Real IRA

Real IRA
Dissident republicans

Monday, April 29, 2013

Robert Carroll (aged 27), from Ard Cluain, Clonee, Co Meath

A judge has today ordered the arrest of a man who has gone missing while waiting trial for withholding information from gardaí investigating the murder of Real IRA leader Alan Ryan.

Alan Ryan, a 32-year-old dissident republican, was shot in the body, legs and head, by a gunman on September 3 last.

The shooting happened near his home, at Grange Lodge Avenue, in Clongriffin, in north Dublin.

Robert Carroll (aged 27), from Ard Cluain, Clonee, Co Meath has been accused of withholding information which might have been of material assistance in securing the apprehension, prosecution or conviction of a person in connection with the murder.

The offence on conviction can carry a possible five-year jail sentence.

On October 25 last, he made no reply when he was charged under Section 9 of the Offences Against the State Act.

Mr Carroll, who has yet to be returned for trial to the Circuit Court, took up bail in his own bond of €6,000 of which he had to lodge €2,000.

Another person had also been approved to act as an independent surety in the amount of €10,000 with €3,000 of that sum to be lodged.

Mr Carroll did not turn up to a hearing at Dublin District Court last Friday when it was expected that he would be served with a book of evidence and an order made sending him forward for trial.

He had been given until today to come to the court but when his case was called he was not present and Judge Patrick McMahon issued a bench warrant for his arrest.

At the previous hearing, last Friday, defence solicitor Declan Fahy had then said “we are somewhat concerned as to why he is not here”.

The lawyer had said Mr Carroll had obeyed his bail terms and it is a case where gardaí were concerned for his safety.

Mr Fahy had also said “the only thing I am aware of is that his father has reported him missing to gardaí” but he had added that he was not aware when that had happened.

Earlier this month, Thomas Hunt (aged 39) from Canon Lillis Avenue, in Dublin city's north-side, who faces the same charge, was sent forward for trial, however no one has yet been charged with Alan Ryan's murder.

Breaking news, Dissident Republicans, Real IRA, The IRA, charges, convictions

Facial mappers used photograph comparison techniques to identify a masked man accused of being the lead flag bearer in a republican parade, a judge has heard.

Facial map 'IDs republican parader'
The accused denies the charge.
 
Opening the Diplock, no jury trial against 43-year-old Patrick John McDaid at Belfast Crown Court on Monday, prosecuting QC Terence Mooney said it was the Crown case that McDaid and the masked flag bearer were "one and the same".

McDaid, from Beechwood Avenue in Londonderry, denies a single charge of managing a meeting in support of a proscribed organisation, namely the IRA on 25 April 2011.

Mr Mooney described how a masked colour party carrying various flags headed up a parade at the city cemetery close to the graves of republicans during an Easter Monday commemoration, organised by the 32 County Sovereign Movement where a speech was made by a masked man on behalf of the Real IRA and Óglaigh na hÉireann (OnH).

The lawyer told the court the colour party, "attired in apparently military uniform", had been driven to and from the cemetery in the back of a van which had been driven by 51-year-old Marvin Canning.

Last week Canning, who is a brother-in-law of deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness and from Galliagh Park in the Maiden City, pleaded guilty to the same charge but walked free from court after his ten-month jail term was suspended for three years.

Pleading guilty alongside him was fellow Derry man 30-year-old Frank Quigley from Elmwood Road whose nine month jail term was also suspended for three years.

Mr Mooney told Judge McFarland that police footage of the commemoration, along with footage seized from various news outlets, was sent to an expert facial comparison company.

Comparing photographs of McDaid taken when he attended the commemoration in previous years in 2007 and 2009, an expert had opined that "his examination lent moderate support to the view that the two persons were the same".

In addition to that evidence, said the lawyer, police had seized documents from a man's home in follow-up searches which seemed to have been written out in preparation for the commemoration.

"The significant part, we say, in support of the identification, we say of the main flag bearer reads: 'colour party - McDaid to get people sorted'," claimed Mr Mooney.

"We respectfully say that the evidence supports the conclusion that the man who is masked and carrying the Tricolour is this defendant."

The trial continues.

Pipe Bombs

Ordering 31-year-old Anthony Thomas Friel to spend half his sentence in jail and half on supervised licence, Belfast Crown Court Judge David McFarland said the evidence clearly showed he was a "facilitator" and added that is "an important cog in the chain of these criminal and terrorist gangs".

Earlier he had heard that covert police had been keeping a flat on Maureen Avenue under surveillance and had watched as Friel came and went.

A prosecuting lawyer told the court that when cops raided the flat on 21 May last year, they uncovered three "large" pipe bombs, timer power units and component bomb parts as well as bomb making equipment including an eye shield and visor, a mini rotary tool kit, drill bits, a heat gun, various tools and electrical material, berets, worksuits, gloves, plastic boxes, Bentley electronic timer instructions, batteries and duct tape.

He told the court that essentially the property was void of all the usual things one would find in a lived-in property such as food and furniture, adding that it was the Crown case the property was being used as a store for the potentially lethal devices.

Forensic examinations of the flat uncovered Friel's DNA on gloves, a jacket and a cigarette butt and his fingerprints on the inside of the front door.

He was arrested later on 21 May and when he was searched, officers found the keys to the flat in his pocket.

During later interviews Friel, from Gartan Square in the Maiden City, offered no explanation for his involvement but later pleaded guilty to possessing the explosives with intent to endanger life and also possessing articles for use in terrorism under suspicious circumstances.

Defence QC Eilis McDermott said the fact that none of Friel's DNA or fingerprints were found on the actual items themselves indicated that he was not involved in their construction but rather was just a storeman for the explosives.

Handing down the nine-year jail term, Judge McFarland said a factor to be taken into account was the prevalence of the use of pipe bombs in recent years, particularly in Derry and also that Friel had not offered any explanation as to his involvement.

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Daryl Mulcahy , 21, from Matt Talbot Court, Derek Nolan, 30, and 55-year-old John Stokes

Three men, including a publican, have gone on trial accused of demanding that a pub in Dublin cease trading and close within 24 hours.

Daryl Mulcahy , 21, from Matt Talbot Court, Derek Nolan, 30, and 55-year-old John Stokes, the owner of the Players Lounge in Fairview, all pleaded not guilty at the Dublin Circuit Criminal Court.

Mr Stokes who now lives in Scotland also denies a charge of assault.

Opening the case this morning, Senior Counsel Paul Carroll said the case centres on two Dublin pubs, the Castle Inn in Summerhill and the Players Lounge in Fairview, which was owned and run by Mr Stokes.

Shane Simpson was a barman at The Castle Inn, which was operated by his brother, and the prosecution alleges that Mr Stokes went there three times on 13 March 2011.

At 8.30pm that evening, the jury was told that Mr Stokes jumped out of a taxi and told Mr Simpson who was outside that he was looking to speak to his brother and said: "I want you'se out of there and if you're not gone by Paddy's Day, you'se and the pub are gone."

The jury was told he also punched Mr Simpson in the chest.

The prosecution also alleges that Mr Stokes later came back with three other men, including the other two accused Mr Mulcahy and Mr Nolan.

The jury was told that Mr Stokes said to Mr Simpson "you're fronting the pub for O'Reilly, we're giving you 24 hours to close the pub down, 24 hours or that's the end of you".

All three men deny the charges. The case continues.

Dissident Arrest, Lurgan arrest

PSNI detectives investigating dissident republican activity have arrested a 50-year-old man in England.

The suspect, who is originally from the Lurgan area of Co Armagh, was detained in Lancashire this morning.

The arrest was made by PSNI officers assisted by detectives from the North West Counter Terrorism Unit in England.

The man is to be returned to Northern Ireland for questioning at an Antrim police base.

It is believed he was arrested in connection with activity dating back a number of years.

Sunday, April 21, 2013

dissident republicans, armagh raids, illegal cigerettes, alcohol


No Smoke without Fire

Detectives investigating dissident republican activity have uncovered a haul of contraband cigarettes worth an estimated £300,000 (€350,000) in Armagh.

Around 66 bottles of contraband alcohol and £50,000 in cash were also seized during the planned raid in the south Armagh area yesterday.

A 31-year-old woman was arrested as part of the operation. She was later released pending further police inquiries.

HM Revenue and Customs are assisting detectives from the PSNI’s Serious Crime Branch in the investigation.

Friday, April 19, 2013

British Agents, Informers, Social media, bogus republican websites

British Agents, Informers, Social media, bogus republican websites

Geo-location data being gathered to monitor Dissident republican activity
A list of ‘dissident’ republican activists in the pay of the British Security Services has been accidently sent to a business in Belfast. The list details ‘dissident’ republicans who are operating Blogs, Republican Chat forums, Facebook sites, Twitter accounts and so forth for the security services in order to gather information for the British.
The security service list was destined for M15, however, a secure internet link was accidently breached and the communication hopped across to an unsecure line.
The communication details how a number of persons associated and involved with the ‘dissident’ groups are employed by the British Security Services to maintain a number of websites and social media platforms, anyone communicating with these forums are being tracked by means of a satellite software programme, informers are also using their own knowledge of the organisations to identify e-mail addresses, computer and IPhone IP addresses for their handlers.
All of the information being gathered by both the informers and their handlers is allowing the security services to build a clear picture of ‘dissident’ support as well as allowing location identification of active dissident supporters. The sites including WordPress sites, Blogs, Chat forums and so forth encourage ‘republicans’ to engage in conversations and post comments, all of which is going directly to the British Security Services and helping to defeat the ‘dissident’ groups.
According to the intercepted communication, informers are using code words in posts to send messages to their handlers rather than using mobile phones. Some of those working for the security services have served sentences for both the Provisional IRA and ‘dissident’ groups with some of them having used their time in prison for education and so they believe that they are too smart to get caught by their often un-educated associates, they are above suspicion, as was Dennis Donaldson, Freddie Scappittini, Roy McShane and so many more.
The new focus on cyber space by the British Security Service is due to the fact that it is an important way to monitor ‘dissident’ republican support and activity, as has been seen from recent court cases, some activists are stupid enough to use mobile phones while on active service, so what more will such people do when they have a few drinks and join one of the ‘bogus’ forums being maintained by British Agents.
One website based in Belfast has asked ‘republicans’ to sign a petition supporting the release of Marian Price, this petition has given the British a unique list of republican supporters and their IP Addresses have been identified their locations.

McKevitt loses appeal against Real IRA conviction

Republican was jailed for 20 years in 2003 for directing terrorism

 
  Former Real IRA leader Michael McKevitt photographed in 2008

Court of Criminal Appeal has dismissed a bid by the Real IRA's Michael McKevitt to have his conviction for directing terrorism declared a miscarriage of justice.

In August 2003 McKevitt (63) became the first person in the history of the State to be jailed for directing terrorist activities.

Today in its ruling the three judge CCA comprised of Mr Justice John MacMenamin, presiding, sitting with Mr Justice and Mr Justice dismissed McKevitt's action.

The State, in a preliminary application, had asked the court to strike out McKevitt's application as an abuse of process.

Giving the court’s decision, Mr Justice McMenamin said the court was acceding to the State's application to strike out the matter because McKevitt's application, under Section 2 of the Criminal Procedure Act was "unstateable and unarguable."

McKevitt was not present in court for today's ruling.

His lawyers had argued his conviction for directing terrorist activities should be set aside because a search warrant used to search his home was issued under Section 29 of the Offences Against the State Act, which the Supreme Court subsequently ruled as unconstitutional.

Any question of the warrant issue being unconstitutional was not raised by McKevitt or his lawyers at the trial or at his appeal. They also argued that evidence used against McKevitt at trial was taken while he was not legally represented.

The State asked the CCA to dismiss the application as it was not based on any new or newly discovered fact. The State said McKevitt had exhausted all rights of appeal in respect of his conviction and that the case had reached finality.

McKevitt’s lawyers argued that the court should not dismiss an application and that it should be allowed to proceed to the full hearing.

Following a lengthy trial, McKevitt was convicted by the Special Criminal Court in August 2003 of IRA membership between August 29th, 1999 and March 28th, 2001, and of directing the activities of the IRA between August 29th, 1999 and October 23rd, 2000.

McKevitt, who had denied the charges, was jailed for 20 years by the non-jury court. He lost appeals against these convictions at the Court of Criminal Appeal in 2005 and at the Supreme Court in 2008.

He also lost an appeal two years ago against a Belfast civil court’s ruling which found him liable for the Omagh bombing.

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Loughgall Martyrs, SAS, Loughgall Village Tyrone, Jim Lynagh, Patrick Kelly IRA, 26 Anniversary

Loughgall Martyrs, SAS, Loughgall Village Tyrone, Jim Lynagh, Patrick Kelly IRA, 26th Anniversary

On the 8th of May 2013 the 26th Anniversary will occur of the summary executions of 8 East Tyrone Provisional IRA volunteers at Loughgall in County Tyrone, ‘dissident’ republicans hope to mark that anniversary with a spectacular attack on the PSNI. Have the IRA under the command of Chief of Staff, Colin Duffy the authority to carry out such an attack on behalf of the Irish Republican Army, or are they as Martin McGuinness MP has stated time and again, “A band of criminals”. Many believe that the IRA under Duffy do not have the legitimate authority to engage in any action against the British as Duffy and others now in the ranks of the ‘dissident’ groups were part and parcel of the Provisional IRA/Sinn Fein sell-out of the republican family, many believe that only when the IRA have purged Sinn Fein’s contempt for the Irish Republican Army will the IRA under Duffy have the legitimate authority to act on behalf of the IRA.
Loughgall is a picture-postcard village on the borders of Tyrone and County Armagh that with its neatly arranged window boxes and hanging baskets you would expect to win the best kept village competition year after year. Tourists come for the antique shops and cosy tea rooms that line its narrow main street. 26 years ago in 1987, other visitors came to Loughgall.
The quiet of a May evening on 8 May 1987 was shattered by the thunder of SAS guns as the Regiment (as it is known) ambushed and wiped out one of the most heavily armed and experienced Active Service Units (ASU) the Provisional IRA had ever assembled. It was known as the 'A' Team. Eight bodies in boiler suits, some with balaclavas, lay bloody and dead on the ground and in the back of the van in which they had been travelling. The SAS had been lying in wait and had opened up with a barrage of over 200 rounds blasted from General Purpose Machine guns (GPMGs) and high-powered Heckler and Koch rifles. The SAS outnumbered and outgunned the IRA by three to one. The van was riddled like a sieve and its IRA passengers cut to pieces. It was the biggest loss the IRA had suffered since 1921 when a dozen of its men were wiped out by the notorious 'Black and Tans'. Loughgall police station, a few hundred yards outside the village and the target of the IRA's attack, was reduced to a twisted pile of concrete and rubble. The IRA just managed to detonate its 200 lb bomb before the SAS opened up.
A few miles away in the ops room that was the nerve centre of the security forces' Tasking and Co-Ordinating Group (TCG) from which the ambush had been directed, an SAS Commander, a Senior M15 Officer and two senior RUC Officers (both shot dead 1989) anxiously gathered to hear the result of one of the most carefully planned M15, RUC and Army operations of the northern conflict. They gathered around an SAS officer who was in radio contact with the SAS commander on the ground, when the news came through, the SAS Officer turned to those gathered (TCG) and declared, “Total Wipe-out”.
To the British, the SAS had given the IRA a taste of its own medicine and to Ulster Unionists clambering for the army to take the gloves off, not before time. There was celebration in the TCG at the unprecedented spectacular and quiet contentment in the Northern Ireland Office. Its Permanent Under Secretary at the time, Sir Robert Andrew, later said how he felt on hearing the news. 'My personal reaction was really one of some satisfaction that we had 'won one' as it were. I think it demonstrated to the IRA that the other side could play it rough. I hope it sent a message that the British government was resolute and was going to fight them.'
Certainly the IRA had been playing it very rough. Only a fortnight earlier, it had assassinated Northern Ireland's second most senior judge, Lord Justice Gibson and his wife with a 500 lb bomb as they drove back across the border after a holiday away. The explosives were thought to have come from Libya. The judge had been a prime target ever since he had acquitted the police officers who shot dead Gervaise McKerr (whose case was also ruled on at Strasbourg) and two other IRA men during a car chase in 1982. He commended them for bringing the deceased to 'the final court of justice'. None of them was armed at the time. The then Northern Ireland Secretary, Tom King said, 'We were conscious we were facing an enhanced threat and we took enhanced measures to meet it.' The SAS was the cutting edge.
At the time of Loughgall, the IRA was brimful of confidence. It had recently had its bunkers filled almost to bursting with over 130 tons of heavy weaponry and high explosives smuggled into Ireland in four shipments courtesy of Mrs Thatcher's sworn enemy, Colonel Gaddafi (murdered 2011) of Libya. The depleted ranks of its leadership had also been strengthened by the IRA's mass break-out from the Maze prison in 1983, many of whose senior gunmen were still on the run. One of them was Patrick McKearney (32).
It was known that IRA Commander, Jim Lynagh, had developed a new Maoist strategy of liberating Green Zones, zones that would be cleared of the British and their collaborators. The IRA began its new strategy in 1985 with a devastating mortar attack on the RUC station in the border town of Newry in which nine police officers died. It followed it up with a bomb and gun attack on Ballygawley police station that left two RUC men dead. In 1986, it launched a bomb attack on another police station, unmanned at the time, in the tiny village of the Birches along the shores of Lough Neagh in County Tyrone. Now a new delivery system had been used, a JCB digger with a 200-lb bomb in the bucket. The digger smashed through the security fence, the bomb exploded and reduced the station to rubble. The attack on Loughgall was designed to be a carbon copy of the attack on the Birches. But this time British intelligence knew the IRA was coming and was across its plans.
The first indicator about the Loughgall operation came three weeks earlier from an RUC agent based in Monaghan Town, Patrick Kelly had travelled to Monaghan to meet Jim Lynagh, however, as often happened, Lynagh was not about, Patrick Kelly made the fatal mistake of making inquiries about Lynagh with Owen/Eoin Smyth, the Round House Bar, Church Square, Monaghan Town. Barely three weeks before Loughgall, five of the East Tyrone IRA had shot dead Harold Henry (52), a member of the Henry Brothers construction business that carried out repairs on security force bases. Just before midnight, the IRA took Mr Henry from his home, put him up against a wall and shot him dead with two rifles and a shotgun. He left a widow and six children. To the IRA he was a 'legitimate target', the first of more than twenty 'collaborators' to be 'executed' by the IRA for 'assisting the British war machine.' One of the weapons believed to have been used in the Henry killing was later retrieved at Loughgall.
On the basis of the information passed to the RUC Special Branch by the IRA informer in Monaghan Town, a major security operation was put into action. Extra SAS Teams were brought into the north, within hours of arriving in the north, the SAS Teams were brought to the firing range beneath the RUC Forensic Lab in Belfast, were they test fired similar weapons to those that would be used by the IRA Team at Loughgall. The SAS Team was briefed by Chief Superintendent Harry Breen and RUC Superintendent Robert Buchanan. This test firing would allow the SAS to distinguish between friendly and enemy fire on the night of the Loughgall executions. While the Monaghan Informer had given an indicator that a major operation was about to take place, the actual target was not immediately known, this would take a detailed mapping of a myriad of intelligence sources. The Monaghan Informer would contact his handler a couple of days before Loughgall to say that Jim Lynagh had moved to a safe house in Coalisland, County Tyrone.
There was other vital intelligence too from M15's listening devices planted inside the homes of IRA suspects, usually put in place when they were away – or even when the homes of the more prominent ones were being built. As long as the batteries held out, these technical devices – or 'bugs' - could be monitored many miles away or their content down-loaded by helicopters flying over the premises where they were hidden. It's likely too that the location where the explosives were stored for the Loughgall bomb were also under M15 technical surveillance. They were probably also under human 'eyes-on' observation by operators of the army's top-secret undercover unit, 14 Intelligence Company (known colloquially as the 'Det') and the RUC's equivalent covert unit, E4A. 'E' is the code for the RUC's Special Branch.
The security force operation was put in place on Thursday 7 May, the day before the IRA's planned assault. Three Special Branch officers from the RUC's specialist anti-terrorist unit volunteered to remain inside the normally sleepy station as decoys to give the appearance of normality whilst the IRA did its 'recce'. 'Matt', a veteran of such covert operations, was one of them. They entered the station with some of the SAS troopers as darkness fell on the Thursday night. They made sandwiches and cracked jokes to lighten the tedium of waiting and perhaps to calm the nerves.
The joint leaders of the ASU was Patrick Kelly (30), an experienced IRA commander whose sister, supported by the other relatives, was a prime mover in bringing the Loughgall cases before the European Court. Kelly had been arrested in 1982 and charged with terrorist offences on the word of a 'supergrass' but was subsequently released as the testimony lacked corroboration. Jim Lynagh was the second Commander and was the man most sought after by the British and Irish security services. Among the younger members of the ASU were four young friends from the village of Cappagh who had joined the IRA after the death of one of their village friend, Martin Hurson, on hunger strike in 1981. One of them, Declan Arthurs (21), was to drive the JCB with a 200 lb bomb in the bucket – just like the Birches.
Throughout the long hours of Friday, the maze of country lanes around Loughgall police station were watched and patrolled by 'Det' operators on the look-out for the 'A Team'. One of them was a young women called 'Anna' who was driving around the area with her 'Det' partner as part of the surveillance cordon. Suddenly they spotted a blue Toyota Hiace van. At first they thought it was simply stuck behind a slow-moving vehicle but when they realised it was a JCB, they immediately put Ballygawley and the Birches together. 'You suddenly realise it's the MO (modus operandi) used by the East Tyrone Brigade,' she said. 'It was like a replay. But this time we were on top of it and we knew what was happening. So we passed on the information to the TCG and pulled off.' The Chief Constable of the time, Sir John Hermon, said the IRA ASU could not have been arrested. He said it was never a realistic option since the IRA would be unlikely to come out with their hands up and police officers lives would therefore be at grave risk.
At 7.15 pm as dusk gathered, the JCB with Declan Arthurs at the wheel and the bomb raised high in the bucket, trundled past the police station with the blue Toyota van in attendance. Both then turned and headed back in the direction whence they had come. Suddenly, the JCB roared into life, headed for the perimeter fence and crashed through it. Almost simultaneously, the van drew up outside, disgorging Patrick Kelly and other members of the ASU who sprayed the station with their assault rifles. The SAS almost certainly opened up the moment Kelly started firing. Everything seemed to happen at once in a deafening crescendo of noise. Inside the station, 'Matt' (Special Branch), who was by the front window, was only about ten metres from the JCB when it came to a halt right before his eyes. He turned and ran to the back with one word on his mind. Bomb! 'I thought of the Birches and Ballygawley and the next minute there was an almighty bang. I was hit in the face, knocked to the ground and buried. I thought "I'm dead", simple as that!' Miraculously 'Matt' survived although buried in the rubble 'inhaling dust and darkness.' The 'A' Team did not. 'Declan was mowed down. He could have been taken prisoner,' his mother, Amelia Arthurs, said. 'The SAS never gave them a chance.' The photographs taken at the scene are gruesome. The van in which the IRA volunteers had travelled was ripped open by part of the shrapnel from the digger bucket when it exploded, this is new information.
'Matt' felt no sympathy for the bullet-riddled bodies on the ground outside the station and in the back of the van. 'They were there to kill us,' he said. 'These guys were responsible for lots and lots of deaths in that area and other parts of the province. Dead terrorists are better than dead policemen.' Forensic tests carried out on the IRA weapons retrieved at the scene were linked to eight murders and thirty-three shootings.
The area around the police station had not been cordoned off since to have done so would have risked making the IRA suspicious and wary of the carefully laid ambush. As a result, two brothers returning home from work, were shot by the SAS. The security personnel who lay on the outer core of the ambush had been ordered to kill everyone within the kill zone.  Perhaps the soldiers thought they were part of the ASU or mistook their white Citroen for an IRA 'scout' car, maybe because one of the occupants was wearing a boiler suit. The brothers had been working on a car. The SAS fired forty rounds at the vehicle, killing Anthony Hughes (36) and seriously wounding his brother Oliver who was scarred for life. He said no warning was given. The RUC's Chief Constable, Sir Ronnie Flanagan, described the attack on the two innocent men as 'an unspeakable tragedy' and blamed the IRA, not planning and operational shortcomings, for his death.
When 'Anna', her 'Det' colleagues and the SAS returned to base, there were great celebrations. 'There was a huge party and it probably went on for 24 hours,' she said. 'A lot of beer was drunk. We were jubilant. We thought it was a job well done. It sent shock waves through the terrorist world that we were back on top.' She said of the dead IRA men. 'They're all volunteers and actively engaged against the British army. They're 'at war' as they would describe it. My attitude is that if you live by the sword, you die by the sword. We were just happy at the end of the day to be alive ourselves.'
Some new information is contained in this article, it is certain that the first indicator for the Loughgall operation came from an RUC Special Branch Informer in Monaghan Town. This informer also contacted the RUC to let them know that Jim Lynagh had moved to a safe house in Coalisland just before the Loughgall operation. Once the security services had their first indicator of a major IRA operation, M15 and the RUC had to simply correlate their myriad of intelligence to match the A Team with their target. At the same time that M15 and the SAS were focused on the East Tyrone IRA, M16 were working closely with Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams and had adopted a hands-off approach to the IRA in Derry and Belfast.
It is known that an IRA operative working closely with senior IRA personnel was sanctioned to track down and eliminate British agents, that IRA operative remains active and has never surrendered. It is believed that the ‘Slayer’ continues to target British agents.

Monday, April 15, 2013

Dissident republicans, Derry Charges

A 20-year-old man has appeared in court in Derry on charges linked to the discovery of weapons and explosives in a car in the Northland Road area of the city on Friday evening.

Man in court over Derry weapons
The man appeared in court in Londonderry on Wednesday.
 
Nathan Hastings, a telecommunications worker from Stradowen Drive in Strathfoyle, is charged with possession of firearms, imitation firearms, ammunition and explosives.

He is also charged with possessing an improvised explosive device.

The court was told Hastings did not speak during a series of extensive interviews over two days following his arrest.

A police officer told the court he was the driver of a Citroen Xsara car, which was one of two vehicles stopped by police in an operation targeting dissident republican activity.

The driver of the second car, a 54-year-old local man, was also arrested but later released unconditionally.

The officer said inside the car driven by the defendant police found the items in a plastic bag in the front passenger footwell.

He described the defendant as being the public face of the 32 county sovereignty movement and said that almost two hours before his arrest he was seen abandoning his own car, a Vauxhall Astra at Fanad Drive in the Creggan estate.

Hastings, who has no criminal record and who is a father of a two-year-old boy, was refused bail and remanded in custody until 8 May.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Dissident Republicans, Derry weapons, Arrests Derry


A police chief has hit out at the “blatant disregard” of what they suspect are dissident republicans after weapons were discovered in Northern Ireland.

Two men, aged 20 and 54, were arrested during the operation in Northland Road, Derry.

Detectives from PSNI serious crime branch said suspected firearms, ammunition and a suspected pipe bomb were seized.

The area was sealed off for a time last night after police stopped two vehicles at around 8pm.

Several homes were evacuated until this morning as Army bomb experts made the area safe.

Chief Superintendent Stephen Cargin praised residents and the community for their patience during the operation.

“We have seen again the blatant disregard of those individuals willing to endanger life in our community. I have nothing but praise for the officers involved in the operation,” he said.

“Police would ask that everyone in the community continue to work with us to take weapons off our streets and put those responsible behind bars.”

The two men arrested at the scene are being questioned at the PSNI Antrim serious crime suite.

Investigators said other items, including a vehicle, were seized during follow-up searches at properties in the area.

Northland Road reopened and residents were allowed back to their homes at around 5.30am this morning.

Sinn Fein Ard Fheis, Martin McGuinness MP, Dissident Republicans


Martin McGuinness has said, "Dissident Republican Groups are an Island wide network of Criminals".

The North's Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness has acknowledged tensions within the Northern Executive between unionist and nationalist Ministers.

At the Sinn Fein ardfheis in Castlebar, Co Mayo last night - the first to be held in Connacht - Mr McGuinness said that commentators "with some justification" were critical of the "lack of cohesion between unionist and republican Ministers". He did not mention First Minister Peter Robinson by name but it appeared clear he was also adverting to the DUP leader.

Mr McGuinness was critical of unionist Ministers in the Northern Executive and also complained that unionist politicians had failed to stand up to loyalist violence over the flags controversy and were failing to tackle the issue of parading.

"More than once in recent months the observation has been made to me that Sinn Féin Ministers are in government with unionist Ministers because we want to be, but that unionist Ministers are in government with Sinn Féin because they have to be," Mr McGuinness told delegates. "Speaking frankly this isn't good enough."

This week on the 15th anniversary of the Belfast Agreement Mr Robinson insisted that the 1998 accord was not the "template" for the current powersharing arrangements.

Again in an implicit criticism Mr McGuinness said tonight that political progress would be helped greatly "if some within unionism ended the pretence that they are not working the Good Friday agreement institutions".

"People need to be in government not because they have to be but because they want to be - and approach decision-making in that spirit," he said.

Continuing his criticism of his unionist partners in the Executive Mr McGuinness added, "I have no difficulty whatsoever in respecting Unionist's allegiance to their Britishness - but it gives me no satisfaction to tell you that there is a marked reluctance by unionist leaders to respect the Irish identity of nationalists and republicans."

Mr McGuinness said that the Belfast Agreement "while not a political settlement" was a "levelling of the political playing field in the North for the first time since partition".

He condemned the actions of dissident republicans, adding, "Whatever else about those groups responsible it is obvious that they have now been swamped by ruthless criminal elements with an island-wide network."

Cavan-Monaghan TD Caoimhghin O Caolain said that Sinn Fein would continue to press for a Border poll on a united Ireland, stating that not only would such a referendum be held but that ultimately Irish "unity is going to happen".

The ardfheis is being held in Castlebar as part of Sinn Fein's policy of rotating the annual conferences between the four provinces.

Sinn Fein Ard Fheis, Martin McGuinness MP, Dissident Republicans

Friday, April 12, 2013

Brian Cavlan and Brian Sheridan, from Co Tyrone, and Dominic Dynes, from Co Monaghan

Jailing Brian Cavlan and Brian Sheridan, from Co Tyrone, and Dominic Dynes, from Co Monaghan, for seven years each at Belfast Crown Court, His Honour Judge Kinney told the trio he could see no reason to distinguish between their sentences.

The judge had earlier heard how police had rammed the Citroen Xantia car being driven by Dominic Dynes, 41, on a country road outside Keady in Co Armagh on 22 April 2011 and when it was searched, officers uncovered a loaded .357 Magnum revolver in the front passenger footwell.

In the boot, wrapped in pink material and covered in soil, they uncovered what the judge described as an "arsenal" of firearms which included an AK47 assault rifle, two other rifles, a handgun, magazines and bullets.

Cavlan, who was sitting in the passenger seat, was noted by police to be wearing gardening gloves and his boots were covered in mud.

During police interviews, the men claimed they had dug the guns up and were on their way to rebury them in an undisclosed location when they were caught.

Dungannon Brian Cavlan, 37 and from the Circular Road, Brian Sheridan, 36 and from Blackwatertown and Dominic Dynes, from Bree, Castleblayney in Co Monaghan all pleaded guilty to having the loaded Magnum with intent to endanger life and possessing the other firearms under suspicious circumstances.

Judge Kinney said given the circumstances of the find he accepted the men's claims and revealed there was no evidence to suggest the guns had been used in any terrorist operation before or how long they had been buried for.

Similarly, said the judge, there was no evidence as to their intended use of the loaded gun given that despite having an opportunity to use it against the police, they had not in fact done so.

He added however that all three "were fully aware of the nature of the weapons" which were "clearly linked to a terrorist organisation" although there were no charges of membership before the court "and they deny such membership."

Jailing the trio and ordering they serve three years behind bars and four years on licence, Judge Kinney said his view was that "this was a one-off operation, not likely to be repeated" but that "only substantial custodial sentences can meet the requirements of the case."

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Brian Gerald Holmes, of Bingnian Drive, Belfast, and Gerard Flannigan, from Cavendish Street

Two men have been charged with having a gun in suspicious circumstances as part of a police investigation into dissident republican activity.

Brian Gerald Holmes, of Bingnian Drive, Belfast, and Gerard Flannigan, from Cavendish Street in the city, appeared before Lisburn Magistrates Court.

The pair were arrested in Lisburn on Thursday night, after police stopped the car they were travelling in.
Mr Holmes was remanded on bail but his co-accused was refused bail.

The court was told police found the weapon in a snow-covered ditch, close to the vehicle that they had stopped.

The long-barrelled rifle, which was viable, had been wrapped in plastic bags.

The car was searched and plastic bags were found in the vehicle. They have yet to be forensically tested, the court heard.

A police constable told the judge he believed he could connect both of the accused to the charge through documentary evidence and CCTV footage, including aerial footage.

A solicitor for Mr Flannigan queried the charge against his client.

He said it was more like attempted possession than possession of a firearm and said the prosecution case was very weak.

The judge also said the case was not particularly strong at this stage but it could get stronger.

Mr Flannigan, 32, was refused bail and remanded in custody.

His 24-year-old co-defendant was remanded on bail under strict conditions.

Both are due to appear in court again later this month.

Rose Lynch, Special Criminal Court, David Darcy, Dissident Republicans

Rose Lynch, Special Criminal Court, David Darcy, Dissident Republicans

A 49-year-old Limerick woman has appeared before the Special Criminal Court on charges of murder, firearms offences and membership of the IRA.

The court was told that some progress had been made in the case and that Rose Lynch woman could be arraigned.

She pleaded guilty to the murder of David Darcy on 28 November 2011.

The 39-year-old delivery man was shot dead at his home on Cherry Orchard Avenue in Ballyfermot as he left for work.

The three judges agreed to an application to adjourn sentencing until tomorrow morning.

This was done because of the seriousness of the charge, the sensitivities associated with it, to deal with the other charges and to iron out procedural aspects including the victim impact statements.

Ms Lynch faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison.
Before she was led away she turned to the public gallery and shouted "Mná na hÉireann, tiocfaidh ár lá" - while some shouted back obscenities and told her she should be ashamed of herself.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Dissident republicans charges, lisburn charges, bomb alert, weapons, psni

Two men have been charged with possession of a firearm in suspicious circumstances after a police operation against dissident republican activity near Lisburn.

Two charged over Lisburn firearm
Security forces at the scene of the alert.
 
The pair aged 32 and 24, who are from the Derriaghy area, are due to appear before Lisburn Magistrates' Court on Monday morning.

They were arrested along with four other people during police raids on Thursday night and in the early hours of Friday morning.

Three men held in west Belfast and a woman detained in Dunmurry have since been released without charge.

The police operation was linked to a security alert in Barnfield Road, where a suspicious object was recovered by army bomb experts on Friday.

"Police can now confirm that a suspected firearm was recovered," a PSNI spokesman said.

The Policing Board member said intelligence-led policing had been used to make the arrests and recover the weapon.

He also called for anyone with information to contact police.

As is normal procedure the charges will be reviewed by the PPS.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Explosive find, louth search, criminal activity


Explosives and a substantial quantity of heroin have been found by gardaí investigating organised criminal activity in Co Louth.

Gardaí found four viable improvised explosive devices and other material used in the manufacture of explosives when they searched a derelict building near Castlebellingham.

Heroin with an estimated street value of €45,000, a sawn-off shotgun and a number of cartridges were also seized in the operation.

The Defence Forces deployed the Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team following a request by gardaí. An examination was carried out and the devices have been removed for technical and forensic examination.

Dissident Arrests, Belfast arrests


Police Service of Northern Ireland detectives are questioning six people arrested in the early hours of today during a series of operations in the greater Belfast area.

The six are being questioned about dissident republican activity.

Three men were detained in Belfast while two more were taken in by police in the Derriaghy area near Lisburn, Co Antrim. A woman was also arrested in the nearby Dunmurry area.

All six suspects are being held in the PSNI serious crime suite in Antrim.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Easter parade, psni, dissident republicans, 32 county sovereignty committee

Easter parade, psni, dissident republicans, 32 county sovereignty committee
Police vehicles were pelted with bottles and stones before the start of an Easter commemoration organised by the 32 County Sovereignty Movement in Derry.
A petrol bomb was also thrown at a PSNI landrover during the event, which otherwise passed off peacefully.
Unlike previous years, there was no statement read by masked paramilitaries.
Sinn Féin was described as a Unionist party and there was criticism of Martin McGuinness, who was described as an “irrelevance”.
One of the speakers was Dermot Ryan, brother of Alan Ryan who was shot dead in Dublin last year.
He spoke on behalf of republican prisoners in Maghaberry prison in Co Antrim.
A PSNI spokeswoman said two verbal warnings were issued to those taking part in the "illegal procession".
She said: “While the event passed off without incident it was extremely concerning to see children, some of whom looked to be under the age of ten, throwing stones at police vehicles.
“It is a sad indictment on those who organised and were in attendance that this was allowed to happen."
Around 200 people attended the rally.

Belfast Parade

Police are investigating reports that shots were fired into the air at a republican rally in Belfast over the weekend.