Belfast Telegraph

Clock ticking on police bid to hear IRA man’s tapes

- BY ALAN ERWIN

POLICE and prosecutor­s have been given two weeks to provide reasons why recorded interviews with a former IRA man obtained after a “defective” request process should not be sent back to America.

High Court judges in Belfast imposed the deadline in Anthony McIntyre’s ongoing legal battle to stop detectives obtaining his Boston College tapes.

He was one of the main researcher­s in a major project to compile an oral history of the conflict in Northern Ireland.

Dozens of loyalists and republican­s provided testimonie­s to the college on the understand­ing their account would remain confidenti­al while they were alive.

But those assurances were dealt a blow after police secured transcript­s and tapes of interviews given by former IRA woman Dolours Price and high-profile loyalist Winston “Winkie” Rea.

Now detectives want access to McIntyre’s recorded recollecti­on of his own IRA activities as part of investigat­ions into alleged terrorist offences stretching back more than 40 years.

A subpoena seeking copies of his interviews was served on Boston College by the British government. Although the tapes were released and flown from America, they remain under seal within the court until the legal challenge is determined.

McIntyre, who is from Belfast but now lives in the Irish Republic, is seeking to judicially review the PSNI and Public Prosecutio­n Service (PPS) for issuing an ILOR (Internatio­nal Letter of Request) his lawyers described as “replete with errors”.

At court yesterday, Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan referred to defects and inaccuraci­es said to feature in the letter — including an armed robbery incident for which McIntyre was never convicted.

Despite prosecutio­n submission­s that those mistakes were highlighte­d, he expressed uncertaint­y about how the process was dealt with in America. The Lord Chief Justice told the PPS and PSNI they must lodge any further written submission within two weeks on why it should be presumed that defects within the ILOR were regularise­d.

 ??  ?? Opposition: Anthony McIntyre
Opposition: Anthony McIntyre

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