comparemela.com
Home
Live Updates
Transcripts For BBCNEWS The 20240703 : comparemela.com
Transcripts For BBCNEWS The 20240703 : comparemela.com
Transcripts For BBCNEWS The 20240703
Police investigation into his activities is ongoing. Much is unknown about
Freddie Scappaticci
s life in the shadows. Butjust one single episode exposed how he operated inside the ira while on the states books. This is a story of a spy who got away with murder. West belfast in the 1980s. An irish republican enclave where many were subject to the iras rules. Such warnings to so called touts were frequently borne out. Archive charlie mcilmurray� s body was found in this van on sunday. Charlie mcilmurray, a west belfast taxi driver, suspected of being a tout slang for an informer was shot dead in 1987. I think that mr mcilmurray, like anyone else living in west belfast, knows that the consequence for informing is death. I mean, if republican activists, who know what the repercussions are for going over to the other side, in fact go over to the other side, then they more than anyone else are totally and absolutely aware of what the penalty for doing that is. Death . Death, certainly. Freddie scappaticci was under orders to enforce the iras rules for so called traitors. Scappaticci was once secretly recorded explaining his technique for extracting confessions. Within the ira, informers were despised figures. The fear of being accused of being an informer was probably the worst thing imaginable in the ira. I mean,
What Circle Of Hell
could dante have created for the informer . This was. An awful allegation to have to put up with, and for an informer� s family, the stigma was powerful. Can you think of a worse crime to be guilty of than informing . No. In west belfast, the iras summaryjustice was dispensed in alleyways. Archive in a statement, the ira said they shot
Joseph Fenton
because he was what they called a british agent. Joe fenton, a suspected informer, had first been interrogated in this house before his execution. Its also where, several months later, another suspected informer, sandy lynch, was brought to. His account of what happened to him gives us
The Greatest Insight Into Scappaticci
at work as a spy catcher. An actor is giving voice to edited extracts of what lynch told the authorities about his ordeal. I belonged to the provisional irish republican army. The unit was under control of the belfast brigade. Sean maguire was second in command. I entered the house. Maguire was walking behind me. I went up the stairs and someone was behind me. Someone who i believed was scappaticci. Sandy lynch was in
Freddie Scappaticci
s sights. We entered a room at the top of the stairs. Maguire and i were talking. The room was in darkness. Ifelt a hand on the back of my head, and i was pushed down onto a bed and i heard a voice saying, ira security. Sandy lynch was stripped, blindfolded and tied up. I was searched from head to foot. And i felt something which i believed to be a
Metal Detector
going over my body. And i heard a voice. Scappaticci said, this thing was going haywire. For over an hour, according to sandy lynch, others in the room taunted him. One of them told me that he enjoyed his work and that he would break me. A voice said the only way i would leave the room was to be taken out and shot. For a time, the ira disappeared
Suspected Informers
. But shooting and burying people in bogs or shallow graves did not solve the iras problem with leaks. In the mid 1970s, its alleged that gerry adams was among those who reorganised the ira. Gerry adams drew up a blueprint for a restructured ira, based on four man cells, asus active service units. These gave improved security. They were independent, separated by cut offs and far harder to penetrate by our own informers. Gerry adams has consistently denied being a member of the ira and refutes the allegations that he was among those who reorganised it. In 1978, the ira set up a
Security Unit
to flush out spies. Freddie scappaticci joined the new
Security Unit
. The twist is that the ira man who became one of the iras spy catchers was already a british army agent. Code name stakeknife. The
Famous Stakeknife
was handed on to me in 1978 as being an important person. That year,
David Ramsbotham
was the
Army Commander
in belfast. He was there when i arrived. I mean, he had already started giving information, and i was briefed that my responsibility was, every time stakeknife made contact, to make certain that we had a handler who knew him on tap so that stakeknife always saw a soldier that he knew. Scappaticci was handled with care because he was worth it. He had access to every ira department. He knew who was on the up, personal weaknesses, insights that could prove useful for turning others. He even vetted new recruits. The unit designed to protect the ira was, in effect, a gift to its enemy. The moment anything from stakeknife came in, we knew it had to be handed on immediately. It was definitely high grade, about policy, rather than low grade, about who was going to be attacked by a bomb or a pistol. I mean, he was obviously someone who had access to the higher levels of the ira. Scappaticci had such access not least because informer
Death Sentences
had to be authorised by one of the iras seven person army council, such as
Martin Mcguinness
. In a two year period, beginning may 1980, more ira members were killed by the iras own internal security than by the police and army. Even ira inmates knew of the
Security Unit
s fearsome reputation. In prison,
Anthony Mcintyre
raised his concerns with a senior republican. There were stories coming in. I made the point, you know, like this internal security seems to have far too much power, and hejust said to me, do you realise the amount of times that the internal
Security Unit
have saved the army council . Now, i didnt think much about it at the time. In later years, ive come to the view that thats perhaps what the internal
Security Unit
s real raison detre was, the real purpose was to protect the army council. The british wanted that army council post 1983 in place because they knew that the army council were assets, and i differentiate between assets and agents here, that they were assets in as far as they were going to deliver a solution. Former ira prisoner
Gerard Hodgins
knew scappaticci to be part of the iras
Security Unit
. I would have first bumped into
Freddie Scappaticci
from about 1986 onwards when i was initially working with sinn fein in west belfast and then the
Republican Press
centre, as well as my other duties. Hes just somebody i knew from the ira and i would just be somebody he would know from the ira. In west belfast, he frequently met
Martin Mcguinness
and other senior ira figures. On the day of their meeting,
Freddie Scappaticci
would come in and hang about the press centre before heading on round to wherever
Northern Command
has theirs. The meetings gave scappaticci an extraordinary insight into the structure of the iras
Northern Command
. Freddie scappaticci was not the only well placed long running agent within the ira. But what marks his double life apart from others is that we know some of what he was never held accountable for, remarkably from another spy in the ira, sandy lynch. In the room where sandy lynch was being interrogated, scappaticci upped the ante. He said, do you know who i am, sandy . I said, yes. He said, you know me, but i dont give two bleep because where youre going, youll not be telling no one. When he was speaking to me, he stood with his elbows on my shoulders and his chin on my head. And then scappaticci spoke ofjoe fenton, whod been shot dead only months earlier. He said, youll get it like fenton. He said that he had done it. According to sandy lynch, an admission from
Freddie Scappaticci
that he had shotjoe fenton. Sandy lynch eventually broke. He admitted he was a police informer. His blindfold was taken off, his hands untied so that he could write a statement admitting his guilt. I was told that if i wanted to make a plea for lenience from the leadership, saying why i shouldnt be shot, to go ahead. The next morning, scappaticci returned. Sandy lynch recorded his statement. I was told that if all went well, that i would be home soon. A
Trademark Line
to
Suspected Informers
, when the reality, in fact, was stark. By late saturday night, additional manpower was needed. Gerard hodgins was told, along with others, to go the house. I had no idea that his name was sandy lynch at this time. We were just told to go to a house and babysit a guy who was an informer. When we went through the door, there was men coming down the stairs. Sean maguire,
Freddie Scappaticci
. Maguire, i bumped into him right at the bottom of the stairs and he looked up at the room where sandy was and he went like that, you know, which to me was sort of saying he should be shot there, you know . But sandy lynch survived. Police raided the house, arresting
Gerard Hodgins
and others. Those whod already left included sean maguire and
Freddie Scappaticci
. Scappaticci had, however, left something behind fingerprints on the battery of an anti bugging device. A
Police Fingerprint
expert said he was certain that the imprint was made by frederick scappaticci. Sandy lynch, whod been a police informer, agreed to give evidence in court before he entered a protection programme. His testimony was key to the conviction of eight people on kidnapping and interrogation charges, but one accusation he made never led to a charge. His testimony included
Freddie Scappaticci
s admission aboutjoe fenton. He said that he had done it. But scappaticci was, it seems, untouchable, because by the time he was arrested, it was in connection with his fingerprint and hed already concocted a false alibi. In custody, he broke an ira rule he spoke under questioning. I represented
Fred Scappaticci
. There was an allegation that he was connected to the house via a fingerprint. Or fingerprints, i cant remember. And he gave a prepared statement which, in itself, was unusual for anyone connected to the ira to make statements in castlereagh holding centre. And secondly, he was released without charge. At that time, i was relatively inexperienced, i didnt see anything particularly unusual other than that was the system working its way through, police took a view that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute. On reflection years later, i have to seriously question that decision. On the face of it, there was probably sufficient evidence to charge him, prosecute him and remand him into custody. That didnt happen. We know now why that didnt happen. And in a nutshell, why . Because he was an agent. Freddie scappaticci is thought to be linked to the murders of over 20 people. Decades on, he did have a day in court. Archive
Freddie Scappaticci
, who is alleged to have been. The armys highest ranking ira agent, has been given a suspended
Prison Sentence
after pleading guilty to possessing over 300 extreme pornographic images. That was the only charge brought against him by officers of
Operation Kenova
, a multimillion pound
Criminal Investigation
led by jon boutcher, a former
Chief Constable
of bedfordshire, into the activities of the army agent known as stakeknife. A catalyst for
Operation Kenova
was the sandy lynch case, because the omission of crucial information from
Prosecuting Authorities
in that case eventually exposed the existence of secrets that had been concealed. Barra mcgrory, a former director of
Public Prosecutions
in
Northern Ireland
, was among those integral to the setting up of
Operation Kenova
. The decision to prosecute any criminal charge is one for the director of
Public Prosecutions
, and the director of
Public Prosecutions
alone. In the wake of the sandy lynch episode, a decision to prosecute those arrested was taken in the absence of all relevant material. Information and material which was integral to he events, which should have been before the then director of
Public Prosecutions
, who was sir
Alasdair Fraser
qc, my predecessor, was withheld from the director. And which, had it been made available to him, would most likely have led the then director to the conclusion that he shouldnt prosecute. So, while my initial concern was in respect of the deception of the director of
Public Prosecutions
, it escalated into a concern in respect of the potential covering up of up to 20 plus murders. And thats what ultimately led to kenova. The convictions of eight people, including
Gerard Hodgins
, had already been quashed. But the contents of the file which was withheld all those years ago has never been made public. What was kept secret has remained secret. To this day, we still dont know whats contained within that. It may well contain reference to
Fred Scappaticci
and or others. We dont know. Whats also unknown is if other criminal cases were prosecuted where crucial information was withheld. I suppose its a fair question, that if it happened once, could it happen again . And the answer has to be yes. But that is why i was so exercised to have this matter fully investigated. But for some people, the possibility that it could have happened in other cases is an appalling vista. It is an appalling vista. In the wake of the sandy lynch episode,
Freddie Scappaticci
s position in the ira was beginning to wane. Those at the top of the ira know exactly when they cast their spy catcher into the cold, but scappaticci did not meet the same end brutally exacted on others. The ira leadership� s reason for not killing, not executing
Freddie Scappaticci
back in 1990, er, in my view, was a result of a need to save their own skin. The ira were keenly aware that every interaction they had with
Freddie Scappaticci
, every order they give to kill, every order they give to kidnap, every order they give to interrogate or torture,
Freddie Scappaticci
had passed that on to the british, and also that
Freddie Scappaticci
may have recorded this and that they were in deep, serious trouble. In 2003,
Freddie Scappaticci
publicly denied he was stakeknife after being named as the agent by several newspapers. I am not guilty of any of these allegations. I have not left
Northern Ireland
since i was challenged by reporters on saturday night. Nobody had the decency to ask me if any of these allegations were true. His death means he will never speak his truth. I dont think freddie took any secrets to his grave. I think theyre very well known. Theyre not known by me, but theyre known by his handlers and theyre known by the leadership of the ira. In my view, the people who have most to fear from
Operation Kenova
are probably those people who served on the army council and ordered the killings. As some people see it, this episode is one of those times where parts of the state and the ira are on the same side in terms of having a vested interest in keeping. Keeping it a secret for a long, long time. Well, what i would say about that is that the truth of this story isnt comfortable for anybody. It isnt comfortable for anybody, so. When it is told, whenever that is. Um, there will be a lot of uncomfortable people. An
Operation Kenova
report, due to be published later this year, may shine a light on details long kept in the dark about the activities of agent stakeknife, including what was known about the interrogation of
Suspected Informers
before they occurred. As i understand it, there is a potential assertion that every single case thats a subject of the
Operation Kenova
investigation, in every single killing, that those deaths were preventable had there been some form of state intervention. Now, thats a pretty stark assessment to make. And were going to know that very, very soon, whether or not that stands up to scrutiny. Jon boutcher declined to be interviewed for this programme. His report is currently in whats described as the security checking stage. The
Ministry Of Defence
told spotlight, as the investigation is ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further. Sean maguire, known to many as mag uidhir, now works as a senior sinn fein press officer. His solicitor told spotlight that his client was interviewed under caution by the
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>s life in the shadows. Butjust one single episode exposed how he operated inside the ira while on the states books. This is a story of a spy who got away with murder. West belfast in the 1980s. An irish republican enclave where many were subject to the iras rules. Such warnings to so called touts were frequently borne out. Archive charlie mcilmurray\ufffd s body was found in this van on sunday. Charlie mcilmurray, a west belfast taxi driver, suspected of being a tout slang for an informer was shot dead in 1987. I think that mr mcilmurray, like anyone else living in west belfast, knows that the consequence for informing is death. I mean, if republican activists, who know what the repercussions are for going over to the other side, in fact go over to the other side, then they more than anyone else are totally and absolutely aware of what the penalty for doing that is. Death . Death, certainly. Freddie scappaticci was under orders to enforce the iras rules for so called traitors. Scappaticci was once secretly recorded explaining his technique for extracting confessions. Within the ira, informers were despised figures. The fear of being accused of being an informer was probably the worst thing imaginable in the ira. I mean,
What Circle Of Hell<\/a> could dante have created for the informer . This was. An awful allegation to have to put up with, and for an informer\ufffd s family, the stigma was powerful. Can you think of a worse crime to be guilty of than informing . No. In west belfast, the iras summaryjustice was dispensed in alleyways. Archive in a statement, the ira said they shot
Joseph Fenton<\/a> because he was what they called a british agent. Joe fenton, a suspected informer, had first been interrogated in this house before his execution. Its also where, several months later, another suspected informer, sandy lynch, was brought to. His account of what happened to him gives us
The Greatest Insight Into Scappaticci<\/a> at work as a spy catcher. An actor is giving voice to edited extracts of what lynch told the authorities about his ordeal. I belonged to the provisional irish republican army. The unit was under control of the belfast brigade. Sean maguire was second in command. I entered the house. Maguire was walking behind me. I went up the stairs and someone was behind me. Someone who i believed was scappaticci. Sandy lynch was in
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>s sights. We entered a room at the top of the stairs. Maguire and i were talking. The room was in darkness. Ifelt a hand on the back of my head, and i was pushed down onto a bed and i heard a voice saying, ira security. Sandy lynch was stripped, blindfolded and tied up. I was searched from head to foot. And i felt something which i believed to be a
Metal Detector<\/a> going over my body. And i heard a voice. Scappaticci said, this thing was going haywire. For over an hour, according to sandy lynch, others in the room taunted him. One of them told me that he enjoyed his work and that he would break me. A voice said the only way i would leave the room was to be taken out and shot. For a time, the ira disappeared
Suspected Informers<\/a>. But shooting and burying people in bogs or shallow graves did not solve the iras problem with leaks. In the mid 1970s, its alleged that gerry adams was among those who reorganised the ira. Gerry adams drew up a blueprint for a restructured ira, based on four man cells, asus active service units. These gave improved security. They were independent, separated by cut offs and far harder to penetrate by our own informers. Gerry adams has consistently denied being a member of the ira and refutes the allegations that he was among those who reorganised it. In 1978, the ira set up a
Security Unit<\/a> to flush out spies. Freddie scappaticci joined the new
Security Unit<\/a>. The twist is that the ira man who became one of the iras spy catchers was already a british army agent. Code name stakeknife. The
Famous Stakeknife<\/a> was handed on to me in 1978 as being an important person. That year,
David Ramsbotham<\/a> was the
Army Commander<\/a> in belfast. He was there when i arrived. I mean, he had already started giving information, and i was briefed that my responsibility was, every time stakeknife made contact, to make certain that we had a handler who knew him on tap so that stakeknife always saw a soldier that he knew. Scappaticci was handled with care because he was worth it. He had access to every ira department. He knew who was on the up, personal weaknesses, insights that could prove useful for turning others. He even vetted new recruits. The unit designed to protect the ira was, in effect, a gift to its enemy. The moment anything from stakeknife came in, we knew it had to be handed on immediately. It was definitely high grade, about policy, rather than low grade, about who was going to be attacked by a bomb or a pistol. I mean, he was obviously someone who had access to the higher levels of the ira. Scappaticci had such access not least because informer
Death Sentences<\/a> had to be authorised by one of the iras seven person army council, such as
Martin Mcguinness<\/a>. In a two year period, beginning may 1980, more ira members were killed by the iras own internal security than by the police and army. Even ira inmates knew of the
Security Unit<\/a>s fearsome reputation. In prison,
Anthony Mcintyre<\/a> raised his concerns with a senior republican. There were stories coming in. I made the point, you know, like this internal security seems to have far too much power, and hejust said to me, do you realise the amount of times that the internal
Security Unit<\/a> have saved the army council . Now, i didnt think much about it at the time. In later years, ive come to the view that thats perhaps what the internal
Security Unit<\/a>s real raison detre was, the real purpose was to protect the army council. The british wanted that army council post 1983 in place because they knew that the army council were assets, and i differentiate between assets and agents here, that they were assets in as far as they were going to deliver a solution. Former ira prisoner
Gerard Hodgins<\/a> knew scappaticci to be part of the iras
Security Unit<\/a>. I would have first bumped into
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> from about 1986 onwards when i was initially working with sinn fein in west belfast and then the
Republican Press<\/a> centre, as well as my other duties. Hes just somebody i knew from the ira and i would just be somebody he would know from the ira. In west belfast, he frequently met
Martin Mcguinness<\/a> and other senior ira figures. On the day of their meeting,
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> would come in and hang about the press centre before heading on round to wherever
Northern Command<\/a> has theirs. The meetings gave scappaticci an extraordinary insight into the structure of the iras
Northern Command<\/a>. Freddie scappaticci was not the only well placed long running agent within the ira. But what marks his double life apart from others is that we know some of what he was never held accountable for, remarkably from another spy in the ira, sandy lynch. In the room where sandy lynch was being interrogated, scappaticci upped the ante. He said, do you know who i am, sandy . I said, yes. He said, you know me, but i dont give two bleep because where youre going, youll not be telling no one. When he was speaking to me, he stood with his elbows on my shoulders and his chin on my head. And then scappaticci spoke ofjoe fenton, whod been shot dead only months earlier. He said, youll get it like fenton. He said that he had done it. According to sandy lynch, an admission from
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> that he had shotjoe fenton. Sandy lynch eventually broke. He admitted he was a police informer. His blindfold was taken off, his hands untied so that he could write a statement admitting his guilt. I was told that if i wanted to make a plea for lenience from the leadership, saying why i shouldnt be shot, to go ahead. The next morning, scappaticci returned. Sandy lynch recorded his statement. I was told that if all went well, that i would be home soon. A
Trademark Line<\/a> to
Suspected Informers<\/a>, when the reality, in fact, was stark. By late saturday night, additional manpower was needed. Gerard hodgins was told, along with others, to go the house. I had no idea that his name was sandy lynch at this time. We were just told to go to a house and babysit a guy who was an informer. When we went through the door, there was men coming down the stairs. Sean maguire,
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>. Maguire, i bumped into him right at the bottom of the stairs and he looked up at the room where sandy was and he went like that, you know, which to me was sort of saying he should be shot there, you know . But sandy lynch survived. Police raided the house, arresting
Gerard Hodgins<\/a> and others. Those whod already left included sean maguire and
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>. Scappaticci had, however, left something behind fingerprints on the battery of an anti bugging device. A
Police Fingerprint<\/a> expert said he was certain that the imprint was made by frederick scappaticci. Sandy lynch, whod been a police informer, agreed to give evidence in court before he entered a protection programme. His testimony was key to the conviction of eight people on kidnapping and interrogation charges, but one accusation he made never led to a charge. His testimony included
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>s admission aboutjoe fenton. He said that he had done it. But scappaticci was, it seems, untouchable, because by the time he was arrested, it was in connection with his fingerprint and hed already concocted a false alibi. In custody, he broke an ira rule he spoke under questioning. I represented
Fred Scappaticci<\/a>. There was an allegation that he was connected to the house via a fingerprint. Or fingerprints, i cant remember. And he gave a prepared statement which, in itself, was unusual for anyone connected to the ira to make statements in castlereagh holding centre. And secondly, he was released without charge. At that time, i was relatively inexperienced, i didnt see anything particularly unusual other than that was the system working its way through, police took a view that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute. On reflection years later, i have to seriously question that decision. On the face of it, there was probably sufficient evidence to charge him, prosecute him and remand him into custody. That didnt happen. We know now why that didnt happen. And in a nutshell, why . Because he was an agent. Freddie scappaticci is thought to be linked to the murders of over 20 people. Decades on, he did have a day in court. Archive
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>, who is alleged to have been. The armys highest ranking ira agent, has been given a suspended
Prison Sentence<\/a> after pleading guilty to possessing over 300 extreme pornographic images. That was the only charge brought against him by officers of
Operation Kenova<\/a>, a multimillion pound
Criminal Investigation<\/a> led by jon boutcher, a former
Chief Constable<\/a> of bedfordshire, into the activities of the army agent known as stakeknife. A catalyst for
Operation Kenova<\/a> was the sandy lynch case, because the omission of crucial information from
Prosecuting Authorities<\/a> in that case eventually exposed the existence of secrets that had been concealed. Barra mcgrory, a former director of
Public Prosecutions<\/a> in
Northern Ireland<\/a>, was among those integral to the setting up of
Operation Kenova<\/a>. The decision to prosecute any criminal charge is one for the director of
Public Prosecutions<\/a>, and the director of
Public Prosecutions<\/a> alone. In the wake of the sandy lynch episode, a decision to prosecute those arrested was taken in the absence of all relevant material. Information and material which was integral to he events, which should have been before the then director of
Public Prosecutions<\/a>, who was sir
Alasdair Fraser<\/a> qc, my predecessor, was withheld from the director. And which, had it been made available to him, would most likely have led the then director to the conclusion that he shouldnt prosecute. So, while my initial concern was in respect of the deception of the director of
Public Prosecutions<\/a>, it escalated into a concern in respect of the potential covering up of up to 20 plus murders. And thats what ultimately led to kenova. The convictions of eight people, including
Gerard Hodgins<\/a>, had already been quashed. But the contents of the file which was withheld all those years ago has never been made public. What was kept secret has remained secret. To this day, we still dont know whats contained within that. It may well contain reference to
Fred Scappaticci<\/a> and or others. We dont know. Whats also unknown is if other criminal cases were prosecuted where crucial information was withheld. I suppose its a fair question, that if it happened once, could it happen again . And the answer has to be yes. But that is why i was so exercised to have this matter fully investigated. But for some people, the possibility that it could have happened in other cases is an appalling vista. It is an appalling vista. In the wake of the sandy lynch episode,
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>s position in the ira was beginning to wane. Those at the top of the ira know exactly when they cast their spy catcher into the cold, but scappaticci did not meet the same end brutally exacted on others. The ira leadership\ufffd s reason for not killing, not executing
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> back in 1990, er, in my view, was a result of a need to save their own skin. The ira were keenly aware that every interaction they had with
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a>, every order they give to kill, every order they give to kidnap, every order they give to interrogate or torture,
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> had passed that on to the british, and also that
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> may have recorded this and that they were in deep, serious trouble. In 2003,
Freddie Scappaticci<\/a> publicly denied he was stakeknife after being named as the agent by several newspapers. I am not guilty of any of these allegations. I have not left
Northern Ireland<\/a> since i was challenged by reporters on saturday night. Nobody had the decency to ask me if any of these allegations were true. His death means he will never speak his truth. I dont think freddie took any secrets to his grave. I think theyre very well known. Theyre not known by me, but theyre known by his handlers and theyre known by the leadership of the ira. In my view, the people who have most to fear from
Operation Kenova<\/a> are probably those people who served on the army council and ordered the killings. As some people see it, this episode is one of those times where parts of the state and the ira are on the same side in terms of having a vested interest in keeping. Keeping it a secret for a long, long time. Well, what i would say about that is that the truth of this story isnt comfortable for anybody. It isnt comfortable for anybody, so. When it is told, whenever that is. Um, there will be a lot of uncomfortable people. An
Operation Kenova<\/a> report, due to be published later this year, may shine a light on details long kept in the dark about the activities of agent stakeknife, including what was known about the interrogation of
Suspected Informers<\/a> before they occurred. As i understand it, there is a potential assertion that every single case thats a subject of the
Operation Kenova<\/a> investigation, in every single killing, that those deaths were preventable had there been some form of state intervention. Now, thats a pretty stark assessment to make. And were going to know that very, very soon, whether or not that stands up to scrutiny. Jon boutcher declined to be interviewed for this programme. His report is currently in whats described as the security checking stage. The
Ministry Of Defence<\/a> told spotlight, as the investigation is ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further. Sean maguire, known to many as mag uidhir, now works as a senior sinn fein press officer. His solicitor told spotlight that his client was interviewed under caution by the
Operation Kenova Investigation Team<\/a> in november 2018. He denied any allegation that he was involved in the unlawful imprisonment and conspiracy to
Murder Sandy Lynch<\/a> in 1990. Freddie scappaticci died in his
70s A Long Life<\/a> denied to his victims. But some secrets do not stay buried, and secrets from what many believe to be one of the murkiest episodes of the troubles may yet come into the light. Morning, all. A stormy end to our weekend of what has been quite a remarkable week of weatherjust passed. On sunday, we saw highs of 33 degrees yet again, so that, coupled with last weeks temperatures, saw seven consecutive days where weve seen 30 degrees or more a record for september. But our week ahead is certainly going to see a change. Yes, well have some warmth on monday, but a noticeable, fresher feel for all of us. These are our maximum temperatures expected as we go through the week ahead, so low 20s quite widely. Weve got a
Weather Front<\/a> then still pushing in from the north. Its a cold front, and this will gradually introduce the change to the weather story. Eventually, that front is going to push its way steadily south and the wind direction swing around to more of a northwesterly, cooler, fresher air tucking in behind. So, to begin with,10 11 degrees in the north west of the great glen. A mild start once again for england and wales, still feeling quite humid out there. And this is where well see the best of the sunshine and the warmth on monday. A showery band of rain through
Northern England<\/a> and north wales. Cloudy and sunny spells and scattered showers following in behind. Fresher here, but ahead of that front, were still likely to see temperatures peaking at 27 degrees thats 80 fahrenheit. Now, as we move out of monday into tuesday, that
Weather Front<\/a> is still there and its still meandering its way slowly south and east, taking its time in doing so. Ahead of the front is where well keep the milder conditions, so first thing on tuesday morning, 16 degrees fresher behind single figures for scotland and
Northern Ireland<\/a>, the front will gradually sink its way south. It could bring some much needed rain actually across the midlands, east anglia and southeast england. Behind it, some sunnier spells and clearer conditions. So were looking at 13 18 degrees here, highest values if were lucky of around 22 celsius. Then as we move out of tuesday, finally, that
Frontal System<\/a> eases away. High pressure is set to build and keep things quite quiet. That means a chilly start potentially in the far northeast on wednesday morning. Maybe temperatures low enough for
A Touch Of Frost<\/a> in sheltered glens of scotland, but it will lead to a largely fine bright day on wednesday, noticeably fresher with showers for the end of the week. Live from washington, this is bbc news. Spains football chief
Luis Rubiales<\/a> resigns following criticism for his world cup kiss. Its a race against time for rescuers in morocco as the death toll surpasses 2000, following fridays powerful earthquake. And the
G20 Summit Ends<\/a> with leaders divided over
Theirjoint Declaration<\/a> that avoids condemning russia for its war in ukraine. Hello, im carl nasman, thanks forjoining us. Luis rubiales has stepped down as president of spains
Football Federation<\/a> following weeks of controversy over a forcible kiss at the womens world cup final. Mr rubiales has insisted the kiss was consensual, and until now, had refused to step down despite being suspended by footballs international governing body, fifa. Joe lynskey has this report. It was the image that overshadowed spains","publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"archive.org","logo":{"@type":"ImageObject","width":"800","height":"600","url":"\/\/ia800505.us.archive.org\/29\/items\/BBCNEWS_20230911_023000_The_Spy_Who_Got_Away_With_Murder\/BBCNEWS_20230911_023000_The_Spy_Who_Got_Away_With_Murder.thumbs\/BBCNEWS_20230911_023000_The_Spy_Who_Got_Away_With_Murder_000001.jpg"}},"autauthor":{"@type":"Organization"},"author":{"sameAs":"archive.org","name":"archive.org"}}],"coverageEndTime":"20240703T12:35:10+00:00"}