A verdict is due today in the trial of a man accused of murdering two British soldiers in the North.
Brian Shivers (aged 47) denies involvement in the gun attack outside Massereene army barracks in Antrim in which sappers Mark Quinsey (aged 23) and Patrick Azimkar (aged 21) died.
Two other soldiers and two pizza delivery men were seriously injured in the shooting.
Judge Mr Justice Donnell Deeny is expected to deliver his reserved judgment in the non-jury case this afternoon.
Shivers, whose address cannot be published for legal reasons, also faces six counts of attempted murder and one of possession of two firearms and ammunition with intent to endanger life in relation to the Real IRA attack in March 2009.
Near the close of his trial at Belfast Crown Court in March this year another count - one of assisting offenders - was added to the charge sheet.
The defendant denies all of the charges.
Sappers Quinsey, from Birmingham, and Azimkar, from London, were gunned down as they collected pizza outside the gates of the barracks.
The soldiers from 38 Engineer Regiment were just hours away from deploying to Afghanistan and already dressed in desert fatigues.
The prosecution case against Shivers was based on DNA evidence found on matchsticks and a mobile phone in and around the abandoned partially burnt-out getaway vehicle used in the attack.
The defence insisted the genetic traces did not prove Shivers was involved on the night of the shootings.