logo
Will of man believed to be IRA agent ‘Stakeknife' will not be made public

Will of man believed to be IRA agent ‘Stakeknife' will not be made public

Sunday World6 days ago
Scappaticci, from west Belfast, had always denied the claims before his death aged 77 in 2023
Freddie Scappaticci, who is widely believed to be the IRA agent known as Stakeknife, outside the offices of the Andersonstown News in west Belfast in 2003 (PA)
The will of a man believed to be the IRA agent known as Stakeknife will not be made public, the High Court has ruled.
Freddie Scappaticci, who changed his name to Frank Cowley in 2020, was believed to be Britain's top agent inside the IRA.
Scappaticci, from west Belfast, had always denied the claims before his death aged 77 in 2023.
In a ruling on Monday, Sir Julian Flaux ordered that Scappaticci's will should be sealed for 70 years, meaning that its contents will not be made public.
The judge said that this is the first time, except for members of the royal family, where a court has ordered that a will not be made open to public inspection in the way the document would usually be.
He said: 'There is nothing in the will, which is in fairly standard form, which could conceivably be of interest to the public or the media.'
A hearing to decide whether the will should be sealed was held on July 21 and was closed to the public and the media.
Barristers for the Attorney General, who represents the public interest in such matters, supported the will being sealed at the hearing in London, Sir Julian said.
The court heard that a man named Michael Johnson was prepared to represent Scappaticci's interests provided that the will was sealed.
Christopher Buckley, representing Mr Johnson, said that making Scappaticci's will publicly available would be 'undesirable' and 'inappropriate', and that Mr Johnson feared his life being put at risk if the will was made open to inspection.
Sir Julian said that there was 'the need to protect (Mr Johnson) and those named in the will from the real risk of serious physical harm or even death because they might be thought to be guilty by association' with Scappaticci.
Jon Boutcher authored the interim report into the findings of Operation Kenova (Liam McBurney/PA)
He said: 'The real risk to his life and wellbeing which the deceased faced in his lifetime is amply demonstrated.'
He continued: 'Publication of the will would be both undesirable and inappropriate.'
The judge concluded that holding the hearing in public would have 'defeated the whole object' of the bid to have the will sealed.
Sir Julian said in his 18-page ruling that Scappaticci was alleged to have been a leading member of the Provisional IRA, and was part of the 'Nutting Squad' from around 1980 until the mid-1990s, which interrogated suspected informers during the Troubles.
In 2003, media reports claimed that Scappaticci had spied on the IRA for the British government, and that while working for both organisations, 'was responsible for the torture and murder of dozens of alleged IRA informers'.
Scappaticci always denied the claim but failed in a legal bid to force the British government to publicly state that he was not Stakeknife, forcing him to move to England in 2003.
Sir Julian said: 'He could not have remained in Northern Ireland, as he could have been killed by one side or the other.
'Even after he moved to England and changed his name, he continued to receive death threats.
'Such was their nature that he had to relocate at short notice several times over the years.'
Operation Kenova was then launched to probe the activities of Stakeknife within the Provisional IRA and crimes such as murder and torture, as well as the role played by the security services.
The probe, which was undertaken by Bedfordshire Police and cost tens of millions of pounds, reported its interim findings last year, after Scappaticci's death.
While it stopped short of naming him as Stakeknife, it found that more lives were probably lost than saved by the agent's actions.
The former Chief Constable of Bedfordshire Police and author of the interim report, Jon Boutcher, said that the identity of Stakeknife 'will have to be confirmed at some point' but that he would 'have to leave this to my final report'.
He said: 'For now, it suffices to say that Mr Scappaticci was and still is inextricably bound up with and a critical person of interest at the heart of Operation Kenova.'
He continued: 'I believe that we found strong evidence of very serious criminality on the part of Mr Scappaticci and his prosecution would have been in the interests of victims, families and justice.'
Prosecutors said at the time the interim report was published that the examination of files containing evidence of serious criminality by Scappaticci was at an advanced stage at the time of his death.
Freddie Scappaticci, who is widely believed to be the IRA agent known as Stakeknife, outside the offices of the Andersonstown News in west Belfast in 2003 (PA)
Today's News in 90 Seconds - July 28th
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BBC faces criticism over delay in paying court-ordered damages to Gerry Adams
BBC faces criticism over delay in paying court-ordered damages to Gerry Adams

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday World

BBC faces criticism over delay in paying court-ordered damages to Gerry Adams

The corporation lost a major defamation case earlier this year after Mr Adams took them to court over a 2016 episode of its Spotlight programme and an accompanying online story Former Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams outside the High Court in Dublin after he won his libel action against the BBC (Brian Lawless/PA) The BBC has been criticised for not yet having paid court-ordered damages to former Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams. The corporation lost a major defamation case earlier this year after Mr Adams took them to court over a 2016 episode of its Spotlight programme and an accompanying online story. They contained an allegation that Mr Adams sanctioned the killing of former Sinn Fein official Denis Donaldson. Mr Adams denied any involvement. In May, a jury at the High Court in Dublin found in his favour and awarded him 100,000 euros (£84,000) after determining that was the meaning of words included in the programme and article. The BBC, which was found by the jury not to have acted in good faith nor in a fair and reasonable way, was also ordered to pay the former Sinn Fein leader's legal costs. BBC Northern Ireland director Adam Smyth (centre) outside the High Court in Dublin after the court case (Brian Lawless/PA) Adam Smyth, director of BBC NI, expressed disappointment in the verdict and said the corporation believes it supplied extensive evidence to the court of the careful editorial process and journalistic diligence applied to the programme and accompanying online article. After the decision, the broadcaster's legal team was granted a stay in the payment of the full award as it took time to consider an appeal, subject to paying half the damages (50,000 euros or £42,000) and 250,000 euros (£210,000) towards solicitors' fees. In June, the BBC confirmed it would not pursue an appeal. However, it is understood that by August 1 the BBC had not paid the damages. Mr Adams previously indicated that he planned to donate what he receives to good causes. He specified that these would include for children in Gaza as well as groups in the Irish language sector and those who are homeless. A source close to Mr Adams told the PA news agency: 'The delay by the BBC is deplorable and it should move speedily towards discharging the order of the court.' A BBC spokesperson said: 'Total costs will be finalised and payable in due course.' Former Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams outside the High Court in Dublin after he won his libel action against the BBC (Brian Lawless/PA) News in 90 Seconds - Sunday, August 3rd

SAS drill ‘Peru Two' coke mule Michaela McCollum in new season of celebrity TV series
SAS drill ‘Peru Two' coke mule Michaela McCollum in new season of celebrity TV series

Sunday World

time2 hours ago

  • Sunday World

SAS drill ‘Peru Two' coke mule Michaela McCollum in new season of celebrity TV series

McCollum recalls wayward years before she wound up in prison for smuggling And the 31-year-old tells her interrogators on Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins that she's finally found love with her twin sons. In a raw interview on the Channel 4 series, in which celebrities are put through an SAS selection course, Michaella breaks down while talking about the public reaction to her drug smuggling conviction and jail term, and her ex-army interrogators speculate that she has PTSD. Michaella and Melissa Reid were stopped in Lima airport and found to have nearly 12kgs of cocaine She served three years in a maximum security prison in Peru after being caught trying to smuggle £1.5 million worth of cocaine to Spain, and says some members of the public continue to castigate her. 'I feel like my life has been defined from my incident in Peru,' she says. 'Some people want me to suffer for ever for the mistake that I've made but I feel like I've paid for that more than enough.' Michaella is one of 14 celebrities taking part in the seventh series of Celebrity SAS including dancer Louie Spence, boxer Conor Benn, former footballer Troy Deeney and Rebecca Loos, who shot to fame over claims of an affair with David Beckham. Interrogation The show doesn't disclose celebrity payments but former British health minister Matt Hancock had to publicly declare his £45,000 fee in 2023, and last year actor John Barrowman was paid £30,000 despite bowing out after 32 minutes. The Celebrity SAS contestants are put through their paces The celebrities are put through gruelling exercises on the series, filmed in north Wales, including a jump into the Irish Sea, a hostage rescue and a hang over a 160ft drop — all in just the first two days. They're also grilled by the former soldiers assessing them when they're hooded and marched to an interrogation room. During her extensive questioning, Michaella tells the ex-military team she's one of ten children raised by a single mother, with an absent father. She spiralled into addiction to ketamine, Subutex and mephedrone at just 16 when she rebelled against the discipline of five older brothers, and at 19 she fled to Ibiza. 'I just wanted out so I got a one-way trip to Ibiza. I thought I can have freedom there,' she says. 'I was only in Ibiza for six weeks and I was partying a lot at the start. I met this group of friends and I was in a party one night taking acid and one of the guys asked me would I go to Barcelona and pick up a package. The Celebrity SAS contestants are put through their paces 'And then I ended up just getting deeper and deeper in this trap. I was passed over to so many different people and taken to all these different locations and then they put me on a flight to Peru in South America and I knew it was wrong and I know I shouldn't have done it, but I just felt so scared. 'If I didn't do it what would they do to me, or would they do anything to my family, and I didn't know how to get out of the situation.' With Melissa Reid from Scotland she was arrested trying to leave Peru smuggling nearly 12 kilos of cocaine, and her life of notoriety began as pictures of the pair in Lima airport were beamed round the world. In December 2013 the drug mules were sentenced to six years and eight months in jail. 'It was a maximum security prison. It was in the middle of the desert. There was male and female, and it was like the worst people, lots of people were on drugs, there was lots of abuse, the conditions were awful,' says Michaella. 'I tried to see to see it as a time where I could learn a new language. I could learn a lot about other people. I could learn a lot about myself.' Close up of Michaella McCollum looking distressed on the show She was freed after three years in prison, granted parole for her work in a beauty salon behind bars. But any hopes of a return to a normal life were dashed and she is emotional describing the reaction to her release. 'In the end I got released and then I came back and it was just like a circus,' says Michaella. Frenzy 'It was a frenzy, and that was really hard, because I knew I had messed up, but constantly being reminded of that and how I'm such an awful person. ' I knew I did something bad but I think the media just made it harder and then I tried to go back to normal but life was not normal any more. I had just turned 24. 'People were continuing with their normal lives but my mind was f***ed up because I had seen stuff you shouldn't normally see.' Michaella and Adam Collard hanging from rope during Hang Tough task Since returning home Michaella has completed a business and marketing degree at Ulster University, written a memoir about her time in jail, done TV and radio interviews, and featured in the BBC documentary High: Confessions of an Ibiza Drug Mule, now on Netflix, for which the corporation declared she wasn't paid. She reveals the arrival of twin sons Raphael and Rio in 2018 was a turning point. She's previously told her Instagram followers she's no longer with their dad. 'I had my boys just under two years after I got released from prison,' says Michaella. 'Having two children at once, alone was quite difficult but I feel like that was like me finding my purpose. I had these two people that taught me how to love, like really love, which I never really experienced in life, but I'm really happy with my boys and the life that we have. 'But now I want to challenge myself and see how capable I am. 'I just need to get rid of the self-doubt and remember that I am capable of doing it because once that voice gets in your head, I just need to get that out,' she says. Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins is on Channel 4 today at 9pm.

BBC faces criticism over delay in paying court-ordered damages to Gerry Adams
BBC faces criticism over delay in paying court-ordered damages to Gerry Adams

Irish Examiner

time7 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

BBC faces criticism over delay in paying court-ordered damages to Gerry Adams

The BBC has been criticised for not yet having paid court-ordered damages to former Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams. The corporation lost a major defamation case earlier this year after Mr Adams took them to court over a 2016 episode of its Spotlight programme and an accompanying online story. They contained an allegation that Mr Adams sanctioned the killing of former Sinn Féin official Denis Donaldson. Mr Adams denied any involvement. In May, a jury at the High Court found in his favour and awarded him €100,000 after determining that was the meaning of words included in the programme and article. The BBC, which was found by the jury not to have acted in good faith nor in a fair and reasonable way, was also ordered to pay the former Sinn Féin leader's legal costs. BBC Northern Ireland director Adam Smyth (centre) outside the High Court in Dublin after the court case (Brian Lawless/PA) Adam Smyth, director of BBC NI, expressed disappointment in the verdict and said the corporation believes it supplied extensive evidence to the court of the careful editorial process and journalistic diligence applied to the programme and accompanying online article. After the decision, the broadcaster's legal team was granted a stay in the payment of the full award as it took time to consider an appeal, subject to paying half the damages (€50,000) and €250,000 towards solicitors' fees. In June, the BBC confirmed it would not pursue an appeal. However, it is understood that by August 1 the BBC had not paid the damages. Mr Adams previously indicated that he planned to donate what he receives to good causes. He specified that these would include for children in Gaza as well as groups in the Irish language sector and those who are homeless. A source close to Mr Adams told the PA news agency: 'The delay by the BBC is deplorable and it should move speedily towards discharging the order of the court.' A BBC spokesperson said: 'Total costs will be finalised and payable in due course.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store