Claims IRA members opened fire in car park were ‘demonstrably untrue’, inquest found
Solicitor Niall Murphy, with clients Caoimhe Hanna and Roisin Ni Dhonaill, the sisters of victim Kevin Barry O'Donnell, and Relatives for Justice CEO Mark Thompson, leaving Laganside Court, Belfast, at the outset of the inquest in 2023. Photograph: Liam McBurney/PA WireMembers of a specialist British military unit who shot dead four IRA men in an ambush in Co Tyrone in 1992 used lethal force which was not justified, a coroner has ruled.
The British special forces opened fire as the men arrived at St Patrick’s Church car park in a stolen lorry they had used in the police station attack.Inside Trump’s surprise plan to ‘own’ GazaAn inquest into the circumstances of the killings, which opened in 2023, found that up to 570 rounds were fired by the soldiers.
However, Mr Justice Humphreys said the use of force by the soldiers was, in the circumstances they believed them to be, “not reasonable”. Mr Justice Humphreys went on to say that reports created by the police force in the aftermath, including those provided to government ministers, referred to simultaneous firing and a firefight.“The reasons for putting forward such false justifications for the actions of the soldiers are obvious,” he added.
The inquest also found that state agencies “perpetuated falsehoods” about the events at Clonoe, having claimed in a press release that there was an “exchange of gunfire”.
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