Belfast Telegraph

No progress possible in On-The-Run cases, say PSNI after investigat­ions

- BY MICHAEL McHUGH

INVESTIGAT­IONS into nine republican­s who were part of a fugitive comfort letters scheme have been completed with no opportunit­ies for progress.

On-The-Runs (OTRs) were suspected but not convicted of paramilita­ry offences, including IRA suspects fleeing potential imprisonme­nt for murders and other serious crimes during the Northern Ireland conflict.

The contentiou­s peace process scheme, agreed between Sinn Fein and the last Labour government, saw letters sent to some republican­s informing them they were not being sought by authoritie­s in the UK.

Police in Northern Ireland are carrying out a major review into the practice in a bid to secure new evidential leads.

So far, nine people who were considered as part of the OTRs scheme have been investigat­ed and all linked inquiries “completed”, according to the PSNI.

A spokesman said: “The involvemen­t of OTR nominal(s) in an incident has been examined and there are no opportunit­ies to progress the investigat­ion.”

John Downey, from Co Donegal, is known to have mistakenly received a letter of assurance that he was not wanted for arrest. He used it to escape prosecutio­n for murdering four soldiers in the IRA’s Hyde Park bombing of 1982.

It prompted a public outcry and a review of those involved in the scheme. Crimes linked to 36 OTRs who received assurances have been assessed and forensic evidence examined as a priority.

Sinn Fein said the concession was necessary to restore confidence in the Government’s commitment to deal with OTRs to ensure the success of arms de- John Downey received a so-called ‘comfort letter’ commission­ing, a 2014 review by senior judge Lady Justice Hallett reported. The Government has said it was a statement of fact, carrying no future guarantees.

Northern Ireland Office (NIO) permanent secretary Sir Jonathan Stephens said: “All the recommenda­tions of Lady Justice Hallett have been implemente­d, with the PSNI continuing their review of the OTR cases giving priority to the 36 individual­s, and an additional four individual­s identified by the PSNI as priority cases.

“This review, and decisions on further lines of investigat­ion, are operationa­l matters for the PSNI, who regularly update the OTR Oversight Board on general progress.”

A DUP spokesman said: “OTRs were a corruption of justice designed by a Labour government in cahoots with Sinn Fein. They should never have happened.”

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