Belfast Telegraph

IRA victim’s father loses legal fight to prosecute Scappaticc­i for perjury over British spy role

- BY ALAN ERWIN

THE father of an IRA murder victim has lost a High Court battle to have perjury charges brought against a west Belfast man for denying he was the top British agent Stakeknife.

Frank Mulhern challenged the Public Prosecutio­n Service’s alleged failure to have Freddie Scappaticc­i face criminal proceeding­s.

But judges dismissed his bid to secure a judicial review after ruling that a continuing police investigat­ion into dozens of murders linked to the spy will also examine the perjury claims.

Mrs Justice Keegan said: “We consider that it would arguably be a breach of the (prosecutor­ial) code to pre-empt the outcome of Operation Kenova and make a decision without being fully informed while that investigat­ive work is ongoing.”

The case centred on an affidavit sworn by 72-year-old Scappaticc­i in 2003 during his own failed attempt to force the British Government to state publicly that he was not the Army’s highest-ranking mole inside the IRA.

Mr Mulhern’s legal team contended that the PPS acted unlawfully when it decided in 2006 not to prosecute on the basis of that statement.

Even though that decision was later set aside, t hey argued the continued failure to charge Scappaticc­i with perjury cannot be justified.

Counsel claimed there was enough evidence to potentiall­y meet the test under the prosecutor­s’ code.

He also questioned how the alleged agent could mount a defence to any charge by relying on a claim of acting out of necessity based on fears for his life.

Earlier this year Scappaticc­i was reportedly arrested, questioned and released on police bail as part of a major and ongoing outside investigat­ion into Stakeknife’s activities.

Codenamed Operation Kenova, the probe — headed by Bedfordshi­re Chief Constable Jon Boutcher — is looking into a catalogue of IRA murders linked to

the undercover agent — including the killing of Mr Mulhern’s son in 1993. Joseph Mulhern (23) was abducted, interrogat­ed and shot by the IRA, who accused him of being a police informer. His body was dumped on a remote hillside near Castlederg, Co Tyrone.

In an affidavit lodged as part of his challenge Mr Mulhern claimed to know who was behind his son’s death.

He said: “At the time of my son’s murder Freddie Scappaticc­i was not only a senior member of the Provisiona­l IRA, he was also an agent of the British Army known as agent Stakeknife.”

Scappaticc­i left Northern Ire- land in 2003 after being named in the media as the spy. Before quitting his home, however, he vehemently denied being the agent while in charge of the IRA’s internal security team.

Counsel for the PPS resisted the legal challenge due to Operation Kenova’s continuing enquiries.

Mrs Justice Keegan, who heard the case with Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan, backed the PPS assessment.

She said: “Insofar as the public interest is engaged, we observe that this investigat­ion is a critical step in the search for truth in relation to the activities of agent Stakeknife.”

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 ??  ?? Freddie Scappaticc­i;
Joseph Mulhern (right), and (left)
his father Frank
Freddie Scappaticc­i; Joseph Mulhern (right), and (left) his father Frank
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