San Francisco Chronicle

Sinn Fein exleader wins his appeal

-

LONDON — Britain’s Supreme Court on Wednesday quashed Irish nationalis­t politician Gerry Adams’ conviction­s for trying to break out of prison in the 1970s, handing a longawaite­d legal victory to the former Sinn Fein leader.

The United Kingdom’s top court said Adams’ two 1975 conviction­s for trying to escape from the Maze prison in Northern Ireland were invalid because his detention at the time was unlawful.

One of the most influentia­l figures of Northern Ireland’s decades of conflict, Adams led the Irish Republican Armylinked party Sinn Fein between 1983 and 2018. He has always denied being a member of the IRA, though former colleagues have identified him as one of its leaders.

Adams, now 71, was jailed in 1972 under rules that allowed terrorism suspects in Northern Ireland to be detained without charge, but was released a few months later to attend secret peace talks with the British government. He was interned again the following year and twice tried to escape. He was convicted for the attempted escapes and sentenced to four and a half years in prison.

At a hearing held remotely to comply with social distancing rules amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, five Supreme Court judges ruled that because thenNorthe­rn Ireland Secretary Willie Whitelaw had not “considered personally” the order to detain Adams in 1973, it was invalid.

About 2,000 people were detained under Northern Ireland’s highly contentiou­s internment policy, which lasted from 1971 to 1975.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States