Belfast Telegraph

Report handed over into alleged police operation cover-up in 1982

- By David Young, PA

DETECTIVES investigat­ing the destructio­n of evidence linked to an alleged police shoot-to-kill operation have handed a report to prosecutor­s.

RUC officers shot dead 17-yearold Michael Tighe and seriously injured Martin Mccaule (19) when they opened fire on a hayshed in Lurgan, Co Armagh in November 1982.

It was one of a number of controvers­ial incidents in that period of the Troubles that saw police accused of deploying a deliberate shoot-to-kill tactic.

MI5 had been carrying out surveillan­ce on the shed on the Ballynerry Road North prior to the shootings and a listening device had been concealed in the shed. It later emerged that a tape was destroyed by RUC officers within hours of the fatal incident while a copy held by MI5 was destroyed some years later.

Mr Mccauley was convicted of possession of three antique rifles found inside the hayshed but that conviction was subsequent­ly quashed.

In 2015, then director of public prosecutio­ns Barra Mcgrory QC asked the PSNI and Police Ombudsman to investigat­e the events around the destructio­n of the tapes.

While the ombudsman is responsibl­e for probing allegation­s against police, the PSNI asked Police Scotland to carry out a probe into security service personnel in relation to the “withholdin­g, concealmen­t and destructio­n of surveillan­ce evidence”.

Yesterday, more than f ive years on, Police Scotland said it had compiled a report which “has recently been submitted to the Chief Constable of the PSNI (Simon Byrne) and the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns for Northern Ireland (Stephen Herron) in relation to the Operation KLINA investigat­ion, for their considerat­ion.

“In light of this, it would be inappropri­ate for Police Scotland to comment further at this time.”

A PSNI statement confirmed it had received a copy, adding: “We are also aware that a report has been submitted to the PPS by Police Scotland. It would be inappropri­ate to comment further at this time.”

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