Sunday, 31 January 2010

Peter Curistan Offers To Pay For Iris Robinson Planing Probe.



Costs do not have to prevent a full review of lobbying by ex-DUP politician Iris Robinson on planning cases.


That’s the message to DUP Environment Minister Edwin Poots today from a businessman who is ready to underwrite the expense of any research.

The minister last week gave details of three cases since 2003 where Mrs Robinson made representations on applications by developers Fred Fraser and Ken Campbell.

It was recently revealed that she solicited £50,000 from the two men in 2008 to bankroll the cafe business of her teenage lover Kirk McCambley.

Mr Poots said his Department was unable to provide a definitive list of cases where Mrs Robinson had lobbied for the pair, as a full manual trawl of planning files would involve “disproportionate” costs.

That has now prompted an intervention by prominent developer Peter Curistan, the man behind Belfast’s flagship Odyssey centre.

He told the Belfast Telegraph: “I was surprised at Mr Poots ruling out a full review on grounds of expense. To promote the cause of transparency in planning, I am prepared to underwrite the costs.

“I am also ready to pay for independent researchers to come in and conduct the research, if the Planning Service is prepared to facilitate that.”

Responding, a DoE spokesman said: “In the interests of transparency and accountability, Planning Service has an open file policy in operation and any member of the public, journalist and public representative is entitled to view any planning file. Planning Service will facilitate all requests for viewing by appointment.”

The open file policy normally involves access to applications on a case by case basis, rather than the full planning history of particular applicants.

Mr Poots gave details of the three planning application representations by Mrs Robinson in reply to Assembly questions from Sinn Fein MLA Daithi McKay.

They involved housing development proposals at sites in Newtownards and Comber.

In one of the cases, approval was granted despite objections from within the local community.



Belfast Telegraph.

Friday, 29 January 2010

The lying witness


Ex Police Chief Norman Baxter lied to members of Parliament in his evidence to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee, Norman lied over comments he made regarding Kevin Fulton, . Mr Baxter fabricated his evidence saying that former British Army & MI5 agent Kevin Fulton had made a statement saying that he had lied over information he gave in regard to the Omagh Bombing, Fulton was quick to rubbish Baxter's evidence, Fulton's solicitor has rubbished Baxter's evidence to the committee in regard to his client Kevin Fulton.

Questions are now being asked in legal circles about evidence given by Norman Baxter in a number of court cases in Northern Ireland.
Norman Baxter was a member of the RUC and PSNI.

Sunday, 24 January 2010

Aine Tyrell: Gerry Adams is still lying about abuse.


Adams' niece slams both Sinn Féin and PSNI as her uncle calls for party leader to resign
Suzanne Breen, Northern Editor

Áine Tyrell: said she never once demanded that Gerry Adams protect her anonymity Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams is lying when he says he couldn't tell party colleagues that his brother Liam was a suspected paedophile because his niece had demanded he protect her anonymity, Áine Tyrell has said.


In an exclusive interview with the Sunday Tribune, Tyrell was scathing of both the Sinn Féin president and the PSNI over their handling of her case. She said: "I didn't know Liam was in Sinn Féin but had Gerry bothered to tell me, I would have waived my anonymity without hesitation.


"I'd have accompanied Gerry to meet his colleagues in Sinn Féin, to talk to the ard comhairle about what Liam had done so they could expel him from the party. But Gerry never gave me that option."


Tyrell said she never once demanded that Adams protect her anonymity and that she had unsuccessfully asked him many times to address the issue of Liam working with youth projects in west Belfast.


"I said I was very concerned that Liam was seeking jobs working with children. Gerry told me that was Liam's way of trying to make up to the community for what he'd done to me."


Tyrell said she had heard her father was a youth worker in west Belfast but didn't know where. At one stage she was so desperate she thought of handing out leaflets in the street warning parents. Gerry Adams said he spoke to Clonard youth centre about his brother but Áine said when she later spoke to Clonard they had no record of that.


Tyrell criticised the PSNI: "Given the length of time involved in bringing Liam to justice, I heavily suspect political involvement in the case." Liam Adams is currently wanted in the north on charges relating to the repeated rape of Áine from the age of four.


He walked into Sligo garda station on Monday 21 December last year but was released hours later because a PSNI European arrest warrant wasn't ready. Tyrell said: "On Monday, when I didn't know Liam was in Sligo garda station, the PSNI had told me this warrant was in place.


When I spoke to a police officer on Tuesday, they didn't even know Liam had been in Sligo and had been able to walk free. I had to tell the officer that information. I was horrified the warrant hadn't been ready and he was back on the streets."


Tyrell said the PSNI didn't seek to interview her until eight months after she asked them to re-open the case. She revealed that when her father didn't turn up for his first court appearance, police refused her request to release a photofit of him to the media saying "it would look like a witch-hunt".


Tyrell's uncle, ex-IRA prisoner Bob Corrigan, called on Gerry Adams to step down from politics. "He should resign all three positions he holds – Sinn Féin president, Belfast West MP, and Assembly member. He has failed in his responsibilities as both a public representative and as an uncle. I don't say this lightly. I'm a former republican prisoner who spent 10 years in Long Kesh."


Tyrell expressed anger that "Mary Lou McDonald and other Sinn Féin politicians" constantly referred to her when quizzed on the party's failings by the media. She questioned the sincerity of their sympathy and added: "I want them to stop using my name."

Sunday Tribune.
January 24, 2010

Friday, 22 January 2010

Why Adams & Police Must Come Clean On Abuse Allegations.



Why Adams and police must both come clean on abuse allegations

By Eamonn McCann
Thursday, 21 January 2010


Nobody is offering up their suffering for the cause any more. Why should they, when the cause has now been abandoned?


Herein lies the connection between the close of armed struggle and the opening out of secret memories of abuse.

None of the women who have come forward in recent weeks will have made this or any other political calculation before deciding to tell their stories.

What is relevant is that the fierce sense of communal solidarity which the republican movement was able to surround itself with during the years of armed struggle has frayed.

As talks proceed towards completion of a settlement which will leave Northern Ireland within the United Kingdom for as far forward as anyone can see, the duty of omerta fades.

The imminent publication of Brendan Hughes's memoirs can be taken as confirmation that the old rules of embattlement no longer apply.

The vast majority in the North — including a vast majority of those defining themselves as nationalist — devoutly welcomed the end of the IRA's armed struggle. But the legacy of the struggle, of loss and pain endured, cannot easily or at all be sloughed off.

In many instances, it was those who were closest to the struggle who both suffered most and are most likely now to feel aggrieved and let down.

There is a dynamic at work here with ominous implications for the republican movement.

That said, the depiction of Gerry Adams as a presiding genius coolly ignoring the abuse of children to protect the reputation of the movement, is inaccurate and wildly unfair. It focuses on the person while ignoring the political context which alone can explain the actions and inactions concerned.

It needs to be said, too, that some seem so anxious to get Adams they are content to let the police off the hook.

Arguably the most serious allegation to emerge from the sickening morass came from the mother of the woman allegedly raped by the SF president's brother.

When her daughter made contact with the RUC, she has claimed, they seemed “more interested in recruiting her as an informer than dealing with (her) abuser”.

Let us imagine for a moment that it had been in Doncaster or Birmingham, not in Belfast, that police were said to have responded to a woman reporting that she'd been the victim of incestuous rape, not with care and assurance that they'd do all in their power to bring the perpetrator to justice, but with an attempt to persuade her to spy on a violent local organisation.

Would this story not be the lead item on Newsnight, the Home Secretary pummelled by Paxman to explain how such outrageous behaviour could have come about? Would the media not be abuzz with demands for a judicial inquiry and heads to roll? Would the police officers concerned not already be suspended pending the outcome of a high-level investigation? But here, next to nothing.

The claimed response of the police to the rape report in Belfast will have strengthened Sinn Fein at the time in arguing that such matters were better left to the movement. In the republican perspective, there was a war on.

To invite combatants of the other side, the police, into the affairs of the community was to weaken the war effort.

And the war, in this view, was a noble enterprise, the culmination of centuries of struggle for an Ireland united and free.

It was to this shining vision that self-sacrifice was offered. The most frequently-quoted maxim in the republican lexicon came from from Terence McSwiney, the Sinn Fein Lord Mayor of Cork who died on hunger strike in Brixton in 1920: “It is not those who can inflict the most suffering but those who can endure the most who will conquer.”

For as long as the war could be presented as delivering the community from all past oppression, republican supporters felt able to put up with the most harrowing of circumstances, and to accept clumsy, inadequate and worse ways of handling the most difficult and distressing of personal problems.

One of the abuse cases at the centre of the current controversies happened in Ardoyne, where, in 1995, Gerry Adams advised an audience not to report abuse cases to the RUC but to avail themselves instead of ‘counsellors’ supplied by the republican movement.

Sinn Fein had a network of such ‘counsellors’ across the North. Few had qualifications or relevant experience.

Their largest case-load concerned ‘wife-beating’, as it was then commonly called. On occasion, they dealt also with serious cases of physical and sexual abuse, including child abuse.

‘Dealt with’ as best they could, which often was not very well.

The cases recently publicised raise serious questions, most importantly because, far from being isolated instances, they were not untypical. The reason Gerry Adams finds himself in the firing line is not — even if everything alleged against him turns out to be true — that he behaved in a particularly reprehensible way but that he behaved in a perfectly representative way. It was the way republicans did things at the time.

It is right that Gerry Adams and all others with questionable roles in these events — including and most importantly the police — should be called to account.

But we also need a political accounting.


Belfast Telegraph.

Wednesday, 20 January 2010

Why Gerry's Problem Just Won't Go Away You Know,



Tuesday, 19 January 2010


As the spotlight continues to shine on Gerry Adams’s relationship with his brother Liam, Alan Murray asks if more political skeletons will emerge


Whatever Gerry Adams put on his Santa wish list, questions surrounding the position of his brother within Sinn Fein, and the Sinn Fein President’s supposed tolerance of Liam Adams despite knowledge of his alleged paedophilia, will continue to arise.


The embarrassment for the leader of Sinn Fein stems not only from his awareness of his younger brother’s alleged sexual humiliation of his daughter Aine, but the grudging extraction of information from the party about the leadership positions Liam was allowed to seize in its structure.

Behind the mud thrown at Gerry Adams, and so far there has been very little compared with that thrown at the Robinsons, is the unravelling of the televised account given by the MP for West Belfast of his contacts and relationship with his fugitive brother.

Anyone watching the UTV documentary would have concluded that Gerry Adams had limited contact with Liam Adams after 1987, wanted little to do with him, and didn’t really know his year to year whereabouts never mind his week to week locations. Contact, we were led to believe by Mr Adams, was minimal, sporadic at best and, really, Gerry knew little of the actions and the roles grabbed by his younger sibling of whom he was greatly ashamed.

He pleaded with his brother to surrender to the PSNI and stand trial and as the UTV credits rolled, we were nearly saying ‘oh what a burden Gerry has had to bear’, except, it didn’t ring true.

It didn’t ring true for the simple reason that when the IRA and Sinn Fein expel someone or monitor someone, provided they’re living on this island, they generally do keep tabs on them through the sophisticated network that has kept both one step ahead of the opposition.

For Mr Adams to ask our wide eyed electorate to believe that President Gerry wasn’t told where brother Liam was and what he was doing every week of the year just isn’t believable.

It might just possibly be true, but people won’t believe it given the tightness of the Sinn Fein/IRA machine. And when pictures began to surface of Gerry with Liam at the latter’s second wedding and of Liam appearing with other Sinn Fein figures in Co Louth and then details emerging of his role, nay roles, with the party in Dundalk and in West Belfast, you wonder if the Sinn Fein President thinks the electorate came up the Lagan in the proverbial bubble.

His narrative in simple terms is that when he learned that serious complaints were levelled against his brother, he drove to Donegal where Liam Adams was then |living and confronted him about the abuse allegations which |he denied.

Thereafter, Mr Adams said, he had little contact with his brother, really didn’t know where he was living and when he became aware he had become involved in Sinn Fein in Co Louth intervened and had him kicked out.

Seemingly the cunning Liam moved to Belfast after the ceasefires when Gerry wasn’t looking, took up a position in Sinn Fein |in Andersonstown and nobody told el Presidente — truly the Green Pimpernel.

Mr Adams has alluded to the failure of the RUC to pursue and track down Liam, but the party machine hasn’t been geared up for a sustained assault, why?

Underlying this strategy was the key ingredient that those within the ranks of the party or the ‘army’, the IRA, observed the discipline of omerta and kept their mouths shut unless they were ordered to open them.

The emergence at the weekend of further tales of IRA members and relatives being abusive towards children is only facilitated by this powerful silence code, the breaching of which can lead to sudden death.

Other rapes and assaults have been alluded to before but never reported to the authorities on either side of the border. As with informers, ‘in house’ sorting was integral to IRA procedure in child abuse cases too it seems.

Whatever the reason, Liam Adams fled Belfast in the 1980s, the ranks have not broken and the beans have not been spilled from within anyway.

A former Army intelligence officer who was instrumental in outing Freddie Scappaticci as the military spy known as ‘Stakeknife’ alleged in an internet posting in 2005 that Mr. Adams had protected members of his family accused by the IRA of spying while others, unconnected to his |wider family circle, had large portions of their skulls detached by IRA bullets. That dimension apart, and if we believe Gerry Adams didn’t know of Liam’s Sinn Fein activities in Dundalk, could we really swallow the line that he didn’t know what Liam was doing in Belfast from the year 2000 onwards?

No, it won’t go away and the danger for Mr Adams and Sinn Fein is that continuing revelations of sexual exploitation, abuse, and humiliation committed within the cocooned republican structure may tarnish the image significantly — mud sticks.

Belfast Telegraph.

Tuesday, 19 January 2010

Sinn Fein denies mishandling abuse claim


Leading Sinn Fein member Padraic Wilson has moved to detail how he dealt with a case of sexual abuse after it was reported to senior party members.

The Sunday Tribune newspaper reported how a woman said she was raped at the age of 16 by a Belfast IRA man.

Ms Cahill is the grandniece of veteran republican Joe Cahill.

She claims Gerry Adams knew of her accusations and said Sinn Fein members Seamus Finucane and Mr Wilson also met with her.

At the time of the alleged abuse in the summer of 1997, Ms Cahill, a former national secretary for Sinn Fein's youth wing had been working for the West Belfast Festival radio station.

She was staying with the republican and his wife while her parents were on holiday.

Her alleged attacker is understood to be a former member of the provisional IRA's punishment squad.

'Dismissive'

Ms Cahill said at one meeting Padraic Wilson, now Sinn Fein Director of International Affairs, had been dismissive of her concerns.

Mr Wilson has denied he behaved in such a way.

Mr Wilson and Mr Finucane have released statements confirming their involvement in trying to resolve the complaint and said they urged Ms Cahill to approach Social Services.

"I did speak with the victim and another member of her family. At all times I emphasised that the only way that the situation could be dealt with was by bringing it directly to the attention of social services," said Mr Wilson.

"This was not a route that the victim or her family were, at that time, prepared to take."

Mr Finucane said Ms Cahill did not wish to involve the RUC in the investigation.

"I am sorry that she felt that I was dismissive of her complaint but this was far from the case," he said.

"I want to make it clear that I did my best to resolve this serious matter."

'No resolution'

The allegations have added to pressure on Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams who is already facing criticism that he knew of sexual abuse allegations against his brother Liam and did not do enough to alert his party about the claims.

On Tuesday Ms Cahill released a statement through the Rape Crisis Centre which said the article in the Sunday Tribune was an "accurate and truthful account"

"Sinn Fein has stated that Gerry Adams refutes the allegations I made," she said.

"Gerry Adams first spoke to me about my case in August 2000. I had meetings with him at which I expressed my feelings on the way I was being treated until 2006.

"I have no interest in attacking Gerry Adams, I have been fond of him at times in my life, he was sympathetic at times.

"However, I stand by my assertion that my meetings with him were pointless, because there was no resolution."

Story From BBC.

The Adams Spy Ring ?



The Adams Spy Ring, Looking back to 2005.

Force Research Unit soldier Martin Ingram wrote on the Cryptome site, in 2005.

( see below, the interesting piece is in red )

This might explain why Liam Adams was not charged with child molestation.


Link to Cryptome.
31 December 2005. Thanks to A.
Martin Ingram, a pseudonym, was a British Army (Force Research Unit) covert agent in Northern Ireland.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[Martin Ingram writes:]

Every time an agent is exposed within the Sinn Fein /IRA organisation you see deep turmoil caused within Republicanism by this exposure, I suppose that is a natural and understandable reaction. Mick Hall in his article dated 21/12/2005 entitled ‘Defeating the enemy within’ is naïve in believing Sinn Fein to be a normal political party. How can it be when it is controlled and colludes with the British Administration? What is required is a new party that represents all strands of the broad Nationalist/Republican interest, free from British influence. When I read Mick’s article I just could not help but enjoy a momentary smile. This warmth is not generated from a desire to see Republicans squirm or become embarrassed but by a genuine admiration for my former colleagues who have run brave agents in a hostile environment.

Any momentary warmth soon evaporates and I revert back into my Nationalist persona. I honestly do believe in a United Ireland and it is an achievable and a just cause. That said it won’t be achieved by murder and corruption and even if it could be it would not be worth the price. I am also certain that articles like Mick Halls dated 21/12/2005 do certainly not help the cause. One may as well be asked to hibernate until the next tout is exposed if you follow Mick’s logic.
I can hear certain elements asking loudly why should we trust this fucking Brit? Well I would turn that question 180 degrees and ask WHY would the RM trust those who have been at the helm of the Republican ship for over two and half decades and achieved WHAT? A stranded ship going anywhere but home.

The peace process today. The GFA is full of ifs’ and buts’ and more than a few maybes. We have PIRA in retirement mode with a public stance that all its weapons have been decommissioned. I can’t help thinking with a smirk what South Armagh and Tyrone Republicans think of that goodwill gesture? After all have the Loyalists not been able to retain the weapons that it acquired from South Africa with a little help from my colleagues within the FRU? I thought this GFA agreement was based upon equality. Who negotiated that one??
We understand the Republican leadership negotiated a deal at Hillsborough in 2003, which clearly stated all persons who had committed a scheduled offence, would be included in the legislation dealing with OTRs. Now Sinn Fein lied about when this deal was struck but thanks to the SDLP who has provided the documentary evidence we know the truth. Now even a fool would surmise that the British would use any opportunity that was available to admonish its’ members who have undoubtedly committed criminal/scheduled offences. You don’t need to be Einstein to see that train coming. Now Adams isn’t any Einstein but on the other hand he is no fool either? So WHY did he agree to this deal? Did he not think that the victims of Bloody Sunday Dublin/ Monaghan would fail to notice this sleight of hand or did he not care?
I accept Sinn Fein have finally backed away from this deal - but they had two feet in it for a long time, why? The sight of Connor Murphy stood proud and upright defending this Sinn Fein British Govt joint agreement outside the British parliament in London was impressive. I wonder did Connor really believe in that legislation or was he just on a mission for Gerry. Over to you, Connor?
Now lets be generous to Mr Adams and Mr McGuinness on this. Maybe Gerry and Martin with a few words of comfort from their old comrade Dennis and compulsive M & S shopper were having a bad day when they negotiated this deal, no problem with that, we all have off days. The problem though here is when the world woke up and said: Eh this is not on what did Sinn Fein do. It did what it knows best, it lies. It claimed that it did not know that State forces could be included in this deal to allow a small number of IRA/Loyalists who were OTR to return home. The SDLP had to provide the evidence that Sinn Fein agreed this deal years ago and only then did Sinn Fein stumble and start to back track. Suddenly the penny dropped with Gerry and he realised he could no longer walk hand in hand with Tony Blair on this one.

Let us move on to the topical issue of agents. Mr Adams and Mr McGuinness know, only too well, how and why agents operate? They operate to provide both tactical and strategic intelligence upon the target and to allow the persons charged with operating those agents to make informed decisions. Those decisions will be designed to disrupt the effective running of the target and to influence its’ own decisions into areas which are controllable and desired. In other words make the enemy do what you want it to do without it knowing because you want that target to operate for as long as possible believing it is operating to its own agenda.

Now when we all stop smirking we can get back to the serious business.
If you are a Republican one would assume rightly you would be asking the following question of the movement. How do we counter this type of activity? (Espionage - or spying for the layman).
The obvious questions a republican should have been asking over the last twenty-five years are some of the following.

Firstly, you would put yourself in your enemies mind and work out your own Vulnerable Points (VP). You would then - armed with this information - develop a sophisticated security department, whose sole job would be to analyse and expose any agents who work against your interests, just like the Brits have. It would be manned by dedicated and trustworthy individuals and rotated and at unpredictable intervals to disrupt any long-term infiltration. Republicans would know that the one unit in its army that could cause the most harm if compromised would be the Security/ Intelligence Department.

What did the IRA do under Adams/McGuinness leadership? It established a unit manned by one ex-British marine ( J J Magee) and promoted Freddie Scappaticci to his deputy.
Now either Adams and McGuinness are the two unluckiest people on this planet or it was no accident. Today everybody knows about Stake Knife (Freddy). Even Messrs Adams and McGuinness - who were initially reluctant to admit that Freddie (and others) whose roles within the Security department were as paid informers and killers. Ok, lets assume more bad luck here and give the benefit of doubt to Adams and McGuinness.

No problem. Because we have done our homework. We know what our VP are and we have worked out that it is best to change personnel at regular intervals to avoid prolonged damage if indeed the Brits managed to compromise us.
Now did that happen under Adams/McGuinness leadership? NO. What do you mean NO? Ok, so they did not regularly change these personnel but surely they did change them at some stage?
The truth is they did not change them at all until one died through cancer and the other lasted more than twenty-five years before he was retired. Well, let’s ask Mr Adams that question. Why did you retire Freddy?
Ok, lets assume that both Adams/McGuinness are trusting individuals and have been unlucky by being caught short on this one? Lets move on.
During my first tour in NI I worked for the Force Research Unit in Derry. We had a very, very nice man on our books that worked for us as an agent, he was called Frank Hegarty. The Intelligence services knew through a vast army of PIRA informers that the IRA was being supplied with modern weaponry from Libya. This information had been gathered for many months prior to the shipments.

I was only in my mid-twenties during this period. Although I had been in NI for a couple of years at this time. I had been asked a few months prior to become involved with Frankie code name 3018 on a co-handler basis. At this time Frankie was not a prolific informer, he had old links back to the IRA of today but not a lot else. He had I was told by my boss some friendship or past association with Martin McGuinness and the agent should be encouraged to become closer to McGuinness. I met this man and quickly developed warmth for him. He was a genuine working class man who like myself enjoyed the dogs, horses and women. I liked him. That said he was not the sharpest knife in the drawer. I admit I never thought twice about asking Frankie to get alongside McGuinness. Frankie complied with our request and became involved with McGuinness. McGuinness vouched for this man against the advice of other senior Republicans. Astoundingly within months was allocated a massive cache of arms and munitions. Now that was lucky was it not? Sometime later this cache of arms was recovered and Frank was recovered to a place of safety. It was at the time the largest ever find in the Island of Ireland.

My Father suddenly became ill before the recovery of the arms and Frankos exposure. I requested and was offered a position within a security department close to my hometown and a rise in rank for good service was also appreciated. This was a compassionate posting. Within two weeks I had left Derry and although I returned subsequently to the FRU after my father died it was never quite the same again.
During this compassionate posting I was asked to become involved in the resettlement of two informers who had become exposed and because I had first hand knowledge of both of them I accepted with the blessing of my father who was very ill. Over a period of time L Branch was looking after both Frank Hegarty and Willie Carlin. During this period I met with both Frank and Willie on almost a daily basis.

During this period Willie Carlin received a phone call directly from Martin McGuinness. This phone call was taped and reports made to record this event. McGuinness reassured Willie Carlin that all would be well and he should return to Derry his hometown to be with his family and he (McGuinness) would personally vouch for Frank’s safety. Once the phone call had finished Carlin told me that he (McGuinness) must think I am a fucking idiot. I had to agree and we both shared a smile.
I prepared a report and handed the tapes over to my boss, Lt Col Kerr. Given Martin McGuinness’ position within the PIRA I took this to be a conspiracy to murder. Kerr concurred and to be honest I never saw sight of either the report or the tape again. A few years ago Carlin spoke to Liam Clarke at the Sunday Times and he mentioned the phone calls made by McGuinness to reassure and hopefully allow him to return home. Carlin did not know the call was taped.

I also had contact with Frank Hegarty and he too informed me that he also had contact with McGuinness. Frank, too, had also been offered a safe return by McGuinness. It is true that Frank was depressed and missed his family very much and his hometown of Derry. I was upset at the state of this man. He was depressed, but as far as I knew, he had not been to see a doctor. I had been assigned to Carlin on a 24 hr basis and only occasionally did I have contact with Frank. I think I met with Frank two or three times over a few weeks. Frank told me that McGuinness had made it clear - come home and the mess can be sorted. I told Frank to forget it; it was not going to happen.

The two people who had been assigned to baby-sit Frank were the easygoing sort and one of them was not a badged FRU member. At the time I did not really think much about this decision. Although it was a strange one. I was aware that Kerr thought Frank to be a security concern and his depression was a potential problem for the FRU. I did not for one moment think that they would allow Frank to return to Derry and if he did they would make it impossible - or at least very difficult - for the IRA to operate against him. Freddie Scappaticci, as the PIRA internal security man, gave the inside story of where, when and how Frank was to be got. What did the FRU do? Fuck all!! Why? I don’t know except I know they could have done a lot. It certainly helped Martin though! A little credibility restored. Derry to the best of my knowledge only ever caught and dealt with one real informer and that one was certainly not Paddy Flood. Why is that? Bad LUCK Martin would argue.

If you listen carefully to the Freddie tapes of his conversation at the Culloden hotel with the journalists, he neatly avoids the question in relation to who killed Franko. I wonder why? Perhaps that was one step too far even for brassed neck Freddie.
I know Frank was murdered by a British Agent (Freddy Scappaticci) accompanied or at least directed by McGuinness and others. It was not just bad luck that killed Frank he was a victim of collusion. Last year I had the privilege of speaking with his son, he is a victim and he deserves the truth, not Sinn Fein/Brits version of it…

Today, we know that Frank did return to Derry and we know from his family that McGuinness did have some part to play in his decision to meet with members of the PIRA just over the border into Donegal. Indeed there is not much we don’t know about that murder. We know the police and others including the Cook report investigated McGuinness. We know the police had prepared a case for prosecution (Operation Taurus) and were confident in their case, indeed unusually for terrorist related offences, the police had the confidence of three witnesses prepared to give evidence against Martin, that was bad luck, Eh, Martin. No problem though his luck suddenly changed for the better. We now know that in a similar way to Stormontgate the decision to proceed with the case was NOT in the public interest and it was suggested to the police in a secret document now in the public domain that McGuinness was shortly to meet with the Govt to discuss the future. The Police were told to back off McGuinness. The case was dropped. It looks like Martin's luck had changed? Not bad except this activity is not justice, this is collusion.

I could go on about this chapter in McGuinness/Hegarty incident but in legal correspondence (i.e. when the MOD attempted to prosecute me and the Sunday Times) the Treasury solicitor makes reference to matters affecting National Security in relation to the Frank Hegarty case. Well the man's dead, the weapons recovered, what’s left? Ah, Say no more lads, your secrets are safe with me!
In recent times individuals from the security forces, who have their own agenda, have provided certain documents to others which I have seen sight off and which if authentic - and I have no reason to doubt their authenticity - would indicate that Martin McGuinness has had more than his fair share of bad luck.

Lets just assume that Martin is a really unlucky guy, lets see if his mate Gerry is any luckier.
A security force agent Brian Nelson hated Adams with buckets of venom. He had planned to have Gerry killed and informed his handlers of his intention. His handlers did not take the high moral ground and say to their agent ‘you can not and will not do that’. Instead they did not inform Nelson that they had been informed by their command staff to frustrate this attack. Having secured the full details of the attack being planned by Nelson the handlers employed the services of other specialist units to tamper with the ammunition that was to be used in the attack and thus kid Nelson and the UDA into thinking that their attack upon Adams was just unlucky.

This incident was the very first Martin Ingram and Liam Clarke wrote for the Sunday Times in 1999. Within days the Governments legal services were threatening legal action against the paper and informing the Sunday Times that they knew the identity of their source (me). In secret, the government applied to the high court and were awarded an injunction against me revealing any state secrets. Nelson had been compromised by then and the technique of tampering with the bullet is older than my mother in law? So what state secret? Any ideas?
Adams became aware (and I am unsure how he came about this knowledge), that more than one of his family had been informing on the movement to the FRU, but decided that blood was thicker than water, and those individuals were quietly removed from Belfast for some time without the normal retribution. It is possible that his good friend Freddie Scappaticci was on holiday and the FRU had failed to offer a suitable stand-in during his absence. Maybe Mr Adams could tell us.


There are plenty within the movement who knew about the Adams’ spy ring so he would find it difficult to deny its existence and still retain any credibility. Although given Adams’ public defence of Freddie Scappaticci his credibility is not really an issue anymore.
Now either I am being slow here or the Brits missed a perfect opportunity to embarrass the RM. Maybe Adams’ luck is changing?


Agents like Dennis Donaldson and Freddie Scappaticci and others don’t stay undetected for over twenty years without having either buckets and buckets of luck or a guardian Angel. Now let me be clear, genuine agents who work towards defeating terrorism I have only admiration for. Over 99% of all FRU operations I would defend to the end. The problem that I have is when people - whether they are agents or the State - avoid taking responsibility for that small 1% of operations that are not legal and involve murder. Both McGuinness and Adams along with the British state negotiated together a deal to wipe these offences under the carpet right under everyone’s nose. Its wrong and it certainly is not in the public interest.

Now either Martin and Gerry are naïve or they are very poor negotiators or they too shop at Marks & Spencers along with Dennis. If that is the case they should acknowledge the mistakes which occurred upon their watch and step aside forthwith and their followers should give thanks for the luck bestowed on these two venerated leaders of the Provisional Republican Movement!!
Happy New Year.
Martin Ingram

Sunday Tribune Statement - Response to Sinn Fein.


Sinn Fein has claimed that the Sunday Tribune, in its coverage of the sex abuse cover-up in the republican movement, is engaged in a campaign to smear the party and its president Gerry Adams. This is simply untrue. We would pursue any political party and its leader with equal vigour given the information we have unearthed.

In relation to last Sunday’s edition and Sinn Fein’s allegation of manipulation of one of two victims who spoke to our Northern Editor Suzanne Breen, we categorically stand by our story and our treatment of the abuse survivors involved.

It is being claimed by Sinn Fein and by one of the women, whose identity was not revealed in the Sunday Tribune, that Mr Adams did not know of the abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of a Sinn Fein elected representative. This is directly at odds with the information we were given and we have proof of this.

The Sunday Tribune was approached in the first instance by this victim’s brother who stated in writing that Gerry Adams had been personally informed about the allegations of sexual and physical abuse against an elected Sinn Fein member over two years ago.

Ms Breen subsequently interviewed the victim at length in the presence of her brother and a photographer. The claim that Gerry Adams knew of the abuse was repeatedly made by both the victim and her brother at this meeting which took place on Wednesday January 5 2010.

The victim offered to pose for photographs and photographs were taken in front of a wall mural.

In follow-up telephone conversations before the publication of the article in the Sunday Tribune, the story, as it would appear in the newspaper, including the allegations against Gerry Adams, was read to both the victim and her brother. They both agreed it was an honest and accurate account of the interview.

Last Saturday, January 16 2010, the victim, through the solicitors Madden and Finucane, claimed she had never given permission for the interview or allegations to be used. Although consent was freely given by the victim, the Sunday Tribune respected her decision to withdraw consent for her identity to be revealed and ran the story without identifying her.

The other abuse victim, the grand niece of Joe Cahill, has issued a statement to the Sunday Tribune confirming that she was not manipulated into giving an interview.

She said: “Sinn Fein has stated that Gerry Adams refutes the allegations I made. Gerry Adams first spoke to me about my case in August 2006. I had meetings with him at which I expressed my feelings on the way I was being treated until 2006. I eventually ended the interviews because they were going nowhere and I believed they were pointless.

Sinn Fein has said it is considering suing the Sunday Tribune. If Sinn Fein is challenging the truth of my story, let them sue me. I thank the Sunday Tribune for interviewing me in a highly sensitive way – and for the support I received afterwards. To date, since my story was printed, no-one from Sinn Fein has contacted me to offer the same. I am also making a statement later today to the Rape Crisis Centre on this issue.”

Press Release From The Rape Crisis & Sexual Abuse Centre Belfast.




PRESS RELEASE - STATEMENT FROM RAPE CRISIS CENTRE RE- SINN FEIN RESPONSE TO THE SUNDAY TRIBUNE.

The Rape Crisis And Sexual Abuse Centre is making the statement following allegations that Suzanne Breen and the Sunday Tribune have manipulated victims of sexual abuse.
The Rape Crisis Centre has known Suzanne Breen for over twenty years and can vouch for her honesty sincerity and courage as an investigative reporter.
She has done tremendous work in allowing survivors of rape and sexual abuse to tell their stories and has exposed cover-ups by those in power. She has always been sensitive professional and caring in her dealings with victims.
We have no reason whatsoever to believe that either Suzanne or the Sunday Tribune has manipulated any survivor of abuse.
We have spoken with Ms Cahill, grand niece of Joe Cahill (who has requested that her first name does not be printed) She is an intelligent professional woman, and she has given us her absolute assurance that it was she who contacted Suzanne Breen to bring her abuse, and the failure of the Republican Movement to deal with it appropriately to public attention.
Ms Cahill has asked us to provide her statement below, to clarify the issue.
“Over the last number of weeks, I watched Aine Tyrell give a very brave and very moving account of the alleged abuse she suffered. I also watched a number of media interviews with members of Sinn Fein afterwards. I was horrified.
I thought long and hard about telling my story. It wasn’t an easy decision. I had every right to do so. I was most certainly not manipulated into giving any interview. I approached the Northern Editor, Suzanne Breen, of my own accord. I wanted other victims to know they were not on their own in cases like this, and I wanted them to know it is possible to recover. I know from the response that I received subsequently from other victims, that it was the right thing to do.
During the interview, Suzanne Breen helped me feel comfortable, spent considerable time with me, and respected and supported me. She acted in a truly ethical and moral fashion. The article printed was an accurate and truthful account of what happened me.
Sinn Fein has stated that Gerry Adams refutes the allegations I made. Gerry Adams first spoke to me about my case in August 2000. I had meetings with him at which I expressed my feelings on the way I was being treated until 2006. I have no interest in attacking Gerry Adams, I have been fond of him at times in my life, he was sympathetic at times. However, I stand by my assertion that my meetings with him were pointless, because there was no resolution

Unbeknownst to the IRA and Sinn Fein, I attended counselling during a good part of their investigation, which I arranged with a counsellor who I knew to be free from republican control. Thankfully that counsellor kept notes. Those notes authenticate my account. Medical records also verify parts of the story.

Sinn Fein has said it is considering suing the Sunday Tribune. If Sinn Fein is challenging the truth of my story, let them sue me. I thank the Sunday Tribune for interviewing me in a highly sensitive way – and for the support I received afterwards. To date, since my story was printed, no-one from Sinn Fein has contacted me to offer the same.

My surname is not important. It does not define me, but it does show that there was no hierarchy of victims. There seems to be however, a hierarchy when it came to perpetrators of abuse.”
Ms ******* Cahill.

The Rape Crisis Centre would also like to add that we have seen copies of documents held by The Sunday Tribune and can verify that no other victim of abuse was manipulated. It would appear to the Rape Crisis Centre that survivors of rape and abuse are being manipulated, as are most of the Northern Press however, Suzanne Breen and the Sunday Tribune are not the culprits.

Eileen Calder.
Rape Crisis Centre Belfast.

Adams denies child abuse 'cover-up'



Sinn Fein insisted it acted correctly in the handling of child abuse allegations against one of its representatives and threatened legal action over claims suggesting otherwise.

It strongly rejected allegations linking its party president Gerry Adams to a supposed cover-up of alleged abuse by a republican representative 30 years ago.

The party confirmed one of its elected representatives was currently suspended after police opened an investigation into a historic case of abuse, but Sinn Fein insisted Mr Adams was not linked to the controversy.

It had been claimed in a Sunday newspaper that Mr Adams was told of the alleged abuse but failed to act, but Sinn Fein rejected this.

On Monday night, in a further development, the alleged victim issued a statement through a solicitor distancing herself from other aspects of the Sunday Tribune report.

Mr Adams, his party and the alleged abuse victim, in separate moves, said they had handed their various concerns to solicitors for consideration.

But the Sunday Tribune defended its story. An editorial in the newspaper said it had already been contacted by lawyers for the alleged abuse victim but decided it was correct to publish and indicated it acted in good faith.

The alleged victim said in her statement: "My primary concerns are for the wellbeing of my children and immediate family and that justice against my abuser is able to take its course without any interference."

The newspaper report also carried the allegations of a separate woman who said Mr Adams was alerted to her claims that she was raped by a leading republican.

Sinn Fein also rejected the claim and denied wrongdoing in the case.


Belfast Telegraph.

Suspended Sinn Fein Councillor Still Went To Meetings.



Tuesday, 19 January 2010

A Sinn Fein councillor, who was suspended from the party following allegations of child abuse, has continued to attend council meetings and receive Government payments.


The councillor is understood to have been questioned by detectives after alleged abuse was reported to the PSNI in spring 2008.

A file was forwarded by the PSNI to the Public Prosecution Service last year and is “under active consideration”.

No charges have so far been brought.

It emerged yesterday that the councillor was suspended “without prejudice” from Sinn Fein when police launched their investigation into the alleged abuse that stems back to the late 1970s.

However, a spokeswoman for the council concerned has told the Belfast Telegraph that the elected representative is still sitting as a Sinn Fein councillor.

According to council records, during the time of the suspension from Sinn Fein, the representative attended two council meetings — a full council meeting on March 30 and a committee meeting on September 21.

When asked last night why the representative was working as a Sinn Fein councillor despite the suspension, the party insisted that “the person in question is not a member of Sinn Fein at this time and was suspended from Sinn Fein early last year”.

The councillor declined to comment about the case.

Meanwhile, the victim of the alleged abuse last night released a statement through a solicitor to claim that reports in a Sunday newspaper about sexual abuse had breached her human rights.

The statement, released through the office of Madden and Finucane solicitors, said: “I feel very let down by the decision of the Sunday Tribune to publish my interview on 17th January 2009. At no time did I give permission for any details of the sexual abuse I suffered as a child to be published.

"The editor of the Sunday Tribune gave me an assurance through my solicitors that I would not be identified as someone who has made allegations to the police regarding sexual abuse.

“Due to the publication of the Sunday Tribune article I have been easily identified within my local community as being the victim of sexual abuse. I have suffered immense hurt, upset and distress as a result of the publication and I feel that I have been manipulated by the newspaper.

"My legal protections of anonymity under the criminal law and my right to private life under the European Convention on Human Rights have been flagrantly breached. Neither my local community nor my family were aware that I was a victim of sexual abuse before the publication of the Sunday Tribune article.

"My primary concerns are for the well being of my children and immediate family and that justice against my abuser is able to take its course without any interference”.


Belfast Telegraph.

Monday, 18 January 2010

On the run bomb accused is rearrested



Tuesday, 19 January 2010


A Newry man who went on the run 18 months ago while facing a retrial for offences linked to a botched mortar bombing at a border police station in 1998 is back behind bars.


Gary Jones was remanded into custody by Belfast Crown Court yesterday after being arrested at his Castlekeele home in the border town in the early hours of Sunday morning.

He was caught hiding in a downstairs toilet during a planned police search of his house on foot of an arrest warrant issued after he had gone on the run during his no-jury retrial in June 2008.

The 42-year-old Newry man, who tried to make a run for it when originially jailed for 14 years in October 2006 for the failed mortar bomb attack on the Corry Square Police Station on July 21 1998, was granted a retrial in June 2007.

The Court of Appeal ruled that Jones should face a retrial on charges of possessing an explosive device and doing an act with intent to cause an explosion. It was during that retrial before Mr Justice Stephens, who was about to deliver a ruling for a direction on behalf of the defence, that Jones, who was on bail, failed to appear.

Yesterday Mr Justice Hart said Jones' case will be mentioned at a later date either before him or Mr Justice Stephens who issued the arrest warrant.


Belfast Telegraph.

Sinn Fein suspends councillor over child-abuse claims.




Photo: Irish News.

Sunday, 17 January 2010

Sinn Fein Threatens To Sue Over Sunday Newspaper Claim.

Monday, 18 January 2010

Sinn Fein is considering taking legal action against a Sunday newspaper after categorically denying it covered up sex abuse allegations against fellow republicans — one of them said to be an elected member of the party.


The party issued a statement last night saying it was considering action against Sunday Tribune claims that two republicans suspected of involvement in abuse were not expelled from Sinn Fein.

According to the paper, two women say senior Sinn Fein figures were made aware of their allegations against the two republicans but did not take action — either by alerting the authorities or expulsion.

Their explosive claims, outlined yesterday, came in the wake of the scandal involving Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams's brother Liam — who is on the run from police on charges of abusing his daughter.

One of the women, a relative of former IRA leader Joe Cahill, alleged she was repeatedly raped at the age of 16 by a prominent IRA member.

The other alleged victim claimed she was sexually abused as a child by someone who is now an elected Sinn Fein representative in Northern Ireland.

The Sunday Tribune claims to know the identity of this representative.

A Sinn Fein spokesman said the “allegations were founded on innuendo and sensationalism and not facts”.

“Gerry Adams and the party refute absolutely any allegation of covering up instances of abuse,” he said.

“Our position on these matters is crystal clear. At all times the welfare of children is paramount. The people who should investigate allegations of abuse are the statutory authorities charged with this task — the PSNI/Garda and the Social Services.

“If an allegation of sexual abuse is made against a Sinn Fein member the party ensures that the matter is reported to the relevant statutory authorities. The member is suspended from the party without prejudice.

“This is in contrast to other political parties which have allowed members against whom allegations are being made to remain politically active until the completion of the legal process.

“A Sinn Fein representative is suspended without prejudice from party membership and all party activities, including work as a public representative.

“This suspension was activated after the PSNI commenced an investigation into an allegation of historic abuse.

“It is not the job of Sinn Fein to establish guilt or innocence and we will await the outcome of the police investigation.”

The allegations come at a time when Mr Adams is facing tough questions over his handling of sex charges against his brother Liam.

His younger brother is wanted by the authorities north of the border to face charges of abusing his daughter Aine Tyrell in the 1970s and 80s.

The high profile republican has faced repeated queries about his handling of the allegations, which he became aware of in 1987, since Ms Tyrell went public last month.

In particular, he has been forced to defend claims he did not do enough to inform the authorities when he found out his estranged brother was working with youth groups in west Belfast and in the Republic over the last 15 years.

This week he was also forced to explain how he did not know his brother worked for Sinn Fein in the heart of his own parliamentary constituency.

Liam Adams chaired a local branch of Sinn Fein in west Belfast in 2000 — three years after his elder brother claimed he had him expelled from party ranks in Co Louth in the Republic.


Belfast Telegraph.

A Big Hello To Sinn Fein Member Briege Meehan & to Martin Morris.


A Big hello to Briege Meehan of Sinn Fein (I was told not to say a bad word or I will be in the doghouse.)

and another Big hello to Martin Morris from Belfast now living in Donegal, Ireland.

SF must address abuse if it wants credibility


SF must address abuse if it wants credibility.

January 17, 2010.
The Sunday Tribune.

Liam Adams was never 'dumped' from Sinn Féin


Liam Adams was never 'dumped' from Sinn Féin
By,Suzanne Breen:

Gerry Adams canvassing in Dundalk in 1997 with his brother Liam (centre)A republican has given the Sunday Tribune extensive details of how suspected paedophile Liam Adams was heavily involved in a Sinn Féin cumann in west Belfast which met two streets away from where his brother Gerry lived.

The details disclosed to us by the republican prompted Sinn Féin on Friday to finally admit that far from being expelled from the party in Dundalk, Liam Adams remained involved in the party four years later – in the heart of the Sinn Féin president's constituency.

The republican who contacted us last week denounced "the dreadful saga of deceit, misinformation and cover-up engendered by Gerry Adams" about his brother's involvement in Sinn Féin.

The republican stated: "I feel let down, and guilty too for having kept quiet." The republican insisted that Liam Adams had never been "dumped" from the party: "He was an active and founder member of the Lower Andersonstown Sinn Féin cumann by the name of 'Cumann Mheon na Fuiseoige' that met on a weekly basis in the Felons' Club in Lower Andersonstown."

The republican said Liam Adams' involvement was common knowledge in Sinn Féin circles in West Belfast: "There never was any attempt to operate in ­secrecy."

The republican named the wife of a senior Sinn Féin official who is extremely close to Gerry Adams as a fellow member of the cumann with Liam Adams. Other republicans later contacted the Sunday Tribune with the names of other Sinn Féin members of that cumann.

The republican stated that Liam Adams canvassed for Sinn Féin in Belfast and was involved in many fundraising events in the city for the party. The republican added that it was inconceivable that the Sinn Féin president didn't know of his brother's involvement in Cumann Mheon na Fuiseoige.

He added that Sinn Féin membership was granted only following a lengthy period of vetting locally and by the national leadership.

Gerry Adams claimed he only found out of Liam's involvement in this cumann last Thursday.

On Thursday night, the Sunday Tribune had emailed Sinn Féin a list of questions about Liam Adams and raised, for the first time by the media, the possibility of his involvement with the party in Belfast.

In a clear damage limitation exercise, Sinn Féin stated on Friday that Liam held several positions, including chairman, of an Andersonstown cumann "before the cumann dissolved".

A death notice placed by the cumann in the Irish News shows it was still active in 2004.

Paddy Power has actually opened betting on who is likely to succeed Adams. Surprisingly, Mary Lou McDonald is the 4/5 favourite, followed by the North's regional development minister, Conor Murphy at 5/1.

Martin McGuinness drifted out on Friday from 5/2 to 6/1. Pearse Doherty and Toireasa Ferris are 8/1, junior Stormont minister Gerry Kelly is 12/1 and Caoimhghín Ó Caoláin is 33/1

Paddy Power has opened a book on whether Peter Robinson or Gerry Adams will be first to resign or be removed as a Northern party leader. Robinson is the 2/7 favourite, Gerry Adams is 9/4.

January 17, 2010.
The Sunday Tibune.

Gerry Adams ignored two more rape victims !



Suzanne Breen, Northern Editor:

Two women abused by republicans say Sinn Féin leader knew but did nothing
Suzanne Breen, Northern Editor

The grand-niece of Joe Cahill: repeatedy raped at the age of 16 by a prominent IRA man. She says Gerry Adams failed to take action Women from two of Ireland's best-known republican families have spoken for the first time about how they were sexually abused by republicans and of how that abuse was covered up by Sinn Féin and the Provisional IRA.

A grand-niece of former IRA chief-of-staff Joe Cahill has told of how she was repeatedly raped at the age of 16 by a prominent IRA man in west Belfast.

The daughter of a now deceased IRA Belfast commander has spoken of how she was physically, mentally and sexually abused by someone who is currently a Sinn Féin elected representative.

Both women said that Gerry Adams was aware of the details of their abuse but had failed to take action. Cahill, who didn't want her first name printed, is a former Ógra Sinn Féin national secretary.

Cahill (28) revealed how the IRA had brought her face-to-face in 2000 with the man who had previously raped her, saying they wanted "to read the body language" to see who was telling the truth. "I felt physically sick," she stated. She said she was never advised to report the rapes to the police or social services.

I wanted to go to the Rape Crisis Centre. I said I needed professional help. The IRA offered me a counsellor. I said that would be a charade because it would be an IRA-friendly counsellor."

She said 'M', her rapist, was put under IRA house arrest in Belfast after it was learned he'd also sexually abused two of her cousins. However, she was later told he 'escaped'. "I didn't accept that. I believe the IRA facilitated his move to Donegal," she said.

She described many heated meetings with the IRA and with Sinn Féin president, Gerry Adams.

At one meeting with the IRA attended by Padraig Wilson, the IRA's go-between with the international decommissioning body, Cahill asked that her rapist be brought back from Donegal.

Padraig said: 'Do you think we should be running around after you?' I started crying. I said it wasn't just about me. 'M' shouldn't have been allowed to go somewhere else he'd have access to kids."

She eventually ended a series of meetings with Adams feeling they were "pointless". According to Cahill, at the first meeting: "Gerry said he knew of the horror of abuse but he believed people could recover and continue with their lives. He said sex abuse cases were very hard to prove as it was one person's word against another.

Gerry said that, from the information he had, the army hadn't allowed M to escape. 'Sometimes these things happen,' he said. I felt numb. I told Gerry I wanted M returned to Belfast. He said the IRA had told him they couldn't do that. I said I felt betrayed by the republican movement

The second victim told the Sunday Tribune how X, who is now a Sinn Féin elected representative, had abused her when she was a child of 10. The name of that individual is known to the Sunday Tribune but can't be printed for legal reasons.

She said X locked her in an attic and also a dog kennel for days, forced her to use a bucket rather than the toilet, beat her mercilessly, held her head under water until she lost consciousness, and sexually abused her.

The Sunday Tribune has seen hospital records of the second victim's injuries and social services reports from her childhood. She made a statement to the PSNI almost two years ago and a police file was forwarded to the Public Prosecution Service last July.

I'm disgusted that X remains a Sinn Féin elected representative and I can't understand why X hasn't been prosecuted," she said. "Another family member informed Gerry Adams face-to-face of what X had done to me.

"Gerry promised to have X expelled from Sinn Féin immediately. I feel let down."

Both women came forward to the Sunday Tribune separately saying it was time to speak out. Cahill said: "I remain a republican and there are many good republicans. Unfortunately, a few powerful individuals put the preservation of the movement, and their own position, above the safety of children. There are plenty more Aine Tyrells and ****** Cahills out there."

January 17, 2010


January 17, 2010.
The Sunday Tribune.

Inside Iris's Filthy Love Nest


Hugh Jordan Of The Sunday World Gives Us A Peek Inside The Kirk & Iris Love Nest.

ToyBoy Kirk Wrote Of The Affair On His Bedroom Wall
"Sex, I am no king,
I wear no crown,
But desperate times,
They seem over".

In another part of the room Kirk wrote.
"But I am still awakened - somehow,it troubles me".

Sunday World.

Thursday, 14 January 2010

Probe into Adams' claims over brother


Published Date: 14 January 2010
AN Assembly investigation has begun into claims that Gerry Adams failed to report his brother's alleged child sex abuse to the authorities.
Mr Adams says he has believed for 22 years that his brother Liam is a paedophile, but in that time his sibling is reported to have enjoyed an extensive career within Sinn Fein and in youth work – both in Dundalk and in a youth project only 300 yards from Gerry Adams' office in west Belfast.

Ian Paisley Jnr last night said he had lodged an eight-point complaint to the Assembly's Standards and Privileges Committee and that he received confirmation that it has been accepted.

"My complaint is that Gerry Adams has been in breach of the Assembly code of conduct in that he knew about the abuse allegations against his brother and did nothing about them for a long period of time," said Mr Paisley.

He had been preparing the complaint for some weeks and it had been a personal initiative which he had informed his party about, he added.

Liam Adams is wanted by the PSNI over claims that he sexually abused his daughter Aine Tyrell since she was four. Gerry Adams has gone on record to say that he believed his niece's allegations from the very outset, over two decades ago.

But speaking on Radio Ulster recently, Mr Adams denied "erroneous and untruthful" claims his brother was ever officially nominated as a Sinn Fein candidate in Louth, claiming that when he heard this, he "moved immediately to both stop that and to get him dumped out of Sinn Fein without telling people why".

Gerry Adams also said he reported the allegations about his brother to Clonard Youth Centre, where Liam worked as a youth worker from 1998 to 2003.

However, the management of Clonard Youth Centre said they have "no record whatsoever" of the matter and would have taken action if they had been informed.

An extensive list of claims about Liam Adams' high-profile activities in Sinn Fein and youth work – which challenge Gerry Adams' claims – have been uncovered by the Sunday Tribune.

Liam is reported to have:

Worked as a youth worker in Gerry Adams' constituency at Clonard Youth Centre, from 1998 to 2003, only 300 yards from Sinn Fein's Falls Road offices.

Entertained Gerry Adams at his second wedding in Dundalk, after his niece had told him Liam had been raping her as a child.

Had Gerry Adams canvass for him during an election in Dundalk in June 1997, with the pair being photographed together.

Chaired the Edentubber Martyrs commemoration in Co Louth attended by 1,000 republicans in November 1997, and introduced the main speaker, Mitchel McLaughlin.

Was Sinn Fein's most senior official in Co Louth – chairman of the Louth comhairle ceantair – liaising directly with the national Sinn Fein leadership.

Was mentioned 11 times in Gerry Adams' 1996 autobiography, with no suggestion he had done anything wrong or had been ostracised.

A spokeswoman for the Assembly said that it was forbidden to discuss investigations of members without the agreement of the Standards and Privileges committee.

Belfast Newsletter.

Wednesday, 13 January 2010

Norman Baxter Lied to MP's Over Omagh Bombing.


Omagh Bomb top cop Norman Baxter, RUC / PSNI has resisted requests to explain his lies to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee, Norman fabricated lies in his evidence about events and has been challenged over the lies. The committee has confirmed that they will include in it's evidence the challenges to Normans testimony, Norman has refused to comment outside of Parliament as Kevin Fulton has threatened to take legal action against Norman.

Sunday, 10 January 2010

Paisley 'beyond fury' over Robinson sleaze


Paisley 'beyond fury' over Robinson sleaze
Iris had affairs with father of 19-year-old and another DUP member
Suzanne Breen, Northern Editor.

Passing of the torch: Eileen and Ian Paisley with Peter and Iris Robinson at a DUP rally to mark the end of Paisley's reign as party leader in May 2008
The Rev Ian Paisley is "beyond fury" following revelations about the behaviour of Peter and Iris Robinson, sources have told the Sunday Tribune.

The former DUP leader is deeply saddened by fears that the party he founded, and led for 37 years, could face heavy electoral losses if urgent action isn't taken.

It is understood that Paisley, as a family man, is appalled that Iris Robinson had an affair with a teenager she had known from the age of nine and who was in an emotionally vulnerable position following his father's death.

Meanwhile, it emerged this weekend that Iris Robinson also had an affair with 19-year-old Kirk McCambley's father, a butcher who died from cancer. She had another affair with a fellow DUP member in the 1980s which was witnessed by the security forces.

Paisley is understood to share the feelings of many people across Northern Ireland that the DUP vote could collapse in May's Westminster election. While the majority of DUP MPs still publicly support Peter Robinson, a growing number of senior colleagues have grave doubts about his future.

Willie Frazer of Fair, a group representing thousands of IRA victims, is also demanding Robinson resign. North Belfast MP Nigel Dodds is favourite to take over with East Derry MP Gregory Campbell as his deputy. However, it is unclear if Dodds wants the job.

"Peter must go and go as quickly as possible. He is damaging us all," a party officer said. One prominent politician stated: "The danger is that we will all be punished at the polls for the Robinsons' behaviour."

While not calling for Robinson's resignation, a veteran member said: "This is the lowest point in our party's history. It's a grim situation." Another senior DUP figure said: "The next few days will be vital in determining whether Peter can recover his position politically or whether he is regarded as an electoral liability."

There are calls for a full investigation into all the Robinsons' past dealings with two property developers, Ken Campbell and the now deceased Fred Fraser, who helped fund the business of Iris Robinson's lover.

Peter Robinson has sought legal opinion from a departmental barrister as to the correctness of his actions in not disclosing his wife's financial transaction to the appropriate authorities. Traditional Unionist Voice leader Jim Allister said this was wholly inadequate and demanded "a proper independent investigation".

While Paisley shares Iris Robinson's religious objections to homosexuality, he is said to be deeply disturbed that she was lecturing others while committing adultery.

Paisley was one of three DUP MPs who didn't issue a statement supporting Peter Robinson in advance of the BBC Spotlight programme. It is understood he believed MPs should have watched the programme and considered the allegations before giving Robinson their absolute backing.

Iris Robinson's affair with Kirk McCambley isn't her first. She had an affair with a fellow DUP member in the 1980s.

It was witnessed by security force members voluntarily guarding the Robinsons' house after the RUC officially withdrew their protection over Peter Robinson's loyalist invasion into Clontibret.

Fair director Willie Frazer, said: "Iris Robinson securing £50,000 from businessmen for her lover contrasts strongly with the DUP's lack of largesse for IRA victims.

"The widows of security-force members living on the poverty line are very angry. Peter Robinson must resign. It's time to rebuild the credibility of unionist politicians."

A Panorama programme tomorrow on the Robinsons will place further pressure on the DUP leader.

Sunday Tribune.
January 10, 2010

Wednesday, 6 January 2010

Former Omagh Bomb Top Cop lied to MP's.


Former Omagh Bomb Top Cop lied to MP's.

Former Omagh Bomb top cop Norman Baxter RUC / PSNI, is keeping very quiet over claims that he purposely lied to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee in his evidence, former British agent Kevin Fulton challenged Mr. Baxter over his lies, so far Mr. Baxter has made no comment and has not repeated the lies outside of Parliament.

Sunday, 3 January 2010

Gerry Adams 'rewrites history'


It defies belief that the most powerful republican in the land could not have asked his alleged paedophile brother to quit the Sinn Féin canvass, writes Northern Editor Suzanne Breen.

Gerry Adams, election agent Fra Browne, and Liam Adams
123Sinn Féin election agent Fra Browne re­m­embers the canvass team set­- ting off through Dundalk in high spirits on a gloriously sunny day. They chatted to locals in Market Square and strolled into the Longwalk shopping centre bantering with customers.

The 6 June 1997 general election was just days away and the canvassers were working hard for candidate Owenie Hanratty.

"Gerry and Liam Adams were with us. The Adams' brothers were not estranged in any way. They got on great together," Browne recalls.

Browne is angry with the Sinn Féin president: "No one on that canvass except Gerry Adams knew that Liam was a suspected paedophile. Unlike Gerry Adams, had we known, we'd have chased Liam. An alleged child abuser has no place on any party's election team. Gerry Adams kept us in the dark."

Browne's account, like those of others on that Sinn Féin canvass, contradicts the version of events given by a Sinn Féin spokesman to the Irish Times. Last weekend, the Sunday Tribune published photographs of Gerry and Liam Adams canvassing at a time when the Sinn Féin president had claimed he was "estranged" from his brother.

Amazingly, the pair were canvassing together 10 years after Liam's daughter, Áine Tyrell, had told the Sinn Féin president that her father repeatedly raped her from the age of four. Gerry Adams had said he believed Áine.

After our photographs were published, a Sinn Féin spokesman told Monday's Irish Times that Gerry Adams couldn't have prevented his brother joining the canvass: "What was he to do: stand up and say on a loudspeaker 'there are allegations of abuse against my brother'?"

The spokesman denied that the photographs blew holes in Gerry Adams' claims to have speedily moved to have his brother "dumped" from the party in Dundalk.

Adams' argument is incredible. It's inconceivable that the most powerful republican in Ireland – politically and militarily – couldn't have told his brother to leave the canvass. It beggars belief that the Sinn Féin president, who has conducted top-level negotiations with presidents and prime ministers, couldn't have successfully had a quiet word in Liam's ear in Dundalk on that sunny afternoon.

If that hadn't worked, then yes, Gerry Adams could have grabbed a loudspeaker; it would have been better than allowing an alleged paedophile to canvass.

But far from being an uninvited guest, as the Sinn Féin spokesman claimed, Fra Browne says Liam was welcomed by Gerry.

Hard-working activist

"There was no animosity or tension between them. Gerry wasn't in any way uncomfortable in Liam's company. Liam didn't gatecrash the canvass. Pretending he did is rewriting history. Liam was very much part of the Sinn Féin team. He didn't appear out of thin air and just tag onto us that day. He was active in Sinn Féin in Dundalk for years. He was a hard-working activist. He was always talking about his brother, saying, 'I'll see Gerry about that'."

There were 20 people on the canvass. The selected few posed for a photograph for the local newspaper, the Argus.

"The candidate, Owenie Hanratty, his wife Marie, myself as the election agent, and Gerry and Liam Adams were chosen. Gerry was happy with that. It's not like Liam forced his way into the picture and Gerry could do nothing about it," Fra Browne says.

He is disgusted that the Sinn Féin president's inaction meant local republicans ended up canvassing and being photographed with an alleged child rapist.

"I would never knowingly sit and pose for a photograph with a suspected paedophile. I'm very angry that this picture was taken and that Gerry Adams allowed it. As Sinn Féin's election agent in Co Louth, I'd never have let a suspected paedophile on any canvass. I'm stunned Gerry Adams did. It sullies the name of the republican movement and gives the idea that we protected a suspected paedophile – something no honourable republican would do. I joined Sinn Féin in 1966 at the age of 19. Republicans have always depended on each other for honesty. But Gerry Adams wasn't honest with us."

In a statement to the Sunday Tribune, Owenie Hanratty said: "Neither my wife Marie nor myself had any idea Liam Adams was a suspected paedophile. Had we known we would most certainly not have allowed ourselves to be photographed with him under any circumstances.

"As the Sinn Féin Dáil candidate, I would not have allowed Liam Adams on the canvass had I known he was a suspected paedophile. No republicans in Co Louth knew Liam Adams faced child abuse allegations. We weren't told."

Hanratty said Liam Adams had "worked hard and was very active in Sinn Féin" in Dundalk.

Veteran republican Hanratty had secured the nomination over Liam Adams at a selection convention in Dundalk's Imperial Hotel. Liam Adams publicly withdrew from the race at the start of the meeting when it became clear, from the configuration of the crowd, that Hanratty would defeat him.

Sinn Féin's claim to the Irish Times on 28 December that there was nothing contradictory about our photographs and Gerry Adams' publicly-stated position on his brother is nonsensical.

On 21 December, Gerry Adams had told RTE: "When I heard Liam was in Sinn Féin, and when I heard somebody was putting it about that perhaps he would be a candidate, I moved immediately both to stop that and get him dumped out of Sinn Féin... I moved very, very quickly. He wasn't a contender. There was no nomination by Liam Adams in the Dundalk area. There was no convention in which his name was put forward."

Yet on 5 October 1996 – eight months before the canvass – the Dundalk Democrat reported that a selection convention would be held later that month in the Imperial Hotel. It named Owenie Hanratty and Liam Adams as those seeking the nomination.

Contrary to Sinn Féin claims, the convention took place. The Sunday Tribune has statements from republicans present. But not only was Gerry Adams canvassing with Liam eight months after his brother's name was first publicly mentioned in connection with the nomination, Liam Adams remained a prominent Sinn Féin member afterwards.

The Dundalk Democrat of 15 November 1997 – five months after the infamous canvass – states that Sinn Féin member Liam Adams played a prominent role in the Edentubber 40th anniversary commemoration, just outside Dundalk, to honour five IRA members killed in the border campaign.

"Proceedings were chaired by Liam Adams of Sinn Féin in Co Louth. The main address was given by Sinn Féin's national chairman, Mitchel McLaughlin," the Dundalk Democrat states. The commemoration had taken place six days earlier.

The proven details of Liam Adam's Sinn Féin activity ­also totally contradict the party spokesman's claims in the Irish Independent last Monday.

"Liam was expelled after the election and as soon as Gerry realised he was in the party he took measures to remove him," the spokesman said.

Liam Adams wasn't speedily expelled. He was still well-respected and active in the party 13 months after his name was publicly associated with the general election nomination and Gerry Adams' alleged moves to expel him. Contrary to Sinn Féin's portrayal of Liam Adams' role in the party as short-lived and minor, Dundalk republicans insist he was a leading member for at least seven years.

Prominent role

He played a prominent role in the official opening of the new Sinn Féin offices in Williamson Place by Martin McGuinness in June 1996 when he was chair of Louth Comharirle Ceantair. There is no suggestion McGuinness knew he was a suspected paedophile. The Sunday Tribune has uncovered photographs of the event. At the opening, Liam Adams posed for pictures with veteran republican Joe Cahill against a picture of the GPO in Dublin.

Local sources say Liam Adams left Dundalk late in August 1998, still a Sinn Féin member. In the run-up to the May 1998 Good Friday agreement referendum, he was present at a BBC Radio Ulster Talkback debate in the Imperial Hotel, chaired by David Dunseith.

Many Sinn Féin representatives and members are strongly committed to transparency over child abuse. Their president's actions don't in any way reflect on them.

In last week's Sunday Tribune, we asked Gerry Adams a series of questions. He hasn't answered, so we will repeat them here.

Why did you attend the wedding of your brother Liam and stand smiling for photographs when you believed him to be a paedophile? Why was Liam allowed to be in Sinn Féin for at least seven years? Why, in your 1996 autobiography Before the Dawn, did you make 11 references to "our Liam", with no negative insinuation, almost a decade after you believed he had raped his daughter Áine?

Liam Adams worked for several youth projects in Dundalk and west Belfast. You claim that, whenever you became aware he held such positions, you informed those projects. Where is your written record of this? Why haven't you disclosed the names of those you spoke to in the projects?

When you saw Liam so successfully seeking and securing jobs working with young people, why didn't you make your concerns public? You could have done this in general terms without compromising Áine's identity. Why did you stay publicly silent when children in your own west Belfast constituency were potentially at risk?

In April 2006, Liam Adams was photographed smiling with Sinn Féin Assembly member Fra McCann and former party chairman Tom Hartley on the Falls Road. He was surrounded by children from the Beechmount Community Project where he worked. There is no suggestion that McCann or Hartley knew Liam Adams was a suspected paedophile. The previous year, Liam was photographed with children at Belfast's St Patrick's Day parade.

In November, Mary Lou McDonald, who has strenuously defended her leader, accused "the most powerful men in the Catholic church in the Dublin diocese" of "a gross betrayal" of children. Unfortunately for her party, the same complaint can now be levelled against the most powerful man in Sinn Féin.

January 3, 2010
Sunday Tribune

EXCLUSIVE Revealed: SF cover-up of Liam Adams' senior role


Sunday Tribune investigation reveals how alleged abuser chaired IRA 'martyrs' event.

By Suzanne Breen, Northern Editor.

Suspected paedophile and senior Sinn Féin member Liam Adams chaired a commemoration for IRA martyrs over a year after his brother Gerry claims to have "moved immediately" to have him expelled from the party.

Liam Adams chaired the Edentubber Martyrs' commemoration in Co Louth attended by 1,000 republicans on 9 November 1997. He introduced the main speaker, Sinn Féin national chairman Mitchel McLaughlin. The event was reported in The Dundalk Democrat.

A Sunday Tribune investigation has uncovered a massive cover-up of Liam Adams' Sinn Féin involvement. He is portrayed as playing a short-lived, minor role. Louth TD Arthur Morgan claimed Liam Adams "was never a party officer".

Today, we reveal Liam Adams was Sinn Féin's most senior official in Co Louth. He was chairman of the Louth comhairle ceantair, liaising directly with the national Sinn Féin leadership.

In June 1996, he welcomed Martin McGuinness to Dundalk and stood beside McGuinness at the official opening of Sinn Féin's new office in the town. In Dundalk's The Argus, McGuinness is photographed cutting the ribbon with "Liam Adams, chairman of Louth comhairle ceantair" by his side. It's inconceivable Gerry Adams didn't know of his brother's senior position then.

Liam Adams is wanted by the PSNI on charges of repeatedly raping his daughter, Aine Tyrell, from the age of four. He denies the allegations but Gerry Adams has said that when Aine told him in 1987, he believed her.

As Louth comhairle ceantair chairman, Liam Adams was over all Sinn Féin cumainn in the county and was their go-between with the leadership. He couldn't have held this position without the national leadership's approval.

Gerry Adams admits knowing Liam was in Sinn Féin only when he heard he was seeking the Sinn Féin 1997 Dáil nomination in Louth. The Sunday Tribune can reveal Liam sought this in October 1996. Gerry Adams said he then "moved very, very quickly" to have him "dumped" from Sinn Féin.

Yet eight months later, Gerry Adams canvassed in Dundalk with Liam and a further five months after that Liam chaired the Edentubber 40th anniversary commemoration for five IRA men killed in the Border campaign.

After Bodenstown, it's the most significant individual commemoration in the republican calendar. A veteran republican said: "I'm appalled the leadership let this man take part in such an important republican event."

The Sunday Tribune can reveal that, apart from attending Liam's second wedding, Gerry Adams also attended the christening of one of Liam's children in Dundalk's Holy Cross Church in 1997 – 10 years after he believed Liam was a paedophile.

Meanwhile, Sinn Féin's 1997 Louth election agent, Fra Browne, has contradicted claims by Gerry Adams' spokesman that the Sinn Féin president hadn't wanted Liam on the Dundalk canvass but was in a difficult position when he turned up.

"The Adams brothers weren't estranged. They got on great together," Browne said. "Liam didn't gate-crash the canvass. Pretending he did is rewriting history."

Both Browne and Sinn Féin Dáil candidate Owenie Hanratty are angry that they unknowingly canvassed with a suspected paedophile. Both men have since left the party.


January 3, 2010.
Sunday Tribune

Friday, 1 January 2010

Ex Police Chief Lied Over Omagh Bombing


Ex Police Chief lied to MP's over Omagh Bombing.

Ex Police Chief Norman Baxter lied to members of Parliament in his evidence to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee, Norman lied over comments he made regarding Kevin Fulton, . Mr Baxter fabricated his evidence saying that former British Army & MI5 agent Kevin Fulton had made a statement saying that he had lied over information he gave in regard to the Omagh Bombing, Fulton was quick to rubbish Baxter's evidence, Fulton's solicitor has rubbished Baxter's evidence to the committee in regard to his client Kevin Fulton.

Questions are now being asked in legal circles about evidence given by Norman Baxter in a number of court cases in Northern Ireland.
Norman Baxter was a member of the RUC and PSNI.