Belfast Telegraph

Loughinisl­and families receive damages and apology over 2011 Police Ombudsman report

- BY ALAN ERWIN

VICTIMS of the Loughinisl­and atrocity have been awarded damages as part of a settlement reached in their legal action against the Police Ombudsman’s Office.

The watchdog has also issued an apology to those bereaved and injured for “failings” in its first report into the sectarian murder of six Catholic men in June 1994.

Proceeding­s centred on former Ombudsman Al Hutchinson’s conclusion­s that there was insufficie­nt evidence of collusion between RUC officers and the loyalist paramilita­ry killers.

Relatives of the Loughinisl­and victims sued the office over the hurt and upset caused by the findings he reached in 2011.

Their civil action was settled at the High Court in Belfast yesterday, with confirmati­on that undisclose­d damages are to be paid out.

Following the resolution, a spokesman for the Ombudsman said: “The office apologises to victims and their families for its failings at that time.”

UVF gunmen carried out the massacre at the Heights Bar in Loughinisl­and, Co Down as customers watched a World Cup football match on June 18, 1994.

The six men killed were: Adrian Rogan (34), Malcolm Jenkinson (53), Barney Green (87),

Report: Al Hutchinson

Daniel McCreanor (59), Patrick O’Hare (35) and Eamon Byrne (39).

Five others were wounded in the attack.

In 2006 the bereaved families and survivors lodged a complaint with the Ombudsman, alleging significan­t failures in the police investigat­ion and collusion between RUC officers and the killers.

Among their concerns was that the getaway car used by the terrorists was destroyed 10 months after the shootings and not retained for evidential purposes.

In 2011 Mr Hutchinson, the Ombudsman at the time, published a report which was highly critical of aspects of the police investigat­ion.

However, he concluded there was not enough evidence to support the families’ collusion claims.

That report was later quashed by the High Court, resulting in a fresh probe and different findings reached by the current Ombudsman in 2016.

According to Dr Michael Maguire, collusion between some officers and the loyalists was a significan­t feature in the murders.

The families’ lawsuit against the Police Ombudsman’s Office related to the earlier Hutchinson report.

Their solicitor, Niall Murphy of KRW Law, identified an alleged failure to discharge the State’s human rights obligation­s as the reason for the legal proceeding­s.

Outside court he said: “The families were hurt and frustrated by the 2011 report published by Al Hutchinson.

“They consider that the settlement of these proceeding­s is recognitio­n of the harm caused in 2011,” he added.

❝ The families consider that the settlement is recognitio­n of the harm caused in 2011

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