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FOURTH SECTION
DECISION
AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application no. 34622/04
by Bernard and Gabriel O’DOWD
against the United Kingdom
The European Court of Human Rights (Fourth
Section), sitting on 6 March 2007 as a Chamber composed of:
Mr
J. Casadevall,
President,
Sir Nicolas Bratza,
Mr G.
Bonello,
Mr K.
Traja,
Mr S.
Pavlovschi,
Mr J.
Šikuta,
Mrs P.
Hirvelä, judges,
and Mrs F. Aracı,
Deputy Section Registrar,
Having regard to the above application
lodged on 10 September 2004,
Having regard to the observations
submitted by the respondent Government and the observations
in reply submitted by the applicants,
Having deliberated, decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicants, both Irish citizens, are
-
Bernard O’Dowd born in 1923, living in Drumnee,
County Meath, Ireland, who was the father of Barry O’Dowd
and Declan O’Dowd;
-
Michael Gabriel O’Dowd born in 1951, living in
Bleary, Armagh, who was the son of Joseph O’Dowd.
They are represented before the Court by
Mr R. MacRitchie of Madden & Finucane, solicitors practising
in Belfast.
The Government are represented by their
Agent, Mr J. Grainger of the Foreign and Commonwealth
Office, London.
A. The circumstances of the case
The facts of the case, as submitted by the
parties, may be summarised as follows.
1. The attack on the O’Dowd home
On the evening of 4 January 1976, the
first applicant was hosting a family get-together at his
home in Ballydougan, County Down. At about 6.30 p.m. three
masked gunmen forced an entry to the house. Barry O’Dowd,
Declan O’Dowd and Joseph O’Dowd were shot and killed. The
first applicant was hit by nine bullets but survived. About
thirty shots were fired during the incident. No organisation
claimed responsibility for their deaths. The same night an
attack was launched on the home of another Catholic family
in Armagh, in which John and Brian Reavey were killed and
Anthony Reavey was injured.
The three men were believed to have made
their getaway in a Morris 1300 car, 3315XZ, stolen earlier
from Robert Street, Lurgan.
The emergency services – police and
ambulance – arrived within a short time. Detectives and
Scene of Crime Officers commenced investigations.
Post-mortems were held. House to house inquiries were
conducted in the area and along the suspected getaway route
with negative results. Nineteen spent bullet cases were
recovered at the scene and the weapon used was identified as
one used in four other attacks. Numerous witnesses were
interviewed, including members of the family who were
interviewed at length. Ronan O’Dowd stated that he had
observed two men standing beside a red car, possibly a
“1300”, close to the house, both men were masked and had
“walkie talkie” radios. Cathal O’Dowd stated that he had
observed a blue coloured “Viva” car near the house that
afternoon.
Several days before the attack, Ronan
O’Dowd had seen masked men running up a lane adjacent to the
house, in what the applicants believed was a dummy run for
the attack. The family also recollected seeing officers of
the Royal Ulster Constabulary (“RUC”) and Ulster Defence
Regiment (“UDR”) in fields near the house the day before the
attack, which was an unusual occurrence.
Police inquiries revealed that a red
Morris 1300 had been stolen from Lurgan on 4 January 1976;
it was found burnt out on 5 January 1976. Inquiries in
Lurgan proved negative. No further information was received
on the “Viva” car.
Three men were arrested by the police on 5
January 1976 and questioned about the murders. They were
released on 8 January 1976 and no charges preferred.
On 20 January 2006, the first applicant
stated that one man who had entered the house was similar in
appearance to a man whom he named. The man was arrested,
questioned but eliminated from the enquiry following
verification of his alibi.
In May-June 1976, the police questioned
the first applicant and asked him to identify a weapon. He
identified the weapon as one used in the attack. He was told
that it was linked to Robin Jackson, a prominent loyalist
paramilitary and to a number of other loyalist attacks.
An Inquest held on 11 February 1977
returned open verdicts.
2. The investigations concerning McCaughey
and Weir
After 1976 there were no further
developments in the O’Dowd murders until 1999 when John Weir
made allegations of police involvement in a range of
loyalist terrorist incidents including the O’Dowds.
In the course of an investigation in 1978,
the police had arrested a reserve police constable William
McCaughey, who, in the course of questioning, revealed his
part in the abduction of a priest and in a variety of other
loyalist paramilitary incidents. McCaughey’s revelations
gave rise to investigations in eleven specific cases, some
of which were linked in terms of the identities of those
involved, the modus operandi or by virtue of the ballistics
examinations of weapons used. Nine suspects were arrested in
total, including five police officers and all were
eventually charged with offences.
One of those implicated was a police
officer John Weir who was named as having been involved in
the murder of a shopkeeper called Strathearn in Ahoghill in
April 1977: he was convicted for that murder in June 1980
and sentenced to life imprisonment. The Government stated
that both McCaughey and Weir refused to name the two
loyalist paramilitaries also involved with them in the
murder unless they received immunity from prosecution. The
police and prosecuting authority took the decision prior to
the trial not to enter into any process of bargaining with
Weir and McCaughey. While both were approached by the police
after their convictions to see if at that stage they would
give evidence against the loyalist paramilitaries, each
again refused to do so unless there was something in it for
themselves. The Government stated that during the period in
which Weir was detained he was interviewed on a large number
of occasions. At no time did he implicate himself or others
in any offence other than the Strathearn murder.
3. The Weir allegations and the response of
the authorities
On 1 February 1993, John Weir was released
from prison on licence. In January 1999, he made a statement
to a journalist alleging RUC and Ulster Defence Regiment
(“UDR”) collusion with loyalist paramilitaries from the
Portadown area in the mid-1970s. This statement was
published in the Sunday Times newspaper in March 1999. It
was obtained by the Patrick Finucane Centre, a human rights
non-governmental organisation in Derry (“the Centre”).
John Weir’s statement made detailed
allegations about security force collusion with loyalist
paramilitaries in a series of incidents. He alleged inter
alia that RUC Reserve Constable Laurence McClure had
told him that Robin Jackson had carried out the murders in
the O’Dowd home and that the attack had been co-ordinated
with the attack on the Reavey family the same night in which
security force personnel participated directly. The
statement also made links between these incidents and other
attacks allegedly carried out by members of the security
forces, both RUC and UDR, and loyalist paramilitaries. This
group used the farmhouse in Glennane owned by James
Mitchell, a RUC reservist, as a base from which to carry out
attacks on Catholics and nationalists. Other attacks
allegedly included the murder of John and Brian Reavey and
wounding of Anthony Reavey in their home on 4 January 1976
(see application no. 34640/04); the murder of Colm McCartney
and Sean Farmer at a bogus vehicle checkpoint in August 1975
(see application no. 34575/04); the attack on Donnelly’s Bar
in which Trevor Brecknell, Michael Donnelly and Patrick
Donnelly were killed (see application no. 32457/04); and the
attack on the Rock Bar in which Michael McGrath was
seriously injured (see application no. 34561/04). Weir also
linked these attacks to the Dublin and Monaghan bombings in
which 33 people were killed in the Republic of Ireland.
On or about 10 June 1999, RTE, an Irish
television channel, broadcast a television programme that
contained allegations of security force involvement in a
number of deaths, including that of Trevor Brecknell. Weir
made allegations on that programme that members of the RUC
and UDR were directly involved in the attack on Donnelly’s
Bar. A BBC Spotlight programme produced a similar
documentary dealing with these allegations.
These allegations attracted considerable
attention on both sides of the Irish border and became the
subject of police investigation in both jurisdictions. The
Government stated that the police investigation in Northern
Ireland was focussed on determining whether Weir’s
allegations should be assessed as sufficiently credible to
require a full investigation. They obtained from the
journalist an edited transcript of the interview with Weir.
While his whereabouts were unknown to the RUC, Weir met with
senior Irish police officers at the Irish Embassy on 15
April 1999. A copy of his statement was provided by the
Garda to the RUC, along with a further statement made by
Weir to another journalist dated 3 February 1999. The police
analysed the available materials and sought to identify the
personalities to be interviewed. It became apparent that
some had died and that others, living abroad, could not be
traced. A series of seven interviews were conducted, under
cautions, between July and December 2001, of those
individuals central to Weir’s account who could be traced.
No charges were preferred. The interviews followed the
format of Weir’s allegations being put to the interviewee
for his or her response. The predominant response was denial
of any involvement and claims that Weir had been untruthful.
No admissions were made by any interviewee. Interviews were
also conducted with less central personalities and with
police officers involved in interviewing Weir in 1978. The
latter stated that Weir had not mentioned the matters now
being alleged.
Meetings were held regularly with RUC
counterparts in the Republic of Ireland. The RUC co-operated
also with the judicial inquiry established in the Republic
of Ireland into the Dublin and Monaghan bombings (see the
description of the inquiry in the case of Brecknell referred
to above). Amongst matters about which the RUC team provided
information to the inquiry was ballistics information which
linked some of the weapons used to more than one incident.
In February 2000 a substantial report was compiled by the
RUC for the Garda dealing with Weir’s allegations. It
profiled Weir and dealt inter alia with a description
of the 1978 investigation into McCaughey, Weir and others.
It concluded that the investigation would continue but that
his credibility was in doubt. According to the Government,
despite inquiries being conducted, Weir’s whereabouts could
not be traced. This report was not disclosed as the
investigation was continuing. An internal RUC report dated
27 February 2001 concluded that it would be necessary to
interview Weir before any view could be finalised in respect
of the credibility of his allegations: such interview was
not possible as his whereabouts were not known. The report
noted the absence of any previous mention of the allegations
before 1999 and that much of what he said was hearsay and
speculation. Inquiries made of the British Embassy in
Nigeria (where he had a known address) and the criminal
intelligence service and others failed to locate Weir.
Contact was made with the Garda and the secretariat of the
Inquiry into the Dublin and Monaghan bombings without
positive result.
The Serious Crime Review Team (“SCRT”) was
established in March 2004, with responsibilities including
the review of all historical murders by way of case
assessment for evidential and investigative opportunities. A
preliminary case assessment was carried out by detective
chief inspector, who audited all known information and
documentation.
In light of the preliminary assessment,
the case was referred to the Historical Enquiry Team (HET).
On 28 April 2006, a Senior Investigating Officer reported on
the further review; a number of potential lines of enquiry
were identified and recommendations made, including that the
HET should extensively interview Weir. This recommendation
was approved. The HET director of Investigations, Detective
Chief Superintendent James of the London Metropolitan Police
Force, took over personal supervision the investigation
which has progressed through the first three of five stages
of the HET process (collection of all relevant material;
assessment of the investigations to date; review of
evidence, with intelligence and open and non-police sources
together with a meeting with the families of the victims of
the attack). As a number of investigative opportunities have
been identified and are to be followed up, the case will
continue to be processed by HET, which have been put in
touch with Weir by the Centre. The Government submitted that
if any evidence of police involvement in the murders was
found, the Office of the Police Ombudsman for Northern
Ireland would then become involved.
There has been contact between the police
and family members, their solicitors or the Centre. In
particular, there were meetings in September 2002 with
Detective Chief Inspector Paterson, and a meeting with the
Chief Constable in June and August 2004; members of HET met
with families or their representatives on 29 March and 31
May 2006; and there has also been extensive correspondence
with the families or their representatives.
The Government stated that the HET would
continue to process the case and follow up opportunities.
4. Application for judicial review
concerning the inadequacy of the investigation
See Brecknell, cited above.
5. Reports of the Independent Commissions
of Inquiry (Republic of Ireland)
See Brecknell, cited above.
COMPLAINTS
The applicants complained under Article 2
of the Convention that the United Kingdom had failed to
provide an effective official investigation into the
allegations made in 1999 by John Weir alleging security
force involvement in the attack in which Barry O’Dowd,
Declan O’Dowd and Joseph O’Dowd were killed and linking that
attack with other acts of security force collusion with
loyalist paramilitaries. The investigation conducted by the
RUC/PSNI lacked the requisite degree of independence from
those implicated in the events; the investigation into the
credibility of John Weir’s allegations was not effective in
that it was not capable of identifying and punishing those
responsible; there was unwarranted delay in progressing the
investigation and it was not pursued with reasonable
expedition; the investigation was not open to public
scrutiny and the relatives affected by the credibility or
otherwise of John Weir’s allegations were not given
sufficient access to the investigation, including documents,
to enable them to protect their legitimate interests.
The applicants also complained under
Article 13 of the Convention due to the lack of any
effective remedy, submitting that the House of Lords
decision of 11 March 2004 in the case of McKerr v. the
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland removed any
domestic remedy for their allegation that the current
investigation breached Article 2 of the Convention.
THE LAW
1. The applicants complained of a lack of
proper investigation into the allegations made by Weir
concerning their relative’s death, invoking Articles 2 and
13 of the Convention which provides as relevant:
Article 2:
“1. Everyone’s right to life shall be
protected by law. ..”
Article 13:
“Everyone whose rights and freedoms as set
forth in [the] Convention are violated shall have an
effective remedy before a national authority notwithstanding
that the violation has been committed by persons acting in
an official capacity.”
A. The six month rule (Article 35 § 1 of
the Convention)
The Court notes that the Government and
applicants’ submissions on this point are identical to those
raised in the Brecknell case, cited above.
For the same reasons, it rejects the
preliminary objection.
B. The substance of the case
The parties’ submissions repeat those made
in the Brecknell case, cited above.
Having regard to the applicants’
complaints and the parties’ submissions, the Court finds
that serious questions of fact and law arise, the
determination of which should depend on an examination of
the merits. The application cannot be regarded as manifestly
ill-founded within the meaning of Article 35 § 3 of the
Convention. No other grounds for declaring it inadmissible
have been established.
For these reasons, the Court
unanimously
Declares the application
admissible, without prejudging the merits of the case.
Fatoş
Aracı
Josep Casadevall
Deputy
Registrar
President |