19/11/2010

Policing Board To Also Monitor Collusion

A special committee has been established within Northern Ireland's police oversight body to monitor an often-controversial investigation into alleged collusion.

It emerged on Thursday afternoon that the NI Policing Board has set up the Special Purposes Committee to monitor the PSNI investigation - in parallel with a separate oversight panel led by the former Police Ombudsman.

The Committee, consisting of seven members, will be "strictly bound by confidentiality and will take forward a programme of work meeting initially on a monthly basis and will report only by exception", said a Board statement.

The Policing Board's Acting Chairman Brian Rea said: "The Board has held lengthy discussions on this issue and has now agreed a mechanism to take forward the statutory responsibilities in respect of monitoring the ongoing investigation."

The news came as it was revealed that the former NI Police Ombudsman, Nuala O'Loan - along with a barrister - are to oversee the ongoing police investigation into murders and other serious crimes committed by the loyalist UVF in north Belfast.

The police said the panel of Baroness O'Loan and Richard Harvey was set up at the request of victims and families and they will be briefed on the investigation and will act on their behalf.

Originally known as Operation Ballast, then renamed 'Stafford', it was launched after Baroness O'Loan's official Ombudsman investigation into allegations of collusion between police officers and the Mount Vernon UVF.

She found evidence that some loyalists had been RUC Special Branch agents and that some police officers had colluded with them to protect them from arrest and prosecution.

The current investigation was criticised after responsibility was handed over from the Historical Enquiries Team to the PSNI Crime Operations Branch earlier this year - with the operational name change following.

Now, a statement issued by the PSNI has said the Baroness's panel had been set up "to address issues of confidence and to demonstrate in good faith the scale and extent of the investigative work which is being undertaken".

A complaint by Newtownabbey man, Raymond McCord Senior, whose son, an RAF ex-serviceman was among those murdered, prompted Baroness O'Loan's original report.

That request to the Office of the Police Ombudsman was received from Mr McCord in May 2002 and her subsequent report was then published on 22 January 2007.

It contained 20 recommendations, with some 17 recommendations relating to the PSNI, one of these stated, "that the NI Policing Board should establish a mechanism to review the PSNI response to the recommendations made in this Report within a period of six months and at appropriate intervals thereafter".

This Special Purposes Committee - which will virtually 'shadow' Baroness O'Loan's oversight role - has now been revealed to be the Board's Acting Chair, Brian Rea, Acting Vice Chair, Gearóid Ó hEára, Martina Anderson MLA, Dominic Bradley MLA, Basil McCrea MLA, Trevor Ringland and Jimmy Spratt, also an MLA.

(BMcC/KMcA)

Related Northern Ireland News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

23 June 2016
Police Officers Disciplined For Failing To Tell Doctor About Woman's Head Injuries
Two police officers have been disciplined after they failed to let their colleagues and a police doctor know that a woman had sustained a head injury, a Police Ombudsman investigation has concluded. The woman died from bleeding to the brain on 24 February 2014, the day after she suffered the injury.
04 September 2007
NI Policing Board Seeks Custody Visitors
The Northern Ireland Policing Board has launched a campaign to recruit Custody Visitors to join the Board’s Custody Visiting Scheme. The volunteer scheme, which operates throughout Northern Ireland, is a means of monitoring how people who are held in police custody are treated.
20 February 2004
Security Minister welcomes police training college decision
Security Minister Jane Kennedy has welcomed the Policing Board's decision to locate the new police training college in Cookstown, Co Tyrone. The new centre will built on a 210-acre site beside a food science centre at Desertcreat on the outskirts of the town and is expected to open in 2007 at a projected cost of about £80m.
06 December 2011
'Flawed' RUC Double Murder Probe Slammed
RUC detectives overlooked vital clues pointing to a controversial double murder, a new report has today suggested.
06 June 2007
Orde says 'No' to unarmed police force
At the first Policing Board meeting involving Sinn Fein, the PSNI Chief Constable was challenged today by Sinn Fein's Alex Maskey to say when an unarmed police force would patrol in Northern Ireland.