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US court hears IRA tape challenge


Jean McConvilleJean McConville was abducted and murdered in 1972

A court in the United States will be asked to rule later that interviews with former terrorists should not be handed over to NI authorities.

Last year, the PSNI launched a legal bid to gain access to interviews with former republicans and loyalists held by Boston College.

They are being sought by detectives investigating cases of people murdered and secretly buried by the IRA.

At the heart of the case is the 1972 IRA murder of Jean McConville.

US prosecutors have demanded anything in the Boston College archive relating to the death of the Belfast mother of 10, one of the so-called "disappeared".

Police in Northern Ireland are seeking accounts from former IRA members who accused Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams of running a secret cell within the IRA that carried out the kidnappings and disappearance - something Gerry Adams has denied doing or having any knowledge of.

This is the first time police have tried to use the Boston College oral history collection to build criminal cases.

The college has already turned over tapes of interviews given by Brendan Hughes, a former IRA member who died in 2008. A subsequent documentary led to calls for the other interviews to be handed over.

Dolours Price was one of 26 former IRA members to give a series of interviews - between 2001 and 2006 - as part of the research study, called the Belfast Project.

They want to hear her interview relating to the abduction and death of Mrs McConville.

Caveat

The material has already been handed over to the US authorities following an earlier court ruling, but on Monday, a US federal court judge will hear a challenge against the material being given to the British authorities.

The application has been made on behalf of those who conducted the Belfast Project - journalist and writer Ed Moloney who was the director, republican researcher Anthony McIntyre and a loyalist researcher.

The people whom they interviewed spoke only with the caveat that the material would not be made public until after their deaths.

BBC journalist Andy Martin who has been following the case said: "The interviewees feel they have been let down by Boston College and by the American authorities. The college has a reputation as a centre of law and holds the documentation relating to paramilitary weapons.

"Ed Moloney and Anthony McIntyre feel they have been let down and Anthony McIntyre feels that his life is in danger.

"Then, there is the victims' lobby which feels that the interviews should be handed over."



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