
‘No smoking gun’ as Gerry Adams court case ends
Former Sinn Féin leader spent two days in the witness box of a London court rejecting claims he was in the IRA
In The News · [email protected]
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Show Notes
Three victims of the IRA’s bombing campaign in Britain have spent the past four years building a legal case in an attempt to prove that Gerry Adams was a leading member of the IRA during the Troubles.
The former Sinn Féin leader spent two days in the witness box in London, maintaining he was never a member of the republican paramilitary organisation responsible for the injuries of John Clark in the Old Bailey explosion in 1973, Jonathan Ganesh at Canary Wharf in 1996 and Barry Laycock a few months later in Manchester.
The 77-year-old appeared, according to Irish Times Ireland and Britain editor Mark Hennessy, frail but he was robust in his denial of the claims.
So what happens next? Why might the judge rule that the case should never have been brought? And why did Adams wear a bulletproof vest on the first day of the hearing?
As the court prepares to sit for its final day, Hennessy explains the background to the case and the evidence presented.
Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon and John Casey.
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