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Last Modified: 12 May 2008
Source: ITN

Loyalist killer Michael Stone intended to slit the throats of Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams and Martin McGuinness when he stormed Stormont, a court heard.

The 53-year-old planned to carry out the assassinations on the day Mr McGuinness was designated as Deputy First Minister at the Northern Ireland Assembly Chamber.

But the murder plot ended in failure when Stone was tackled by security staff at the entrance to the building.

Stone faced a total of 14 charges, including attempting to murder Mr Adams and Mr McGuinness, when he went on trial at Belfast Crown Court.

As well as the attempted murder charges, Stone is charged with possessing home-made explosives and an imitation gun with intent.

He is also charged with carrying a garrotte, three knives and an axe and assaulting staff members who trapped him in the revolving doors at Stormont.

Stone has since denied the charges claiming his attack was "performance art".

But prosecuting council Charles Adair QC said that after being arrested by police, Stone said: "My intention was to walk into the debating chamber and look for where Adams, McGuinness and Sinn Fein were sitting. I would have lobbed several nail bombs to cause confusion.

"I planned to stab Adams and McGuinness and cut their throats."

Mr Adair said Stone said he would use "close-quarter tactics" to slit the throats of Mr Adams and Mr McGuinness.

The lawyer said Stone admitted to counting on the fact that any personal protection weapons the Assembly members had would not have been carried in the debating chambers.

Mr Adair said Stone explained to police why he had planned the assassinations. He told them: "I see Adams and McGuinness as republican war criminals. Adams and McGuinness don't deserve to be in a devolved Government. It would be a bastardisation of democracy".

After his detention and arrest Stone was taken by police from Stormont to the nearby Ulster hospital for a check-up because he had been complaining of chest pains and difficulty in breathing.

It was during the journey to the hospital and while in the hospital that he told them why he had launched the attack.

He said Stone - who suffers severe arthritis and walks with a stick - spent two hours working his way through the Stormont grounds to the entrance of Parliament Buildings.

He was first spotted by a security guard spray-painting on the front of the buildings the words 'Sinn Fein IRA war'.

When the guard challenged Stone he pulled a gun, which later turned out to be replica, and pointed it directly into the security man's face, saying: "You had better run or you're a dead man."

The security guard ran in a zig-zag fashion to the east-end of the building where he raised the alarm.

While he was doing so, Stone tried to enter the main revolving door but was trapped by security guard Sue Porter, said Mr Adair.

He had a bag with him which he dropped and used a lighter to light what appeared to be a fuse which started to sparkle.

He flung the bag into the entrance hall shouting that a bomb would go off.

Stone told Ms Porter the bomb would go off in five minutes but in fact the device never went off and is believed to have malfunctioned having got damp during the torrential rain that fell that day.

Mr Adair said Stone insisted he had been acting alone telling police: "I am a dissident loyalist freelance".

He claimed to have left the Ulster Defence Association on the day he was released from the Maze Prison under the Good Friday Agreement early release scheme.

Stone gained notoriety in 1988 when he launched a gun and grenade attack on the republican funeral of three IRA members shot dead by the SAS in Gibraltar.

Three people died and several more were injured before Stone was arrested by police as he fled Milltown Cemetery in West Belfast by running onto the M1 motorway.

Following his arrest at Stormont he was returned to prison to serve out the balance of his life sentence for the murders.

The case continues.

© Independent Television News Limited 2008. All rights reserved.

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