
Martin O'Hagan: Man charged with fraud in journalist murder investigation
A man charged with fraud by false representation in relation to the investigation into the murder of journalist Martin O'Hagan has appeared in court in Craigavon.42-year-old Michael Kingsberry of Sycamore Close in Doncaster is accused of claiming to hold official documents with the intention to make a gain for himself or another or to cause loss to the family of Martin O'Hagan.No details of the alleged offence were presented in court but Mr Kingsberry said he understood the charge against him and a detective constable said she could connect the accused to the charge.Mr Kingsberry had been on police bail - this was converted to court bail of £500.
He is to reside at an approved address. Other requirements include that Mr Kingsberry does not contact anyone connected to Mr O'Hagan or enter Lurgan's 30mph zone.The matter will return to court on 13 June.Mr Kingsberry was arrested in Sheffield in April before being transported to Northern Ireland for questioning in the serious crime suite at Musgrave Police Station in Belfast.A search of a property in Sheffield was also carried out as part of the operation.
Who was Martin O'Hagan?
Mr O'Hagan was 51 years old when he was killed as he walked home with his wife from a pub on 28 September 2001.He was a journalist for the Sunday World newspaper when he was shot dead by the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF).He was the first working journalist to be killed in Northern Ireland since the outbreak of the Troubles in 1969.As a reporter for the newspaper, he had built a reputation for stories which exposed paramilitaries and drug dealers operating in Northern Ireland.No-one has ever been convicted for his murder. Charges brought against individuals in 2010 and 2011 were withdrawn.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BreakingNews.ie
2 days ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Convicted rapist who harassed three female journalists jailed for 11 years
A convicted rapist who threatened and harassed three female Sunday World journalists has been jailed for 11 years. Mark McAnaw (53) refused to enter a bond before a sitting of Dublin Circuit Criminal Court which would have suspended the final 12 months of the 11-year sentence imposed for the harassment of Nicola Tallant, Amanda Brunker and Deirdre Reynolds. Advertisement After Judge Pauline Codd had outlined the conditions attached to the suspended portion of the sentence on Thursday, McAnaw's counsel Rebecca Smith BL said her client did not wish to enter the bond as he found the conditions 'onerous'. As a result, the judge imposed the full 11-year sentence. Judge Codd also ordered that McAnaw should have no contact either directly or indirectly with the women, should not approach them, go within 10 miles of their homes and workplaces or communicate with them for life. McAnaw, previously of Letterkenny, Co Donegal, pleaded guilty to the harassment of Ms Tallant, Ms Brunker and Ms Reynolds on various dates in August 2023. The court heard McAnaw repeatedly sent the three women emails and messages of a violent and sexually threatening nature, which escalated to him threatening to put a 'bullet' in one of them. He also referred to himself as an 'IRA Top Boy'. Advertisement He also turned up at the offices of the Sunday World on Talbot Street and, when refused entry, he went to a cafe across the road. When gardaí approached him there, McAnaw was in the process of writing an email to Ms Tallant. McAnaw is currently detained in the Central Mental Hospital (CMH). McAnaw does not accept his diagnosis of schizophrenia and has declined to take medication, the court was told. His previous convictions include the rape of a foreign student in Donegal in October 2010, for which he was sentenced to nine years in prison in 2012. McAnaw also has a 1989 conviction for kidnapping and convictions for assaults causing actual bodily harm from a court in Northern Ireland in 2011. Advertisement He also has a conviction for aggravated assault after attacking a woman in her home in April 2018, for which he received a sentence of eight years and four months in June 2023. This sentence was backdated to 2018 when he went into custody, with the final 16 months suspended for 16 years on strict conditions. McAnaw was released from custody on this sentence in July 2023 – one month before the harassment of the three journalists took place. Ms Smith said her client instructs that he found it difficult to abide by the conditions attached to the suspended portion of the sentence imposed in 2023. A handwritten letter from McAnaw was also handed to the court, which Judge Codd described as 'concerning'. Advertisement Judge Codd noted that social media and online communication makes it easier to target journalists and others in public facing roles. The judge noted women in the public eye are often targeted online and subjected to 'base and lewd threats and comments', which accelerated with the advent of social media. Judge Codd said it is important that 'in a democracy, free speech and freedom of press must be rightly defended' and an aggravating feature of the case was the targeting of female journalists with 'threats of a highly graphic nature'. The judge said general deterrence was necessary and that the 'message goes out' that there are criminal laws which can and will be enforced. Advertisement She said it was aggravating that McAnaw harassed the women in the context of their work, which potentially impacted their constitutional rights to earn a living and bodily integrity. Judge Codd said the court also had to consider the issue of protection of the public, given McAnaw's history of violent offending, the evidence of his failure to follow medical advice and his consumption of illicit substances, including cannabis. The judge said the need to protect the public 'can't be an end in itself', adding that preventative detention is not permitted by law in Ireland. But Judge Codd said the protection of society was a factor alongside other sentencing principles that the court could have regard to when constructing a proportionate sentence. She added that the fact that 'an offender is a danger to public, which is borne out by evidence, can justify a sentence towards the higher end of the scale'. The judge noted McAnaw's mental health difficulties and that he declines to take anti-psychotic medication 'reserved for most serious cases of schizophrenia'. The judge said McAnaw also has a history of substance misuse and inconsistent past engagement with community mental health services. The judge said McAnaw is assessed at high risk of violent and sexual re-offending. She said the court would give no discount on the headline sentence for his mental health issues, as he had contributed to them by declining to follow medical advice and by taking illicit substances. Judge Codd said the escalating nature of the messages sent was aggravating and, in relation to Ms Reynolds, these included a threat to kill. The judge said while the offences occurred over a short period of time, this had less weight due to McAnaw's status as a violent offender, which would have exacerbated the concern felt by the injured parties. Judge Codd noted the mitigation including McAnaw's guilty pleas and his background. She outlined a global sentence of 11 years, with the final 12 months to be suspended on strict conditions for five years. These included that McAnaw remain under probation supervision for five years, comply with his medical regime, refrain from the use of illicit substances and make available any internet-enabled devices when requested by gardai. The judge backdated the sentence to August 2023, when McAnaw went into custody. Ireland Man jailed for sexual assaults at Lough Derg pilgr... Read More Ms Brunker and Ms Reynolds were both present in court when the sentence was imposed. Probation and forensic psychological reports were handed to the court. Ms Smith told the court her client does not accept the diagnosis of a mental illness and has remained drug-free since entering the CMH in October 2023. Judge Codd commended the three women for their resilience and courage throughout the process and wished them well for the future. She directed McAnaw to appear at a sitting of Dublin Circuit Criminal Court later this month in relation to the breach of conditions imposed as part of a suspended sentence.


Belfast Telegraph
3 days ago
- Belfast Telegraph
UK government must provide certainty to Troubles victims, Sinn Fein says
John Finucane was commenting after he and party vice president Michelle O'Neill met Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn in Belfast to discuss legacy issues. Since taking office last year, the Labour government has pledged to repeal and replace some of the provisions of the contentious Legacy Act that was introduced by the last Conservative government, and bring forward a revised framework for dealing with cases linked to the Troubles. The Irish government has been involved in the process, and political leaders in Dublin have said intensive engagement is ongoing to see if a 'landing zone' can be arrived at in the coming weeks. The Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act 2023 halted scores of civil cases and inquests into Troubles deaths and also offered conditional immunity to perpetrators of conflict-related crimes in exchange for their co-operation with a new investigatory and truth recovery body. The Act was opposed by all the main political parties in Northern Ireland, the Irish government and many victims' representative groups. In 2023, the Irish government initiated an interstate legal case against the UK in the European Court of Human Rights, claiming the Legacy Act breached the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR). The case remains active, with ministers in Dublin wanting to see how Labour resolves its concerns over the legislation before any decision is taken to withdraw the action. Mr Benn's engagement with Sinn Fein on Wednesday was part of a round of discussions with the main Stormont parties. Alliance leader Naomi Long and deputy leader Eoin Tennyson also had a meeting at the NIO offices in Belfast city centre on Wednesday. The UUP held an online meeting with Mr Benn while the SDLP's discussions took place on Tuesday. The DUP will hold a meeting with the Northern Ireland Secretary at a later date. After the Sinn Fein meeting, Mr Finucane said there was a need for families to have a route to seek truth and justice. 'Today was an opportunity for us to reiterate and speak on behalf of those families that have been treated disgracefully by the Legacy Act and that have been left in limbo really since Labour came into government last July,' he told reporters. 'Those families who have had their inquests halted, those families who have uncertainty and who, after many years, still find themselves in a position where they don't know if they will receive truth and justice.' Mr Finucane said he and Ms O'Neill also raised the case of murdered GAA official Sean Brown. Mr Benn has applied for a Supreme Court appeal on judicial rulings in Belfast that compel him to establish a public inquiry into the 1997 murder by loyalist paramilitaries. Mr Brown, 61, the then-chairman of Wolfe Tones GAA Club in the Co Londonderry town of Bellaghy, was ambushed, kidnapped and murdered as he locked the gates of the club in May 1997. No-one has ever been convicted of his killing. Mr Finucane said: 'We made it very clear in the meeting that on behalf of Sean Brown's family that there needs to be a full public inquiry established and announced without any further delay. 'We talked about the fact that five High Court judges here have endorsed consistently the family's position and we criticised without any equivocation his (Mr Benn's) decision to take this family, to take Bridie Brown (Mr Brown's 87-year-old widow) and her family to London for an appeal.' Alliance leader Ms Long described her meeting with Mr Benn as 'constructive'. 'We're very conscious of the impact that the legacy process and lack of a formal and comprehensive legacy process has had on victims, and our priority in all of this is to ensure that victims' families' rights and needs are properly respected in that process,' she said. 'We're on record as having said that we don't believe that the Legacy Act as passed by the last government is fit for purpose, and the courts agreed with us in that regard. 'I would have preferred if that Legacy Act had been repealed and replaced (in full) and we have said that. However, that's not the space we're in, and so what we are doing now is trying to ensure that whatever the Secretary of State brings forward is a clean and fresh start in terms of how we deal with legacy and one that puts the victims at the heart of all that we do.' Ms Long, who is Stormont's Justice minister, said achieving 'consensus' on a new framework was key. 'We're not in that space yet, but I remain hopeful that there is a possibility we could be in that space, and I think that that would be the best outcome for everyone,' she said. 'This being a contested space where nothing progresses, where nothing moves forward, is not good for families. It's not fair on them that they are constantly at the whim of political change. What we need now is substantive progress.' Ahead of Wednesday's meetings, Mr Benn said the Government was committed to finding a system 'capable of delivering for all families who are seeking answers around the loss of their loved ones'. 'I am continuing to work with all of the Northern Ireland parties over what should be included in that legislation,' he said. 'It is important that new legacy arrangements are capable of commanding the confidence of families and of all communities.'


Belfast Telegraph
3 days ago
- Belfast Telegraph
Police say ‘no intelligence' to suggest hit in Irish pub in Spain was planned in Scotland
Police Scotland said the attack that claimed the lives of Eddie Lyons Junior and Ross Monaghan did not appear to be linked with an outbreak of violence between rival gangs in Scotland Police investigating the brutal gun deaths of two Scottish gangsters at an Irish pub on the Costa del Sol have said there is "no intelligence' to suggest the hit had been planned in Scotland. In a statement, Police Scotland said the attack that claimed the lives of Eddie Lyons Junior and Ross Monaghan did not appear to be linked with an outbreak of violence between rival gangs in Scotland. However, sources told Sunday World the hit may be connected with a six-figure drugs debt that the two men owed. Scottish police said the investigation into the fatal shootings in Fuengirola 'is being carried out by Spanish police'. 'Police Scotland is supporting Spanish police where requested, however, at this time we have no officers deployed within Spain,' a statement reads. There is currently no intelligence to suggest the deaths of these two men in Spain are linked to the recent criminal attacks in Scotland being investigated as part of Operation Portaledge. 'Any misinformation or speculation linking the events in Spain are not helpful to the ongoing investigations in either country. 'There is also nothing to suggest that the shooting in Fuengirola was planned from within Scotland.' So far more than 40 people have been arrested in connection with the incidents as part of Operation Portaledge that is investigating a suspected gang feud linked with a number of shootings, fire bombings and assaults in the Glasgow and Edinburgh areas since March. Both men died after a gunman opened fire outside Monaghans Bar in Fuengirola, Malaga on Saturday at around 11pm. One report suggests that a car pulled up outside the bar and a masked man got out before opening fire on the two as they stood outside the venue. The gunman then fled in the car, leaving both men dying at the scene. However, local media is reporting that police are searching for a blond man as the shooter who arrived on foot with his face covered and, after fleeing, got into a vehicle that fled towards Benalmádena . The Forensic Investigation team and the National Police's Organised Crime Unit (UDYCO) are working to identify the perpetrator of the crime and "will find the culprit," according to Javier Salas, the central government's deputy delegate in Malaga. Officers in charge of the investigation are gathering information and evidence from testimony collected on-site and from asking witnesses to come to the police station to confirm their statements, Salas told the Herald of Aragon. They are also attempting to secure security camera footage from where the shooting took place and this will have to analysed, Salas added. The deputy delegate is convinced that the shooter will eventually be identified. "I have no doubt that the person responsible for the two murders, who arrived and left the pub on foot with his face covered, will be identified and located, as happens in 90 per cent of cases that occur in the province of Malaga,' Sala said, according to the Herald. Although Spanish cops are convinced there was only one shooter, the investigation will determine whether there were more people involved 'who could have collaborated with him'. 'However, the available data indicates that only one person entered and shot the two British citizens, who died practically instantly,' the Herald reports. Regarding security, Salas stressed that in Málaga there are "more resources and more police officers than ever before' who have 'the best techniques and the best materials" at their disposal to carry out the investigation and fight crime. Salas stated that the scientific investigation team is "one of the best" in Spain. Several police unions and policymakers have expressed concern about what they consider an escalation of violence on the Cost del Sol. The Spanish Police Confederation (CEP) has claimed "the escalation of violence and the lack of human and material resources' is proof the National Police is "abandoned by the government in the province of Málaga."