Man in court charged with 1970s murder of part-time UDR soldier
Joseph James Porter's body was found close to the entrance of his farm at Creggan Road, in Mountnorris, County Armagh, on 24 June 1979.
The part-time Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR) soldier died from gunshot wounds to the head and body.
James Donegan, of Bruce Manor in Arvagh, County Cavan, appeared in the dock at Newry Magistrates' Court on Wednesday afternoon following a lengthy extradition process from the Republic of Ireland.
Prosecutors said they can link Mr Donegan, who has lived in the Republic of Ireland since the 1970s, to the murder as a result of drops of blood and fingerprints that had been found.
The court heard that in 2012 the Historical Enquiries Team (HET) produced a fingerprint match and that, in 2017, the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) asked An Garda Siochana (Irish police) to pursue an inquiry into the murder.
In 2017, prosecutors in the Republic brought no charges on the matter due to insufficient evidence – but, in 2024, the PSNI applied for an extradition warrant.
Mr Donegan fought extradition but when his appeal was dismissed he presented himself for arrest.
He is charged with murdering Mr Porter on a date between 22 June 1979 and 25 June 1979.
He also faces charges relating to the possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life and membership of a proscribed organisation, namely the IRA.
A defence barrister argued that due to a backlog in trials it could be some time before a trial date could be set – meaning that if Mr Donegan was put on remand a trial could be further away than the two-year sentence the offences carry under legislation.
However, District Judge Eamonn King said he was content that Mr Donegan could be considered a flight risk and, as such, bail was refused.
Mr Donegan's defence barrister stated the matter could be revisited in the High Court.

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USA Today
7 hours ago
- USA Today
Man accused of faking his death to evade charges found guilty of rape in Utah
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Alahverdian's conviction stems from charges that he raped his then-girlfriend, a woman whom he had met online, according to prosecutors. Shortly after the two began dating, prosecutors said Alahverdian told the woman they should get married and they purchased wedding rings. But Alahverdian soon became verbally and emotionally abusive, prosecutors said. An argument at a shopping mall turned violent, and when the couple returned to Alahverdian's apartment, he refused to let her leave and then raped her, according to prosecutors. The charge is punishable by five years to life in the Utah State Correctional Facility, according to the Salt Lake County District Attorney's Office. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Oct. 20. Alahverdian, who was charged under his former surname Rossi, also faces additional rape charges involving a different woman in Utah in 2008. He has yet to go to trial on those charges. What to know. Nicholas Alahverdian extradited to US four years after faking his death. Nicholas Alahverdian extradited to U.S. in 2024 Alahverdian has been held without bail in a Utah county jail since January 2024, when authorities extradited him from Scotland. He had spent three years in Scotland pretending to be "Arthur Knight," a former Irish orphan and victim of misidentification, in an outlandish pretense that played out before international media and an extradition court. A Scottish judge, who had tolerated Alahverdian's charade during hearings on his identity, cleared the way for Alahverdian's return to the United States − concluding that he 'is as dishonest and deceitful as he is evasive and manipulative.' Alahverdian finally gave up his hoax in November 2024 while asking a Utah District Court judge for bail. During the hearing, he alleged that his years of deception and name changes were part of an effort to protect himself from 'death threats' and not because he was evading authorities. 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Investigators later tracked him to Scotland after searching his iCloud account and bank records, and he was arrested at a hospital in December 2021 after waking up from a coma caused by COVID. Alahverdian, who has used several different aliases, has appealed in recent weeks to the judge in his Salt Lake County case that he now be charged under his birth name, Alahverdian. The judge has denied the request. What is Alahverdian accused of in Utah? Alahverdian was previously convicted of groping a woman at an Ohio community college in 2008, according to authorities. He then attempted to sue the woman for libel and had his appeal request tossed when his key piece of supposedly new evidence was ruled a fake blog post. Investigators said DNA from that case connected Alahverdian to the rape of a 21-year-old woman in Orem, Utah, in September 2008. The trial this week, which began on Aug. 11, stems from allegations that he raped his former girlfriend in November 2008. No DNA evidence tied him to that incident, investigators have said, but she came forward after recognizing Alahverdian during his international extradition case. As in the Orem case, authorities say Alahverdian met the Salt Lake City woman online. They dated briefly before the relationship quickly sped up and they bought wedding rings. But after a violent argument at a shopping mall − Alahverdian threatened to call the police and report that she had hit him if she didn't let him back in her car − the two returned to his apartment, where he raped her, police said. Nicholas Alahverdian case: American who faked his own death could return to US after bizarre trial ends in Scotland


Fox News
17 hours ago
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Homicide investigator warns against rushing bikini designer's yacht death probe as lawyer reveals new details
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The Hill
18 hours ago
- The Hill
Man accused of faking his death to avoid rape charges is found guilty of sexual assault in Utah
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