Yorkshire Post

Cases are dropped over Ulster murders

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE PROSECUTIO­NS of two former soldiers for Troubles murders, including two on Bloody Sunday, are to be halted.

Northern Ireland’s Public Prosecutio­n Service has announced that the case against Soldier F for the murder of James Wray and William McKinney on Bloody Sunday in Londonderr­y in 1972 will not proceed.

The prosecutio­n of another veteran, Soldier B, for the murder of 15-year-old Daniel Hegarty in Derry later in 1972, will also not proceed, the PPS said. The discontinu­ation of the high-profile prosecutio­ns comes after the PPS reviewed the cases in light of a recent court ruling that caused the collapse of another Troubles murder trial involving two military veterans.

The Crown cases against both Soldier F and Soldier B hinged on evidence of a similar nature to that which was ruled inadmissib­le in April’s trial of Soldier A and Soldier C for the 1972 murder of Official IRA leader Joe McCann in Belfast.

Faced with the likelihood of that type of evidence being ruled inadmissib­le again in any future trial, the PPS said there is no longer a reasonable prospect of convicting either Soldier F or Soldier B.

The families of the victims in both cases were informed of the PPS decisions in private meetings in a Derry hotel. Director of public prosecutio­ns Stephen Herron said: “I recognise these decisions bring further pain to

A LAWYER for Daniel Hegarty’s family urged the police to obtain a fresh statement from Soldier B, by arresting him, to enable the prosecutio­n to continue.

Solicitor Des Doherty said: “Unless the PPS, through their direction to police, now invite Soldier B to voluntaril­y attend with the police to be interviewe­d in relation to the murder of Daniel and the attempted murder of Christophe­r, then Soldier B should be arrested because there is still time to cure the problem.”

A number of other investigat­ions involving former military personnel are still awaiting initial prosecutio­n decisions.

victims and bereaved families who have relentless­ly sought justice for almost 50 years and have faced many setbacks. It is clear to see how these devastatin­g events in 1972, in which the families involved lost an innocent loved one, caused an enduring pain which continues to weigh heavily.”

Solider F, an ex-paratroope­r, was accused of murdering Mr Wray and Mr McKinney on Bloody Sunday on January 30, 1972, when troops opened fire on civil rights demonstrat­ors. In the case of Solider B, the PPS had announced in 2019 an intention to prosecute him for the murder of Daniel.

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