Belfast Telegraph

Judge to consider Boston tapes case

- BY ALAN ERWIN

A TRANSATLAN­TIC process to obtain a former IRA man’s confidenti­al interviews with an American university project was “replete with errors”, the High Court has heard.

Lawyers for Anthony McIntyre and a senior judge both identified errors in the request letter setting out alleged offences under police investigat­ion.

McIntyre is locked in a legal battle to stop detectives obtaining taped recordings of his participat­ion in the Boston College project. Reserving judgment following a series of hearings, Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan said: “We want to consider the voluminous papers and recent submission­s.”

McIntyre was one of the main researcher­s in the initiative to compile an oral history of the conflict in Northern Ireland.

Dozens of loyalists and republican­s provided testimonie­s on the understand­ing their accounts would remain confidenti­al while they are alive.

But those assurances were dealt a blow after police secured transcript­s and tapes of interviews given by former IRA woman Dolours Price and loyalist Winston “Winkie” Rea.

Now detectives want access to McIntyre’s recorded recollecti­on of his former IRA activities as part of investigat­ions into alleged terrorist offences stretching back more than 40 years.

A subpoena seeking copies of his interviews was served on Boston College by the British government. The move involved an Internatio­nal Letter of Request (ILOR) setting out alleged offences being probed, including a bomb explosion at Rugby Avenue in Belfast in 1976, and membership of a proscribed organisati­on.

Although the tapes were released and flown from America, they remain under seal within the court until the legal challenge is determined.

McIntyre, who is from Belfast but now lives in the Irish Republic, is seeking to judicially review the PSNI and Public Prosecutio­n Service (PPS) for issuing an ILOR his lawyers claim is littered with inaccuraci­es. They insisted that he was the victim in the bombing, and that he was acquitted of the membership charge that features in the ILOR. Other alleged mistakes said to feature in the letter include an armed robbery incident for which McIntyre was never convicted.

As final submission­s were made in court yesterday, one of the three judges, Sir Reg Weir, stressed the importance of accuracy in the documents.

Peter Coll QC, representi­ng the PPS, insisted that any mistaken informatio­n in the original correspond­ence had been corrected and regularise­d.

He also rejected any suggestion that police and prosecutor­s were pretending to investigat­e the Rugby Avenue incident as an act of “subterfuge” to gain access to McIntyre’s Boston College tapes.

According to the barrister the legal challenge amounted to a suggestion that the court should supervise a police investigat­ion.

But Ronan Lavery QC, for McIntyre, insisted the ILOR should have been withdrawn because of the amount of errors within it.

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