Belfast Telegraph

Boston Tapes to be handed over before Legacy Act is enforced

- By Alan Erwin

SECRET recordings about a former IRA member’s Troubles-related activities are being handed over to police before a deadline for investigat­ing their content, the High Court ordered yesterday.

The interviews Anthony Mcintyre gave to Boston College in the United States have remained in secure storage for more than five years amid a legal battle to prevent any disclosure.

But after lifting a prohibitio­n on the PSNI accessing the tapes, senior judges decided they can be released on April 26 — five days before all conflict-era inquiries must end under the Government’s new Legacy Act.

The handover date also gives Mr Mcintyre’s legal team a chance to lodge any further appeal.

Lady Chief Justice Dame Siobhan Keegan said: “We think that is the just and proportion­ate outworking­s of our order.”

Mr Mcintyre was one of the main researcher­s for the Boston College project to compile an oral history of the conflict in Northern Ireland.

Dozens of ex-paramilita­ries provided testimonie­s on the understand­ing their accounts would be kept secret while they are alive.

Those assurances were dealt a blow after police secured transcript­s and tapes of interviews given by former IRA woman Dolours Price and loyalist Winston ‘Winkie’ Rea.

Detectives want access to Mr Mcintyre’s recorded recollecti­on of his own IRA activities as part of investigat­ions into alleged terrorist offences nearly 50 years ago.

A subpoena seeking copies of his interviews was served on Boston College by the UK Government.

The move involved an Internatio­nal Letter of Request (ILOR) setting out alleged offences under investigat­ion, including a bomb explosion at Rugby Avenue in Belfast in 1976, and membership of a proscribed organisati­on.

In 2018, Mr Mcintyre began a legal challenge to ensure the recordings and transcript­s remain sealed and confidenti­al.

Although PSNI officers brought the tapes back to Northern Ireland, they have been kept under lock and key at the Royal Courts of Justice in Belfast.

Previous attempts to obtain an injunction to restrain police and Director of Public Prosecutio­ns from making any further use of the interviews were dismissed.

With the tapes being sought before the May 1 deadline for continuing Troubles-related investigat­ions under the Legacy Act, lawyers for the Chief Constable argued that all routes of appeal have now been exhausted.

On Tuesday, a panel of High Court judges backed the PSNI’S case and ruled there they had no legal power to retain the material.

A draft order was drawn up for the recordings to be delivered to a named Chief Inspector at 4pm yesterday.

But counsel for Mr Mcintyre, Ronan Lavery KC, sought a stay on the handover so that an appeal can be advanced.

Claiming police had shown no urgency to obtain the tapes, he added: “This material will (only) have any use to the police up to May 1.”

Tony Mcgleenan KC, for the Chief Constable, resisted suggestion­s that the handover should be put on hold for 14 days.

Confirming the new date for police to take possession of the dates, Dame Siobhan said it would “facilitate any further steps that the appellant may wish to take”.

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