Dissident Republicans Charged
A dissident republican plot
to target judges and police officers in Northern Ireland has been exposed by a
covert MI5 operation, a court heard.
Listening devices placed in
a house in Newry, Co Down at the direction of the Security Services provided
the evidence to charge seven men who appeared in court accused of a range of
terrorist offences, a police officer told the judge.
The Police Service of
Northern Ireland detective sergeant said that “somewhere close to 70 hours” of
material gathered in the property in Ardcarn Park over a three-month period
from August included a series of meetings involving “leading key figures of a
proscribed organisation”.
All seven accused, aged
between 30 and 75, were arrested in a raid in Ardcarn Park last week by heavily
armed police investigating the activities of the Continuity IRA.
They were all remanded in
custody by the district judge at the close of today’s short hearing. Four of
the accused are from the Republic of Ireland and three are from Northern
Ireland.
All were charged with
membership of a proscribed organisation. Six face charges of conspiracy to
possess explosives with intent to endanger life, conspiracy to possess firearms
and ammunition with intent to endanger life and preparation for acts of
terrorism.
Five of the men are also
charged with directing terrorism.
Confirmed details
As all seven watched on from
the crowded dock, a prosecution lawyer asked the detective sergeant to confirm
details of the operation that led to the arrests.
“MI5 arranged for a device
or number of devices to be placed within an address at Ardcarn Park, Newry,” he
said.“A number of meetings were recorded at which the defendants were present.”
The officer said those
statements were correct.
She also answered “correct”
when asked if topics discussed during the meetings included membership of a
proscribed organisation; weapons training; funding terrorist activity; plans to
commit acts of terrorism; and plans to procure firearms and ammunitions.
The lawyer then asked:
“Specific individual police officers were discussed with a view to targeting
them?” The detective sergeant answered: “That is correct.”
Asked if “members of the
judiciary” were also discussed at the meetings, she again answered in the
affirmative.
The lawyer then asked if
there had been talk that a dissident member be “taken out” for apparently
posting material on the internet. “That is correct,” replied the officer.
The five men facing a count
of directing terrorism along with the four other charges are Patrick Joseph
Blair, 59, from Villas One, Dundalk; Liam James Hannaway, 44, from White Rise,
Dunmurry on the outskirts of Belfast; Joseph Matthew Lynch, 73, from Beechgrove
Avenue, Limerick; Sean O’Neill, 75, from Quinn’s Cottages, Limerick; and Colin
Patrick Winters, 43, from Ardcarn Park, Newry.
The man facing four charges
is John Sheehy, 30, from Clounmacon, Listowel, Co Kerry.
Seamus Morgan, 58, from
Barcroft Park, Newry, faces the solitary charge of membership of a proscribed
organisation.
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