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Omagh Bombing Case Collapses Belfast
Crown Court acquitted Sean Hoey of all charges in connection with the
1998 Omagh bombing, which claimed the lives of 29 civilians. Hoey, a 38-year-old
electrician from Jonesboro, Co. Armagh, was accused of 56 charges relating
to the atrocity but Justice Reg Weir ruled that the forensic evidence
gathered by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) was unreliable.
Hoey was acquitted of all charges.
At the end of a trial which lasted ten months Justice Weir concluded that
police officers had botched the investigation. He added that two PSNI
officers fabricated evidence to strengthen their case and two witnesses
called were guilty of “a deliberate and calculated deception.”
He also expressed doubt that one person alone was involved in assembling
the bombing device.
Sean Hoey is the only person arrested by Northern Ireland authorities
in relation to the Omagh bombing. Two suspects currently imprisoned in
the Republic await trial.
When it was revealed that the main evidence against him was based on low-copy
DNA taken from the timing devices that set off the bomb, the case virtualy
collapsed. Although low-copy testing is a widespread practice by prosecutors
it is usually offered as supporting evidence rather than forming the basis
of a case.
Speaking after the verdict Hoey’s solicitor, Peter Corrigan, said
his client was an innocent man who had been completely vindicated. “Today’s
judgment – a reasoned, lengthy and well considered judgment –
completely vindicated this position that he maintained. Sean Hoey is an
innocent man,” said Corrigan.
Outside the court Mr. Hoey’s mother Rita told reporters: “I
want the world to know that my son Sean Hoey is innocent. The authorities
north and south have held two separate trials, but one witch-hunt.”
Transcripts of the 56-day trial have been sent to the Police Ombudsman’s
office in Belfast. An inquiry is expected to review the actions of two
PSNI officers who gave evidence at the trial.
A senior Garda (Irish police) spokesman pointed out that the Gardai have
dropped using low-copy DNA evidence in other cases. “It was something
we looked into but we felt that low-copy DNA samples could be transferred
from anywhere and were not particularly reliable,” he said. “We
did not consider it to be robust enough at all, certainly for a high-profile
investigation. It may have its uses as support evidence if there were
witnesses and so on, placing a suspect at the scene. However, we would
not consider it at all appropriate to bring a case based on this type
of DNA evidence on its own.”
The failure of the PSNI to identify and charge the perpetrators of the
1998 atrocity has led to stinging criticism of its bungled investigation.
Relatives of the 29 victims have openly despaired at the lack of investigative
progress in nine years since the Co. Tyrone market town was torn asunder.
“There wasn’t an atrocity in the history of the Troubles that
more was known about, and yet least was done about,” said Michael
Gallagher, who lost his son Aidan in the blast. Lawrence Rush, who lost
his wife Elizabeth, felt the case had been grievously mishandled by the
PSNI.
Gallagher, Rush and others are demanding that a full cross-border inquiry
be conducted to find out who carried out the Omagh bombing in an effort
to bring them to justice.
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