The Impact Of Gerry Adams Squashed Conviction By Supreme Court

The Impact Of Gerry Adams Squashed Conviction By Supreme Court

By Ashley Young

The impact of Gerry Adams having his historic convictions for attempting to escape from the Maze Prison in the 1970s  squashed could extent to several other similar cases.

Adam’s decades long conviction was  overturned by the UK’s highest court after it ruling the detention unlawful.

The former Sinn Fein leader claimed his two 1975 convictions were unsafe because his detention was not “personally considered” by a senior government minister.

Mr Adams, 71, attempted to escape from the Maze – also known as Long Kesh internment camp – on Christmas Eve 1973 and again in July 1974. He was later sentenced to a total of four-and-a-half years.

At a hearing in November, Mr Adams’ lawyers argued that his convictions were unlawful  because the interim custody order (ICO) used to initially detain him in July 1973 was not authorised by the then-secretary of state for Northern Ireland Willie Whitelaw.

Announcing the Supreme Court’s judgement at a remote hearing on Wednesday, Lord Kerr – the former Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland – said the court had unanimously allowed Mr Adams’ appeal and had quashed his convictions.

Lord Kerr said: “The making of the ICO in respect of the appellant was invalid since the secretary of state had not himself considered it.

“In consequence, Mr Adams’ detention was unlawful, hence his convictions of attempting to escape from lawful custody were, likewise, unlawful.”

Lord Kerr added: “The appeal is therefore allowed and his convictions are quashed.”

The judge said that Mr Adams had been detained under an ICO made under the Detention of Terrorists (Northern Ireland) Order 1972 and that “such an order could be made where the secretary of state considered that an individual was involved in terrorism”.

Mr Adams has consistently denied being a member of the IRA.

In the court’s written judgement, Lord Kerr said the power to make such an order was “a momentous one”, describing it as “a power to detain without trial and potentially for a limitless period”.

He added: “This provides an insight into Parliament’s intention and that the intention was that such a crucial decision should be made by the secretary of state.”

Gerry Adams urged the British Government to identify and inform others whose internment may also have been unlawful.

“I have no regrets about my imprisonment, except for the time I was separated from my family. However, we were not on our own.

“It is believed that around 2,000 men and women were interned during its four-and-a-half years of operation.

“I consider my time in the prison ship Maidstone, in Belfast prison and in Long Kesh to have been in the company of many remarkable, resilient and inspiring people.

“Internment, like all coercive measures, failed.

“There is an onus on the British Government to identify and inform other internees whose internment may also have been unlawful.”

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