Irish Independent

Adams’s conviction­s for trying to escape prison quashed

- Sam Tobin and Michael McHugh

GERRY ADAMS’S conviction­s for attempting to escape from prison in the 1970s have been overturned by the UK’s highest court after it ruled that his detention was unlawful.

The former Sinn Féin leader took legal action claiming the two 1975 findings of guilt were unsafe because his incarcerat­ion was not “personally considered” by a senior government minister.

Mr Adams (71) attempted to flee the Maze high-security jail near Belfast – also known as Long Kesh internment camp – on Christmas Eve 1973 and again the following July. He was later sentenced to a total of four and a half years.

“Today is about the judgment from the heart of Britain’s own legal system, from their Supreme Court, saying that they acted unlawfully,” he said.

Internment without trial was introduced as Northern Ireland descended into sustained inter-communal violence in the early 1970s.

It is believed that nearly 2,000 men and women were imprisoned during its four and a half years of operation, Mr Adams said.

People were suspected of paramilita­ry involvemen­t but much of the intelligen­ce was flawed, the historic record suggests. At a Supreme Court hearing in November, Mr Adams’s lawyers argued that, because the interim custody order (ICO) used to initially detain him in July 1973 was not authorised by the then-secretary of state for Northern Ireland Willie Whitelaw, his detention was unlawful and his conviction­s should be overturned.

Announcing the Supreme Court’s written judgment at a remote hearing yesterday, Lord Kerr said the court had unanimousl­y allowed Mr Adams’s appeal and had quashed his conviction­s.

The judge said Mr Adams’s detention was unlawful because it had not been “considered personally” by Mr Whitelaw.

Lord Kerr said: “The making of the ICO in respect of the appellant was invalid since the secretary of state had not himself considered it.

“In consequenc­e, Mr Adams’s detention was unlawful, hence his conviction­s of attempting to escape from lawful custody were, likewise, unlawful.

“The appeal is therefore allowed and his conviction­s are quashed.”

He explained that Mr Adams had been detained under an ICO made under the Detention of Terrorists (Northern Ireland) Order 1972 and that “such an order could be made where the secretary of state considered that an individual was involved in terrorism”.

Lord Kerr said the power to make such an order was “a momentous one”, describing it as “a power to detain without trial and potentiall­y for a limitless period”.

Mr Adams has consistent­ly denied being a member of the IRA.

Yesterday he said: “There is an onus on the British government to identify and inform other internees whose internment may also have been unlawful.”

A series of other legal cases could be affected by the decision, lawyers said.

Ulster Unionist leader Steve Aiken said IRA victims would be “angered and bewildered”.

“Mr Adams is able to go into a British court more than 40 years later and seek legal redress before getting off on a technicali­ty. That is a lot more than hundreds of victims of the IRA are able to do,” he said.

 ??  ?? The judge said Gerry Adams’s ‘detention was unlawful’
The judge said Gerry Adams’s ‘detention was unlawful’

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