It wasn’t about the money. It was about clearing our father’s name, that was the main thing all the way along and finally we now feel that we have done so, and we are all happy now and we would just like to go home and live our lives.”
The family received hate mail and malicious telephone calls after their father’s imprisonment.
Jalisco and his sister were both forced to leave the Inishowen area after they found it difficult to get work. They were branded outcasts and a drug dealing family.
Two rogue gardaí, former superintendent Kevin Lennon and his accomplice ex-detective garda Noel McMahon concocted the frame up. They were later branded corrupt by the Morris Tribunal for setting hoax IRA arms dumps in Donegal in the mid-1990s as they tried to further their careers.
Mr Shortt was wrongly jailed in 1995. He served 27 months of a three-year sentence in appalling conditions in a cramped, dirty cell in Mountjoy Prison.
In 2000, he appealed his conviction which the Director of Public Prosecutions did not oppose.
But he had to wait until 2002 when the Court of Criminal Appeal granted him a certificate of innocence after declaring a miscarriage of justice.
A judge described the garda’s actions as an outrageous abuse of power.
Mr Shortt sued the Garda Commissioner Noel Conroy and the State. He had been made an initial payment of €375,000 in July 2005 by the High Court pending final judgment. That sum was then included in a final award of €1.9m he received in October of that year.
In the 2006 settlement, the State acknowledged the considerable suffering and distress caused to the Shortt family. But it refused to admit liability
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