Dundalk man charged with possession of firearms and ammunition

GARDAI3A man appeared before an out-of-hours sitting of the Special Criminal Court last night charged with possession of firearms and ammunition.

Joseph Finnegan (53) was arrested on Saturday night by members of the Special Detective Unit as part of ongoing investigations in to the activities of dissident republicans.

Mr Finnegan, of Cuillenstown, Readypenny, Dundalk, Co Louth is charged with possession of one 8mm clibre, Valtro make, Model 85 combat, converted blank-firing pistol and seven rounds of 8mm ammunition at his home on July 11, 2015.

He is also charged with the possession of a 12 gauge side-by-side, double barrel Eibar shotgun and three shotgun catridges at the same address on July 12, 2015.

Detective Garda Graham Dunne told State Solicitor Mr Michael O’Donovan that he formally arrested the accused Joseph Finnegan at the Crescent, Dundalk Co Louth at 4:55pm yesterday evening.

The court heard that Mr Finnegan, who appeared before the court wearing a navy jumper and black slacks, made no reply to his arrest or caution.

Counsel for Mr Finnegan, Ms Irene Sands BL, asked that the court list the matter for next Thursday when it is anticipated an application for bail and legal aid will be made.

Presiding judge Ms Justice Iseult O’Malley, sitting with Judge Alison Lindsay and Judge Flann Brennan, remanded Mr Finnegan in custody to appear before the court on July 16.

Source: Independent.ie

Bomb warning at Gerry Adams’ home is dismissed

Gerry Adams

Gerry Adams

A bomb warning at the Belfast home of Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams has turned out to be “nothing untoward”.

The PSNI were called to the Norfolk Drive area of west Belfast this morning after receiving information that a device had been left at an address there.

Inspector Roy Burnside said: “Officers attended and nothing untoward was found.”

Mr Adams, a TD in Co Louth, said it comes amid a “concerted series of threats and attacks on the homes of Sinn Féin members”.

He added: “There can be no place for these type of actions nor will they deter Sinn Féin from working to advance the peace process and advance our political objectives.”

Earlier, Martin McGuinness blamed dissident republicans for attacks on two cars belonging to Sinn Féin representatives in Derry.

Police said the separate attacks happened at 1.50am in Kildrum Gardens and just before 2.30am in Oakbridge Park on Wednesday.

A parked car was set on fire in the earlier incident causing extensive damage to the engine block, while in the second case the front and rear windscreens of a parked vehicle were smashed.

Two men aged 17 and 23 were arrested by police in Oakbridge Park on suspicion of criminal damage.

Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness tweeted: “With overnight attacks on Sinn Fein councillors Sandra Duffy and Colly Kelly in Derry, I have no doubt anti-democratic dissidents responsible.”

Guns and ammunition seized outside Dundalk

gardai

Gardaí seized a handgun loaded with five bullets in an operation targeting the activities of dissident republicans just outside Dundalk yesterday.

A rifle, also seized during the search of lands at Raskeagh, off the old Armagh Road, did not contain ammunition.

Gardaí also found components for other guns. All will be subject to ballistic tests.

The Army Bomb Disposal Unit assisted gardaí and a number of items were removed to the Curragh army camp where they will be examined.

The operation began Friday night and continued for most of yesterday. No arrests were made.

The searches, which saw traffic diverted in the area for a period, took place approximately 3km from Kilcurry.

Three local republicans set to walk free from prison today

Three local dissident republicans convicted of trying to buy weapons and explosives on behalf of the Real IRA are expected to walk free from prison later today after the State lost its High Court bid to keep them in jail until late 2016.

Mr Justice Gerard Hogan directed the three must be released “forthwith” after finding the High Court has no jurisdiction to vary defective warrants under which they are detained. He also refused a stay on his order.

The decision means Fintan O’Farrell, Declan Rafferty and Michael McDonald are likely to be freed within hours. Relatives of the three were in court for his ruling.

The court was previously told the three local men, who sought arms and financial support from the Iraqi government, were arrested by Slovak police in July 2001 after they had met two agents whom, they believed, were Iraqi arms dealers.

The “dealers” had turned out to be undercover British security agents and, following their arrest, all three were extradited to England where, in 2002, they pleaded guilty at a London court to charges under the UK’s 2000 Terrorism Act, and to conspiracy to cause explosions in London.

The men were initially been given sentences of 30 years, which, on appeal, were reduced to terms of 28 years. All three were transferred to Ireland and are held in the Midlands Prison in Portlaoise, Co Laois.

O’Farrell and Rafferty, both from Carlingford, and McDonald, from Dundalk, had asked the High Court to inquire into the lawfulness of their continued detention in Portlaoise.

Last month, Mr Justice Hogan ruled the warrants detaining the three were defective but refused to release them until the State had an opportunity to apply to vary the warrants. He later heard arguments on whether there was power to vary and reserved judgment on that issue to today.

Michael O’Higgins SC, for the three, had argued they were entitled to immediate release on grounds arising from their transfer from the UK and a recent Supreme Court decision here – in the Sweeney case – directing the release of an Irishman transferred here from jail in England arising from significant differences between the sentencing regimes here and in England/Wales.

In his judgment on the case of the three men last month, Mr Justice Hogan said the British sentencing system involved a legal entitlement to automatic release after service of two-thirds of the sentence and that went to the legal nature of the sentence imposed by the English judiciary. In contrast, the Irish system of remission, normally one quarter, was fundamentally a matter of administration of the sentence by the executive of the receiving State.

The Supreme Court had noted the relevant laws on the transfer of prisoners envisaged the legal effect of the sentence was to be governed by the law of the sentencing State and, in this case, that was the law of England and Wales. The effect of the Sweeney decision meant the description of the sentences in the warrants detaining the men as of 28 years’ duration was defective and could not stand.

Having gone on to consider whether there was power to have the defective warrant amended, the judge today said he had concluded the High Court had no power to correct the warrant. In those and other circumstances, the men must be freed.

Source: The Irish Times.

Locals amongst six dissident republicans free from jail following High Court action

Scotland Yard photo from 2003 of Robert Hulme, now 34, who was one of six dissident Republicans freed from prison today. Photograph: PA Photo/Scotland Yard/Collect

Scotland Yard photo from 2003 of Robert Hulme, now 34, who was one of six dissident Republicans freed from prison today. Photograph: PA Photo/Scotland Yard/Collect

Local brothers Aiden and Robert Hulme were amongst six dissident republicans freed from jail yesterday after bringing High Court proceedings claiming that their detention was unlawful.

The sextet – which also included fellow Dundalk men Darren Mulholland and James McCormack – had all been transferred to jails in Ireland to complete lengthy sentences for conspiring to cause explosions in Britain.

The State did not contest their applications for release, made in the wake of a significant Supreme Court judgement arising from the differences in the Irish and British sentencing regimes.

Inquiries into the legality of the detention of three other dissident republicans are due before the High Court next week.

Brothers Aiden (37) and Robert Hulme (34), Darren Mulholland (34), James McCormack (47), Anthony Hyland (41) and Liam Grogan (36) all claimed they were entitled to immediate release.

After the Supreme Court judgment of July 3rd last in the case of Vincent Sweeney, all six separately applied to the High Court for inquiries into the legality of their continued detention.

Sweeney, of Ballytivnan, Co Sligo, was jailed for 16 years in England on drug charges, with six to be served in prison and six in the community on licence. All six argued the Sweeney ruling and the position adopted by the State concerning release on licence in other cases supported their claims for immediate release. The State was enforcing sentences imposed by the English courts not compatible with Irish law, they argued.

Hyland, Grogan and Mulholland – the latter from Meadow Grove – were convicted in 1999 of conspiring to cause explosions in Britain in 1998.

The Hulme brothers and James McCormack, all from Dundalk, were convicted in 2003 of conspiring to cause explosions.

They were convicted in relation to a bomb attack outside the BBC television centre in Shepherd’s Bush, London in March 2001 and bombings of Ealing Broadway tube station in London and at Smallbrook, Queensway, Birmingham.

Three arrested as suspected bomb is uncovered at Kilcurry

Three men have been arrested after Gardaí uncovered what is believed to be a bomb in Kilcurry this evening.

The discovery was made after a number of vehicles were stopped close to the border.

Reports suggest that the device was in the process of being transported across the border and was destined to be used in an attack in the North.

Members of the Garda armed division believe they have foiled a major incident planned by dissident Republicans with security forces believed to be their target.