Belfast Telegraph

‘Stakeknife’ cop warns on halting probes into murders

- By Michael Mchugh

A SENIOR officer who investigat­ed the Army’s top agent within the IRA has urged extreme caution over closing down inquiries into unsolved murders in Northern Ireland.

Jon Boutcher led Operation Kenova, probing the activities of the mole codenamed Stakeknife, and said it showed that opportunit­ies for prosecutio­n could be identified.

In March, Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis announced that only Troubles killings with “compelling” new evidence and a realistic prospect of court proceeding­s would receive a full reinvestig­ation by police.

The Government said that, after a review, most unsolved cases would be closed and a new law would prevent those investigat­ions from being reopened.

Mr Boutcher said: “The closing of investigat­ions of unsolved murders so that they cannot be reopened would be a new legal stance.

“The proposal to close down investigat­ions of murder in legacy cases after a quick review process where those cases could not be reopened would, I believe, be a legal novelty in the United Kingdom for serious crimes such as murder.

“In light of the opportunit­ies identified by Operation Kenova, this proposal should be approached with extreme caution, especially as regards the processes applied to establish what informatio­n exists about those cases.”

As part of the independen­t Operation Kenova, four people, including two former MI5 officers and a former prosecutor, will not face criminal proceeding­s as part of a major investigat­ion. Other prosecutor­ial decisions are outstandin­g.

Mr Boutcher added: “An investigat­ion/review which starts and finishes only with the informatio­n available at the outset and does not allow for the developmen­t of lines of inquiry would not be Article 2 Echr-compliant.”

Article 2 of the Human Rights Act surrounds the protection of life.

Stakeknife is alleged to have been west Belfast man Freddie Scappaticc­i (73), who was arrested for questionin­g in the course of the investigat­ion.

Mr Scappaticc­i has denied being the Army agent, who worked within the IRA’S notorious “nutting squad” interrogat­ing suspected informers during the Troubles.

He left Northern Ireland when named by the media in 2003.

Mr Boutcher added: “It should never be the case that those responsibl­e for crimes such as murder are protected by a lack of a thorough examinatio­n of the facts.

“Prosecutio­ns are exceedingl­y challengin­g in legacy cases and I would expect them to be very much the exception.

“The starting point for legacy should be finding the truth for families of what happened.

“Families want to be listened to, acknowledg­ed and for an investigat­ion to take place that is an independen­t and robust search for the truth.

“They are generally realistic about the scope for seeing culprits brought to justice and punished and about the practical utility of such an exercise at this point in time.”

The multi-mill i on pound Operation Kenova investigat­ion was launched in 2016 and involved dozens of police officers examining the activities of Stakeknife.

 ??  ?? Warning: Jon Boutcher has urged caution over closing down inquiries into killings
Warning: Jon Boutcher has urged caution over closing down inquiries into killings

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