Belfast Telegraph

Bomber who refused electronic tag fails to overturn jail recall

- BY ALAN ERWIN BY LAURA ELSTON

A DISSIDENT republican convicted of having explosives has lost a High Court battle over being returned to prison a day after he walked free.

Neil Hegarty’s release on licence was revoked last December after he allegedly denied entry to G4S security staff to install electronic monitoring equipment at his home in Derry.

The 52-year-old’s lawyers argued the decision was unlawfully based on false assertions that he intended not to co-operate with the tagging condition.

But a judge dismissed his case after rejecting claims the Department of Justice had acted irrational­ly.

Mr Justice McCloskey said: “The recall determinat­ion of the official concerned plainly lay within the range of reasonable decisions available to him.”

Hegarty was one of three men sentenced to 10 years for possession of explosives.

Police stopped them in a car containing an anti-personnel device in the Creggan area of the city in December 2012.

Hegarty served five years behind bars before being released on licence conditions which included compliance with electronic monitoring.

But the following day the PSNI informed a parole commission­er that he failed to admit security staff to his home to fit the equipment, the court heard.

A police report alleged G4S personnel who went to the mid-terrace property at Benevenagh Gardens observed a number of men inside and were refused entry.

It was also claimed that before leaving prison Hegarty had revealed he would not be consenting to having the equipment fitted.

The parole commission­er concluded that he had displayed “wilful disengagem­ent” with the licence process and recommende­d the revocation.

Hegarty’s legal team challenged the accuracy of evidence against him and questioned the descriptio­n of the house security staff who said they visited.

Seeking to have the licence revocation quashed, they argued that the commission­er had unreasonab­ly accepted unattribut­ed, unexplaine­d and false assertions of fact as evidence without a proper enquiry.

Claims that Hegarty had either revealed his intention to refuse co-operation or entry to his home were incorrect, it was contended.

Ruling on the challenge, Mr Justice McCloskey identified issues in the police dossier provided to the commission­er.

“The gloss in this report relating to ‘wilful disengagem­ent’ and ‘affirmatio­n’ was opaque, unparticul­arised and, having regard to the totality of the evidence, misleading,” he said.

However, he held that the threshold for judicial interventi­on had not been overcome.

Following the verdict Hegarty’s solicitor Ciaran Shiels of Madden and Finucane confirmed his intention to lodge an appeal. PRINCE Harry and Meghan Markle met one of the armed forces’ smallest recruits as they visited Scotland for the first time — a Shetland pony.

Corporal Cruachan IV, the mascot of the Royal Regiment of Scotland, is famed for trying to upstage the Queen when she visited Stirling Castle last summer by nibbling on her posy.

But he was on his best behaviour when he met the prince and his bride-to-be as they made their first joint visit to Scotland, starting with a trip to Edinburgh Castle.

Hundreds of well-wishers had braved cold and wet conditions to meet the couple, who were carrying out their fourth joint engagement together. A visit to Northern Ireland is expected to follow before their May 19 wedding.

On the eve of Valentine’s Day, one male well-wisher gave Ms Markle a bunch of roses and told her “Don’t marry Harry, marry me” as she and Harry greeted crowds.

Meghan was dressed in a long, navy blue and dark green wool and cashmere-blend Burberry coat yesterday.

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