logo
The Troubles: Supreme Court to hear Paul Thompson inquest disclosure challenge

The Troubles: Supreme Court to hear Paul Thompson inquest disclosure challenge

BBC News11-06-2025
The Supreme Court will hear a case later which campaigners believe has implications for state secrecy around several killings during the Northern Ireland Troubles.The case has been brought by the Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn.He is appealing a decision in which a coroner intended to release some intelligence information about the loyalist murder of Paul "Topper" Thompson in 1994.The 25-year-old was travelling in a taxi which was fired upon by the Ulster Freedom Fighters (UFF) at Springfield Park in west Belfast.
His family believes the case involves state collusion.Coroner Louisa Fee had planned to disclose a "gist", or summary, of intelligence at his inquest in March 2024, but Benn's predecessor, Chris Heaton-Harris, began a legal challenge which will now culminate in a two-day hearing in London.Judgement will be delivered at a future point.
'Critical questions'
Amnesty International, Relatives for Justice and the Committee on the Administration of Justice (CAJ) are supporting Mr Thompson's family.They said the case raised "critical questions" about the government's Neither Confirm Nor Deny policy, which is used "to prevent the disclosure of information on national security grounds".CAJ director Daniel Holder said: "This case has wide implications for numerous bereaved families and the rule of law."National security cannot surely be invoked to conceal state wrongdoing or the involvement of state agents in killings or other human rights violations."Mr Thompson's inquest was one of several halted under the last government's Legacy Act.Labour has pledged to reinstate inquests under a replacement act.The act was passed by the Conservative government in September 2023 despite opposition from Labour, all Northern Ireland parties, several victims' groups and the Irish government.It created a new legacy body known ICRIR to take over all Troubles-era cases from 1 May 2024, including those on the desk of the Police Service of Northern Ireland.The act shuts down all historical inquests.The act's most controversial element, the offer of conditional immunity to suspects, has been disapplied following legal action by bereaved families.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Teachers have the right to ask pupils to call them Mx, instead of Mr, Miss, Mrs, says Bridget Phillipson
Teachers have the right to ask pupils to call them Mx, instead of Mr, Miss, Mrs, says Bridget Phillipson

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Teachers have the right to ask pupils to call them Mx, instead of Mr, Miss, Mrs, says Bridget Phillipson

Teachers have the right to ask pupils to call them 'Mx' instead of Mr, Mrs or Miss, Bridget Phillipson has said. The Education Secretary said teachers can 'request' that children call them by the gender-neutral honorific instead of traditional titles. Women's rights groups criticised Ms Phillipson for bringing a 'contested ideology' into classrooms and said children should only be taught the fact of biological sex. On whether teachers be referred to as Mx - a gender-neutral honorific used by people who do not identify as either male or female - Ms Phillipson said they 'can make that request'. She told LBC: 'But of course, what we'll be looking at is making sure that people are able to exercise their views on this topic too. 'This has been the subject of various legal cases as well about people's rights in terms of how they approach questions of gender identity. 'We'll consider all areas of the practical guidance that schools need and responding to the challenges that they tell us they've faced.' Fiona McAnena, director of campaigns at human rights charity Sex Matters, said that schools should not being telling children that teachers can be neither male nor female and pupils 'should be taught the facts about biological sex'. She added: 'School heads and teachers urgently need joined up and sensible guidance that safeguards every child, with the wellbeing of all pupils at its heart, whether they identify as trans or not. 'What is the Education Secretary's priority? A teacher's personal sense of identity, or the education and wellbeing of children?' Ms Phillipson was also unable to say when the long-awaited transgender guidance for schools would be shared with teachers - more than a year after the election. Draft guidance published by the Tories in late 2023 urged caution when children ask to 'socially transition' to the opposite gender and said that parents should not be kept in the dark. It also forbids schools from teaching 'gender identity' views as fact. But when the Tories lost the election last year, Labour placed it under 'review', leaving schools in limbo ever since despite renewed pressure after the Supreme Court said trans women aren't legally female. On when the guidance might be released, Ms Phillipson told LBC yesterday [TUES]: 'So the last government were consulting on this at the point of the election. 'That consultation concluded, and we had to look at all of those responses. But also what happened subsequently was Dr Hilary Cass published her final review around gender questioning children. 'So I think it is important, given the sensitivity of this area, that we make sure that the guidance we publish is aligned fully with Dr Cass's recommendations. And I do think it's important we take the time to get this right... She added: 'This is an important area. This is about children's wellbeing. It's about making sure they've got the support they need and schools have got the clarity of the guidance too.' A Department for Education spokesman said: 'While teachers can make such requests, the Education Secretary was clear it's not something that they can insist on. 'Teachers and pupils should be treated with respect.'

Serial shoplifter spared prison four times because she's a single mum is finally jailed after stealing £3.2k of designer sunglasses
Serial shoplifter spared prison four times because she's a single mum is finally jailed after stealing £3.2k of designer sunglasses

Daily Mail​

time22 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Serial shoplifter spared prison four times because she's a single mum is finally jailed after stealing £3.2k of designer sunglasses

A serial shoplifter who was spared jail four times because she was a single mum has finally been locked up for stealing thousands of pounds worth of designer sunglasses. Kayleigh Bradley, 37, was repeatedly handed suspended sentences after she complained about her difficult childhood and how she had been in and out of care from the age of ten. However Bradley, who has 128 offences on her record, continued to prey on shopkeepers using a foil lined bag and a small 'detagger' she had bought on the internet to beat the security alarms. In her latest spree, she was caught stealing more than £4,000 worth of goods from stores at the Cheshire Oaks retail complex in Ellesmere Port over a two month period. This included the theft of £3,213 worth of designer sunglasses from an opticians on three separate occasions. At Chester Crown Court, she tried to escape jail for a fifth time - again citing her childhood and saying she needed to spend more time with her 12-year-old son. However, she was sentenced to 20 months in prison with Judge Patrick Thompson telling the court: 'Why keep stealing if she wants to spend time with her son? 'I am afraid the defendant thinks court orders do not exist and do not matter. 'This is the first time I have seen someone receive four consecutive suspended sentences. 'I have seen people with sad and difficult backgrounds and I have got sympathy for that - but chance after chance has been given. 'If somebody keeps stealing from shops they are going to prison whatever the problem.' Bradley's four suspended sentences were imposed by JPs and judges in Liverpool between September 2023 and September 2024. But she flouted all four of them to embark on thieving sprees with a male accomplice - once again using her foil lined bag to stop tagged goods setting off the alarms. Prosecutor Miss Selda Krasniqi said that at 11.40am on May 26, Bradley and a male were seen entering the Cheshire Oaks car park in a black Volkswagen car. She was then seen getting out of the vehicle carrying a number of shopping bags and entered the Cosmetic Company store. Bradley selected a number of items with a total value of £872.25. Ms Krasniqi said: 'These were placed in her bag before she walked out making no attempt to pay. 'She then placed the items in the boot of the Volkswagen vehicle. She then entered the David Clulow store, selected five pairs of designer sunglasses valued at £1,495. 'Those items are placed in a foil lined bag. She leaves the store, again making no attempt to pay, then returns to the car and places the bag in the boot. 'The assistant manager of this store reviews the CCTV and identified further incidents where Miss Bradley had committed thefts. 'On Tuesday April 1, Miss Bradley was seen to enter the store, select four pairs of sunglasses before leaving the store without making any attempt at payment. 'Then on March 15, she selected two pairs of sunglasses before leaving without making any attempt at payment. The offending was sophisticated in the nature of planning.' Police arrested Bradley after officers saw her and the unnamed male accomplice get out of the Volkswagen at McDonalds in Rock Ferry. They recovered the foil lined bag and items from David Clulow and the Cosmetic Company. Bradley admitted four charges of theft and one of going equipped for theft. She also admitted being in breach of the four suspended sentence orders. In mitigation, defence counsel Oliver Saddington said: 'She is a woman who has struggled with enormous difficulties growing up. 'She was in and out of care, passed from pillar to post and has struggled with alcohol issues throughout her life. 'She continued stealing as she needed the money. There was the unsavoury company she was in and she owed money to these people and that is why she felt she has no choice but to steal. 'The reason these chances have been given to her is that somebody with her difficulties needs time to rehabilitate. 'There is a method by which the court could deal with the breaches and give this woman a chance to prove herself.' Jailing Bradley for 20 months, the judge said: 'Shopkeepers are trying to make a living. 'People who are working there rely on those shops for employment so why should they have to lose £4,000? 'She has been given a number of chances to prove herself - but all she proved herself to be, I am afraid, is a thief.' Judge Thompson told Bradley: 'You need to understand that people cannot afford for others to steal from them. 'You may see stores as easy prey but the shop owners and people who work there rely on them for their families. 'When people constantly steal from shops, eventually the shops find it difficult to operate economically. 'It is a real problem but it is particularly serious when you are serving not one, not two, not three but four various suspended sentences.' Bradley, who is from Fazakerly in Liverpool, has a criminal career dating back at least 12 years. In 2013, she admitted stealing £580 worth of goods from River Island, Oasis, Warehouse and Dorothy Perkins. She was freed with a two month curfew after a judge ruled: 'Everything indicates she intends to change her life.' But over the following decade she was repeatedly brought before various courts for a string of store thefts.

Six ways Starmer hopes to stop migrants crossing Channel — ranked
Six ways Starmer hopes to stop migrants crossing Channel — ranked

Times

time22 minutes ago

  • Times

Six ways Starmer hopes to stop migrants crossing Channel — ranked

W hen Sir Keir Starmer came into office one of his first acts was to scrap the Conservative government's 'failed' Rwanda deportation scheme and pledge to bring down illegal migration by 'smashing the gangs' behind small boat crossings. But as the months have gone on the prime minister has found, like his predecessors, that tackling the small boats crisis is much easier said than done. As the numbers crossing the Channel have risen… …so have the number of initiatives designed to deter them. So with the total number of migrants who have arrived in the UK since Labour came to power at 50,000, what exactly has Labour done to try and solve the problem — and to what extent is it working?

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store