Belfast Telegraph

Adams given date for jail escape appeal

- BY ALAN ERWIN

GERRY Adams’ legal bid to overturn historical conviction­s for attempting to escape from prison more than 40 years ago will be heard next month.

Senior judges in Belfast have set aside a full day for the appeal being mounted by the Sinn Fein leader.

Mr Adams is challengin­g conviction­s in 1975 for two alleged attempts to escape from jail.

He was among hundreds held without trial under an internment programme introduced by the British Government during the early years of the Troubles.

First interned in March 1972, he was released in June that year to take part in secret talks in London. Mr Adams was rearrested in July 1973 at a house in Belfast and interned again at the Long Kesh camp.

On Christmas Eve 1973 he was one of three prisoners apprehende­d by wardens while allegedly trying to cut their way through its perimeter fencing.

In July 1974, according to government files, he again attempted to escape by switching with a visitor. He was later sentenced to 18 months.

The Louth TD’s bid to overturn his conviction­s centres on the recovery of a document from the National Archives in London.

During a review at Belfast’s Court of Appeal, Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan confirmed a January date for the hearing.

 ??  ?? Hearing: Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams
Hearing: Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams

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