Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Veteran soldier found guilty of Troubles killing

- PRESS ASSOCIATIO­N REPORTERS

AFORMER soldier has been found guilty of killing a man at an army checkpoint in Northern Ireland more than 30 years ago.

David Jonathan Holden, 53, who had been on trial at Belfast Crown Court accused of the manslaught­er of Aidan McAnespie in February 1988, is the first veteran to be convicted of a historical offence in Northern Ireland since the Good Friday Agreement.

Mr McAnespie, 23, was killed in Aughnacloy, Co Tyrone, moments after walking through a border security checkpoint.

He was on his way to a local Gaelic Athletic Associatio­n club when he was shot in the back.

Holden had admitted firing the shot which killed Mr McAnespie but had said he had fired the weapon by accident because his hands were wet.

But trial judge Mr Justice O’Hara said he was satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that Holden was guilty of manslaught­er by gross negligence.

He found that Holden had pointed a machine gun at McAnespie and pulled the trigger, while assuming the gun was not cocked. He said: “That assumption should not have been made.” He also said the former soldier had given a “deliberate­ly false account” of what happened.

The judge said: “The question for me is this – just how culpable is the defendant in the circumstan­ces of this case? In my judgment he is beyond any reasonable doubt criminally culpable.”

The judge said the weapon controlled by Holden was “lethal in the extreme”.

He added: “It is suggested on his behalf that it was not exceptiona­lly bad or reprehensi­ble for him to assume that the weapon was not cocked. I fundamenta­lly disagree.

“In my judgment this was the ultimate ‘take no chances’ situation because the risk of disaster was so great.

“The defendant should have appreciate­d at the moment he pulled the trigger that if the gun was cocked deadly consequenc­es might follow.

“That is not something which is only apparent with hindsight.

“The defendant took an enormous risk for no reason in circumstan­ces where he was under no pressure and in no danger. In light of the foregoing I find the defendant guilty of the manslaught­er of Aidan McAnespie by gross negligence.”

Holden is set to be sentenced in the New Year.

Speaking outside court, Mr McAnespie’s brother Sean became emotional as he recalled family members who had not lived to hear the judgment.

“We waited 34 years, we never thought we would have got it,” he said. “I’m thinking of my father and my mother that prayed and prayed for this day, and they’re not here to see it.

“As a family we’re very relieved and happy. We’ve such a big family, cousins, community and relations to help us through this, it took the whole lot to get us over the line.”

Holden is a former Grenadier guardsman from England, whose address in court documents was given as c/o Chancery House, Victoria Street, Belfast.

The case was heard in a Diplock format without a jury sitting.

The trial proceeded amid continuing controvers­y over government plans to deal with Northern Ireland’s troubled past.

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