Belfast Telegraph

Review of RUC probe into Kincora reports to conclude this year

- BY MICHAEL McHUGH

THE Police Ombudsman’s investigat­ion into child sex abuse at the notorious Kincora Boys’ Home in Northern Ireland is to conclude this year.

Ombudsman Dr Michael Maguire launched the review after alleged victims complained about the RUC handling of reports in the 1980s of wrongdoing.

A separate public inquiry, which published its findings in January this year, has already rejected claims that senior establishm­ent figures used the East Belfast institutio­n to target children. Instead, it blamed failings by the health authoritie­s and the RUC after dozens of residents raised concerns.

The Ombudsman’s office said: “We are investigat­ing a total of seven complaints about how police dealt with reports of child sex abuse at the Kincora Boys’ Home in East Belfast.

“The allegation­s include that police failed to fully investigat­e those reports, that they knew abuse was taking place but failed to act, and that police investigat­ions were compromise­d by other security agencies.

“The Ombudsman’s investigat­ion will be concluded during 2017.”

The Ombudsman’s office liaised with Judge Sir Anthony Hart, who carried out the wide-ranging Historical Institutio­nal Abuse (HIA) inquiry into the allegation­s, to ensure there was minimal duplicatio­n of effort and that victims and survivors were dealt with compassion­ately.

The RUC held its own Kincora inquiries from 1980 to 1985.

Six people were imprisoned for sexual abuse as a result of the specialist RUC team’s work, including three associated with other homes.

William McGrath, Raymond Semple and Joseph Mains, senior care staff at Kincora, were jailed in 1981 for abusing 11 boys.

Sir Anthony’s inquiry dismissed long-standing claims that senior politician­s, civil servants and businessme­n were complicit in a paedophile ring that operated at the home in the 1970s.

The report also rejected associated allegation­s that the UK security services knew what was going on and, instead of intervenin­g, used the informatio­n to blackmail the establishm­ent figures involved.

Publishing the HIA findings in January, Sir Anthony said of Kincora: “It was not a homosexual brothel, nor was it used by any of the security agencies as a honey pot to entrap, blackmail or otherwise exploit homosexual­s.

“It is now time to finally lay these unfounded myths to rest.”

Earlier this year a former Kincora resident said he would mount a legal challenge against the inquiry’s findings. Richard Kerr, who alleges he was abused by “very powerful people” with links to the Kincora home, does not accept the conclusion­s of Sir Anthony’s four-year HIA inquiry.

Earlier this year, the man who attempted to expose the historical sex abuse at the notorious Kincora boys’ home in Belfast has lambasted an inquiry in a scathing 14-page letter.

Former Army captain and intelligen­ce officer Colin Wallace slammed the Historical Institutio­nal Abuse inquiry’s report on the Kincora paedophile cover-up in the 1970s.

Mr Wallace, whose attempts to expose the abuse of young boys were overthrown by his superiors, has contacted the inquiry’s solicitor, Patrick Butler, to raise concerns about what he claims are “factual inaccuraci­es and misleading informatio­n”.

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 ??  ?? Left: The Kincora Boys’ Home. Above: Police Ombudsman Dr Michael Maguire
Left: The Kincora Boys’ Home. Above: Police Ombudsman Dr Michael Maguire

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