Wednesday, 28 April 2010

Insider, by Gerry Bradley & Brian Feeney.



After reading Insider by Gerry Bradley with Brian Feeney one could only draw the conclusion that Whitey Bradley thinks very highly of himself and that anything that went wrong was never his fault. After reading the spectacular failed operation against Police officer Derek Martindale, Bradley points out to the reader the number of suspicious happenings before the operation, and his suspicions that things had been compromised by the security forces, if this is the case one can only come to the conclusion that Bradley was not as smart as he thinks he is, in fact anyone in the IRA with an ounce of whit would have walked away from that IRA operation.
Indeed on reading Bradley's book it is clear that he was anything but professional
"He kept on getting caught" another thing to note in the book Bradley keeps on saying that he is not a "Tout" or an "informer" this is the same mantra that all touts and informers are trained to say when they are confronted by the internal security team, it's interesting that Bradley has spouted this over two years ago even before anyone has even suggested he was one!


As Bradley points out in his book, he and other members of the IRA stole from small businesses and private individuals in N. Ireland to fund the IRA, Bradley wont admit they where common criminals, this means that the IRA where no different from burglars and thieves.

The main reason Kevin Fulton stuck so close to Gerard Bradley was because, in Fultons own words "GERARD BRADLEY WAS LOOSE AS FU*K, I had no problem getting information from him".



IRA bosses force out godfather of terror
(Joe Oliver, The People)

A top republican - once named in Parliament as an IRA Godfather - has been 'stood down' in north Belfast, The People can reveal. The decision to sideline Eddie Copeland has sent shockwaves through the republican movement. He has been replaced by evil sectarian killer Robert 'Cheeser' Crawford - a hated double murderer freed under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement. Crawford, 45, also from the Ardoyne area of the city, is considered a hardliner in republican circles.
The overthrow of Copeland was shrouded in mystery last night but republican sources did say that the move is not linked to change of strategy - even though Crawford is said to have been sceptical of the peace process and has opposed the idea of any Provo weapons being handed in. Another republican source said Copeland had been out of favour following an incident almost two years ago when the IRA ceasefire was called into question.
Copeland, 32, has long been a loyalist hate figure and has had a number of close brushes with death. As one of the most senior republican figures in north Belfast he was top of loyalist Johnny Adair's personal hit list. But in 1993 he was nearly killed by a soldier. He sustained bullet wounds to the chest and abdomen when the soldier opened up on him and other mourners outside the home of Shankill bomber Thomas Begley.
The soldier was later jailed for 10 years - and Copeland received £27,500 for the injuries he suffered in the shooting. The following year David Trimble used the cloak of Parliamentary privilege to name Copeland and two others as "IRA Godfathers" during a debate on the renewal of anti-terrorist powers.
Mr Trimble claimed that Brian Gillen was commander of the Provos in Belfast. He added: "There is the gentleman who probably planned the Shankill Road bomb, one Eddie Copeland."
Crawford is still said to be a man loyalists would love to 'take out'. It's believed he has been involved in discussions regarding republican riots at the Ardoyne interface with loyalist Glenbryn in north Belfast.
His predecessor, Copeland, hit the headlines three years ago when he was at the centre of a political storm after being awarded £60,000 for injuries he received when a booby-trap bomb exploded under his car. He was reversing away from his mother's home in December 1996 when the device erupted, injuring his arm and blowing away the calf muscle of his right leg.
The NIO tried to block the compensation claim on the grounds that he had been engaged in terrorism. Copeland, whose father John was shot dead by a solider in 1971, was also named by a Crown lawyer two years ago as "the senior IRA man in the north of the city" after he was charged with abducting and threatening to kill a drug dealer. But when the case came to trial last August the charges were withdrawn.
The man said to have replaced him as republican leader in north Belfast - Cheeser Crawford - was part of a heavily armed Provo hit team foiled during a bid to murder top cop Derek Martindale in 1994. They were nabbed red-handed by a special police unit which swooped on their hijacked van in the Belmont area of the city.
Crawford and David Adams, a cousin of Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams, were later jailed for a total of 25 years on a string of charges including conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to cause an explosion.
A third man, Paul Stitt, was jailed for 22 years for the same crimes and two others sentenced to 10 years for false imprisonment and hi-jacking. At the time Crawford was out on licence after being convicted of murdering two young Protestant men in Belfast in 1975.
June 22, 2003________________
This article appeared first in The People on June 22, 2003.
Blanketmen: An Untold Story of the H-Block Hunger Strikeby Richard O'Rawe
David Trimble: The Price of Peaceby Frank Millar


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http://www.nuzhound.com/articles/Sunday_People/arts2003/jun22_top_republican_stood_down.php

Tuesday, 27 April 2010

Slobbering Norman.


Slobbering Norman. ( Norman Baxter that is )

It's still on the agenda, Norman has again been challenged by Kevin Fulton to explain why he purposely lied to the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee in regard to the statements made by Kevin Fulton to the Police Ombudsman's Office, Norman refused to make any comment, as one person rightfully put it "Slobbering Norman"

Norman told the committee that Kevin Fulton admitted to police that he had lied to the Ombudsman's office over his claims over the Omagh Bombing, Fulton challenged Norman Baxter for fabricating the untrue claims, Baxter has refused to comment or to repeat his statement outside Parliament.

Sunday, 18 April 2010

Wife of army agent to sue Stakeknife & MoD.



Wife of IRA informer in move to sue ‘Stakeknife’

Saturday, 17 April 2010


The wife of an IRA informer has launched a High Court bid for permission to sue a man alleged to have been the highest-ranking British agent within the Provisionals.


Lawyers for Margaret Keeley want to be allowed to name west Belfast man Freddie Scappaticci as a co-defendant in her damages claim against the Chief Constable.

Scappaticci (64) denies allegations that he was the military spy codenamed Stakeknife.

Mrs Keeley, whose husband is the one-time MI5 agent known as Kevin Fulton, has issued proceedings against the police for alleged wrongful arrest and false imprisonment.

The case has been brought over her alleged detention at the Castlereagh holding centre in 1994 after an IRA attempt to murder senior RUC detective Derek Martindale in east Belfast.

She claims that after being released she was taken to a house in the New Lodge, north Belfast and interrogated by a number of IRA men. Mrs Keeley says she later suffered a nervous breakdown as a result of her ordeal.

Scappaticci was thrust into the spotlight in 2003 when British and Irish media claimed he was the double agent Stakeknife, an allegation he categorically denied. He has since secured a court order banning any publication of his current whereabouts.

As part of Mrs Keeley's case she is now attempting to widen her claim to include both Scappaticci and the Ministry of Defence.

After a brief hearing in the Masters Court, Mrs Keeley's solicitor, Kevin Winters, confirmed: “The application today was to seek the court's permission to join Mr Scappaticci and the MoD as co-defendants in the action.

“It was adjourned for four weeks to allow his lawyers to prepare and file a replying affidavit.”

If the application is granted writs will then be served on both Scappaticci and the MoD.

Belfast Telegraph.