Hi there
Air Corps accidents and incidents reports are not routinely made public.This has always been the case and only in the event of a particular tragedy, such as 248, would the findings be made public.Generally, accidents are investigated by a Board, made up of Officers and some specialist senior NCOs and they tend to follow the same procedural pattern as civil investigations.They operate under Military law, not civil law, which is an important difference.Accident reports tend only to be given to the concerned parties, such as the Corps itself, the State and the families of any deceased...the fact that every credible Military nation publishes it's accident reports for the general public, on the basis that the taxpayer paid for the miltary in the first place seems to have slipped the Air Corps' mind.Although, if the public knew how many accidents and incidents the Don has really had, they might get a little worried.
Incidentally,the crash of the Cessna in Clonbulloge was widely filmed because so many of the jumpmasters had video/still cameras as part of their jump rigs. The filmed evidence was collected, voluntarily, within minutes of the crash.
regards
GttC