Adams describe Ombudsman’s report on UDA gun attack as ‘incomplete’

Gerry Adams

Gerry Adams

There is no evidence that the RUC was involved in a UDA gun attack that left Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams with serious wounds over 30 years ago, the North’s Police Ombudsman, Dr Michael Maguire, has found.

Despite Dr Maguire’s findings, Deputy Adams – now a Louth TD – described his report as incomplete and asked that Dr Maguire set aside his conclusions until he had access to British Army files and other pertinent intelligence records.

Mr Adams, said in a statement yesterday: “Following the publication of several media articles in December 2006 claiming that there was collusion in the gun attack in March 1984 in which I and three others were wounded, I made a formal request to the Ombudsman’s office for this to be investigated.

“The Ombudsman also looked at two other allegations arising from newspaper reports by journalists and not raised by me. These were that the RUC knew of the attack one week in advance ‘due to a Special Branch informant’ and that the bullets were ‘doctored by the authorities to reduce their velocity and dumb them down.’ It rejected both.

“The Ombudsman’s report only deals with one of the three areas of concern that I brought to its attention in my letter of 18 December 2006.

“The Ombudsman identifies these as:

  1. ‘The RUC or security forces either had prior knowledge of the attack on him or were directly involved in the attempted murder
  2. Chief Constable Jack Hermon refused to acknowledge that Mr. Adams had been shot during a terrorist attack and didn’t issue a certificate to support Mr. Adams’ claim for criminal injuries
  3. RUC officers unnecessarily stopped and searched Mr. Adams’ visitors at the RVH, making him feel like a prisoner rather than a victim of an attack.’

“A previous Police Ombudsman had decided that two and three were not ‘grave or exceptional’ and consequently they were not investigated. This was a mistake. For a Chief Constable to refuse to confirm that a person has been shot was shameful and a grave misconduct in public office. It warranted investigation.

“Equally the treatment by RUC officers of my family and of visitors to me in the hospital was outrageous and intimidatory. It also deserved to be thoroughly investigated.

“The Ombudsman found that my allegation of collusion has not been substantiated.

“He says that there was no collusion by the RUC or ‘security forces’. But he did not have access to British Army files or those relating to the Force Research Unit which was the British intelligence agency principally responsible for running agents and informers, like Brian Nelson, within the UDA.

“The Ombudsman also acknowledges that there was ‘post intelligence (October 1984)’ that identifies UDA leaders who planned, organised, sanctioned, and supplied the weapons for the attack

“He goes on to state that this ‘intelligence was not shared with the investigating officers and as a result there was no further enquiries made in respect of the planning and sanctioning of the attack.’

“He does not investigate this or who took this decision.

“The Office of the Ombudsman also bases its conclusion that there was no prior knowledge of the attack on the denials of the would-be assassins and the fact that they were captured within minutes of the ambush.

“In my opinion this report is incomplete. The Ombudsman should seek access to British Army files and other pertinent intelligence records and set aside his conclusions until this is done.

“I will write to him formally asking him to do this.”

Members of the Ulster Defence Association, using its Ulster Freedom Fighters cover name, carried out the gun attack on a car containing Mr Adams and four other republicans as they were driving towards Belfast Magistrates Court in March 1984.

Mr Adams was hit in the neck, shoulder and arm as his vehicle was sprayed with some 20 bullets in the attack led by senior UDA figure John “Grugg” Gregg.

The driver, despite being hit, managed to escape the scene and drive to the Royal Victoria Hospital.

Dr Maguire, in his investigation, reported that Gregg and two other gunmen were arrested by an off-duty Ulster Defence Regiment soldier who was driving in the area, by an off-duty RUC officer who arrived at the scene, and by two British soldiers in plain clothes.

“We have talked to all the people involved in the events that day, including the perpetrators, the victims and the police. We have examined all the available evidence, including forensic and sensitive intelligence material and found no evidence that police knew of the attack beforehand,” he said.

Gregg and two other UDA men received lengthy prison sentences. When Gregg was released he once again became a senior UDA leader, being the so-called brigadier for southeast Antrim. In 2003 he was killed during a feud involving his mainstream UDA and a group led by Johnny Adair.

Dr Maguire conducted his investigation following a complaint by Mr Adams and after two newspaper reports stated that members of the RUC knew in advance of the attack.

Mr Adams alleged that the police or the security forces either had prior knowledge or had been involved. He said he felt “something was not quite right” about the entire incident and wondered how security force personnel “coincidentally” appeared at the scene that day.

A Police Ombudsman team spoke to Mr Adams, to the soldiers who arrived on the scene, to members of the public who saw what happened, to the two surviving gunmen who carried out the attack and to a number of retired police officers.

One of the convicted men said he had no part in planning the operation while the getaway driver said he suspected it was planned close to, if not on the day itself. Dr Maguire also reported that the off-duty UDR soldier and the two other soldiers accounted for their presence at the scene and these accounts were supported by independent witnesses.

Police Ombudsman to investigate claims of police collusion in Dundalk bombing

The scene on Crowe Street after the Dundalk bombing in December 1975

The scene on Crowe Street after the Dundalk bombing in December 1975

The Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland is to investigate claims police in Northern Ireland were involved in a 1975 bomb in Dundalk.

Two men in their 60s died when a loyalist paramilitary car bomb exploded outside a pub in the town on 19 December 1975.

The campaign group, Justice for the Forgotten, has alleged collusion by the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC).

The ombudsman, Dr Michael Maguire, will examine the original RUC investigation.

The bombing outside Kay’s Tavern on Crowe Street – now the Crowe’s Nest – was blamed on the Red Hand Commando, a loyalist paramilitary group affiliated to the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).

Hugh Watters, 60, died on the day of the bombing and 61-year-old Jack Rooney died from his injuries three days later.

The attack took place outside the the RUC’s jurisdiction, but Margaret Urwin from Justice for the Forgotten has alleged that everything that led up to the bombing, with the exception of planting the device, happened in Northern Ireland.

Ms Urwin said that her campaign group submitted a complaint to the ombudsman claiming that the RUC did not carry out a proper investigation and also, that some RUC officers were involved “in the planning and planting of the bomb”.

Justice for the Forgotten was set up 18 years ago to campaign on behalf of relatives of victims of the Dublin and Monaghan bombings of 17 May 1974.

Their loved ones died in one of the worst days of the Troubles, when four car bombs exploded within 90 minutes in the Irish capital and in Monaghan town.

A total of 34 people were killed and the death toll from both areas represented the greatest loss of life in a single day of the Troubles.

Ms Urwin said the Dundalk explosion is the third bomb attack in the Republic of Ireland that they have successfully submitted to the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland for investigation.

The group’s other two complaints relate to allegations of RUC collusion in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings and a complaint about the RUC’s handling of an attempted UVF pub bombing in central Dublin in 1994.

Members of the loyalist group attempted to carry a bomb into the Widow Scallan’s pub in Dublin’s Pearse Street on 21 May 1994, but were challenged by a doorman.

The UVF gang shot the doorman and he died later in hospital.

A spokesman for the Office of the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland said the Dundalk bomb complaint and the Dublin and Monaghan bombings complaint would be investigated as part of the ‘Glenanne series’ of attacks.

The name refers to an alleged UVF gang based at a farm at Glenanne, County Armagh. The gang has been accused of carrying out 120 murders on both sides of the Irish border during the early 1970s.

The ombudsman’s spokesman said the investigation “will begin in the latter stages of 2014”.

He added that no date has yet been set for the Widow Scallan’s pub attack investigation.

Source: BBC News