15 Jul 2012

Murdered woman’s family welcome Boston IRA ruling

The family of Jean McConville, murdered and secretly buried by the IRA 40 years ago, welcomes a US court ruling that an interview with a former IRA bomber should be handed to police.

Convicted car bomber Dolours Price allegedly discussed Jean McConville’s death during one of a series of interviews recorded as part of the Boston College Belfast Project.

Mrs McConville, a mother-of-10 from Belfast, was murdered and secretly buried by the IRA 40 years ago.

The Boston College Belfast Project – which began in 2001 and lasted five years – was a series of interviews conducted by former IRA member turned academic Anthony McIntyre and journalist Ed Moloney. They have argued against any disclosure of the material.

Price, and other interviewees from republican and loyalist sides of the conflict who participated, spoke on the strict understanding that the interviews would be kept secret until after their deaths.

But a US Appeal Court has now ruled a tape transcript should be handed to police.

Mr McIntyre and Mr Moloney plan to challenge the ruling and have the case re-heard – meaning release of the tapes could be delayed for months.

Detectives with the Police Service of Northern Ireland investigating the murder of Mrs McConville’s, one of the so-called Disappeared, requested the transcript.

The Disappeared were people abducted, murdered and secretly buried by republicans.

Mrs McConville was taken from her Divis Street home in Belfast in 1972 and shot and buried on the Co Louth coast.

Her body was found at Shelling Hill beach in 2003.

Michael McConville, Jean’s son, welcomed the court ruling. He said: “I am not really worried about prosecution but the people that murdered my mother, I would like them to be named and shamed.

“We get to know who the people were who murdered my mother. If something happens to them, that will be good enough for our family.”
The material is expected to be handed over next month.

Mr McIntyre’s solicitor Kevin Winters said legal action was also being taken in Northern Ireland – on the basis that his client’s human rights may be breached if Boston College hands the material to the police.