Belfast Telegraph

Couple in court over bomb ‘found in their kitchen’

- BY PAUL HIGGINS

A COUPLE appeared in court yesterday accused of possessing a bomb discovered in a kitchen cupboard in a Co Armagh house where three children — all under the age of four — were present. Lurgan man Ross Hardy (21) and Rebecca Jane Gallagher Gregory (21) (both above) from Tandragee were charged after a weekend security alert.

A COUPLE appeared in court yesterday accused of possessing a bomb discovered in a cupboard in a Co Armagh house where three children were present.

Standing side by side in handcuffs in the dock of Banbridge Magistrate­s Court, sitting in Newry, Ross Hardy (21) and Rebecca Jane Gallagher Gregory (21) confirmed they understood the charges against them.

Hardy, of no fixed address in Lurgan, and Gallagher, from Woodview Park in Tandragee, are jointly charged with possessing the explosives in suspicious circumstan­ces on November 30.

Hardy faces a further charge of possessing an explosive device under suspicious circumstan­ces, while Gregory was also accused of possessing class B cannabis on the same date.

The charges arose after an improvised blast bomb device was found on Saturday at Gregory’s home. Bomb disposal experts made the device safe and recovered it for further examinatio­n.

A police officer told yesterday’s hearing he believed he could link both defendants to their respective charges, revealing that while Gregory claimed to be holding the device “under threat”, her partner Hardy had made “full and frank confession­s” to having built the device about a year ago.

A prosecutin­g lawyer told the court the device was uncovered in a kitchen cupboard, adding that Gregory’s three children, all under four, were present in the house at the time of the seizure.

Arrested and interviewe­d, Gregory admitted having the small amount of cannabis.

She claimed that a male she refused to name had given her the bomb to hold about three weeks beforehand, further claiming she “felt frightened” of this male.

She later admitted to knowing the bomb was in the cupboard.

The lawyer revealed however that Hardy had confessed to building the bomb “approximat­ely a year ago” at Lovers Lane in Tandragee. He admitted to police that “he had found himself in difficulty, physically around that time — he had been picked on in fights” so he had built the bomb “intending to use it, if required, to frighten people who sought to fight him”.

The lawyer said that an initial examinatio­n indicated it had been constructe­d using powder from fireworks with a fuse from a banger and that it also contained shrapnel such as screws, batteries and a “small torch”.

The police officer added Hardy had admitted he had moved it from place to place “with ready access” and had only put it into Gregory’s kitchen cupboard the day before it was found.

“He confirmed he knew he shouldn’t have it and that it was illegal to make and possess it,” said the detective, who told District Judge Paul Copeland that “in my opinion it would cause serious injury to anyone in close proximity of it being exploded”.

He agreed with the judge that police had concerns “there may be further offences committed” should Hardy be granted bail and also that “police are concerned that if there was a specific target, it may be that this plan is still to be acted on”.

“He mentioned in interview that he had secreted it for a year in various locations in and around Tandragee so police have concerns that possibly he had made further devices and would have a further opportunit­y to offend,” said the detective. Under cross examinatio­n from defence solicitor Kevin McCamley, the PSNI officer agreed that neither defendant had any connection­s to paramilita­ries.

The solicitor claimed that Hardy had made the device a year ago “at a time when he was severely on drugs and paranoid that people would attack him” but that he has been drug free for eight to 10 months.

“He informs me that he simply didn’t know how to get rid of it,” said the lawyer who conceded that given the admissions, “it’s clear that he will he pleading guilty”.

He contended that both could be freed “with stringent bail conditions”.

Describing the device as “amateurish and thrown together”, Judge Copeland said neverthele­ss it was enough to cause “significan­t concern” so he did not feel it appropriat­e to bail Hardy.

Turning to Gregory, the judge said it was with “some reluctance” that he was freeing her on bail but that his decision was “almost exclusivel­y” based on the fact that she had responsibi­lities to three young children.

Gregory was freed on her own bail of £750 with two £1,000 sureties, with conditions that she keeps a curfew, reports to police three times a week and has no contact with Hardy. Both will appear at Armagh Magistrate­s Court on December 17.

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 ??  ?? Ross Hardy and Rebecca Gregory who appeared in court yesterday on explosives charges
Ross Hardy and Rebecca Gregory who appeared in court yesterday on explosives charges

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