UVF supergrass 'wanted to hound and expose fellow informer and terror chief'

Latest: Loyalist paramilitary commander-turned-supergrass Gary Haggarty wanted to hound and expose a well-known fellow informer and terror chief, a court has been told.

UVF supergrass 'wanted to hound and expose fellow informer and terror chief'

Update 5.57pm: Loyalist paramilitary commander-turned-supergrass Gary Haggarty wanted to hound and expose a well-known fellow informer and terror chief, a court has been told.

Mark Haddock was shot and badly injured during an attack in north Belfast in 2006 but survived.

Haggarty has admitted that he was part of a conspiracy to kill the former leading Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) member.

It was one of a series of feuds between rival loyalists outlined in court which also saw Haggarty vow to empty a machine gun into a car containing Ulster Defence Association (UDA) kingpin Johnny Adair.

Prosecuting barrister Ciaran Murphy QC said: "He suspected Haddock was an informer, the defendant said he wanted him hounded so he had nowhere to go.

"He said he wanted him exposed as a tout, which would make him vulnerable on his release from custody."

Haggarty was feeding information to police handlers, the court was told.

Yet he visited a forest grave dug in preparation for another alleged "tout", the prosecutor told the court, as part of the ruthless pursuit of suspected informers.

Haggarty has admitted assisting offenders involved in a murder bid on Haddock.

The former Police Ombudsman Dame Nuala O'Loan's report focused on Haddock as the main informer at the centre of her investigation into police collusion with killers. Haddock was named in the Irish parliament as a UVF killer.

Haggarty intimidated Haddock into withdrawing a statement to police during other legal proceedings, Belfast Crown Court was told on Wednesday.

Mr Murphy said: "He sent others to intimidate the entire family."

The litany of charges read out in court included involvement in violent disputes with the loyalist splinter group the Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF) and the UDA.

The barrister said former UDA figures Adair and John White were seen in White's car outside Haggarty's Mount Vernon home in north Belfast.

Haggarty armed himself with a Sten gun and another man brought an AK 47 machine gun, the court was told.

Mr Murphy said: "The defendant stated that he intended to empty the full clip into the car if they returned.

"They never did return."

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Earlier (4.02pm): Court hears graphic details of ex-UVF commander-turned-supergrass’s confessions

The confessions of a loyalist paramilitary commander-turned-supergrass witness have been outlined in graphic detail during a sentence hearing.

Gary Haggarty's admission to shooting defenceless grandfather Sean McParland in the neck at close range was read to Belfast Crown Court, as was his description of the kidnap and brutal beating of father-of-four John Harbinson by his Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) gang.

Haggarty, 45, a long-time police informer, has pleaded guilty to 202 terror offences, including five murders, as his part of a controversial state deal that offered a significantly reduced prison term in return for giving evidence against other terrorist suspects.

The opening day of the sentence hearing was told Haggarty and another UVF member were due to toss a coin to determine who would be the man to pull the trigger ahead of Mr McParland's murder, before the loyalist chief dismissed the idea and demanded that he would be the killer.

Crown lawyer Ciaran Murphy QC told judge Mr Justice Colton that Haggarty said he was handed a promotion within the UVF for shooting Mr McParland after forcing entry to a house on Skegoneill Avenue in Belfast as the 55-year-old, who spoke with the aid of a voice box, was babysitting his young grandchildren.

Mr McParland was not the intended target of the UVF attack in 1994.

Mr Murphy told the court that Haggarty, once leader of the UVF's notorious Mount Vernon gang in north Belfast, expressed regret in his admission to detectives.

"He said he is sorry, it was the wrong person killed - he is sorry for the kids that were there," the barrister said.

Ciaran Fox, son of Eamon Fox who was shot dead by the UVF, speaking outside Laganside courts, Belfast during the sentence hearing of loyalist supergrass Gary Haggarty. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA
Ciaran Fox, son of Eamon Fox who was shot dead by the UVF, speaking outside Laganside courts, Belfast during the sentence hearing of loyalist supergrass Gary Haggarty. Photo: Brian Lawless/PA

The sentence hearing was also told that Haggarty has acknowledged that two more of his victims - Eamon Fox and Gary Convie - were innocent men, not republican paramilitaries as loyalists claimed at the time of their shooting in 1994.

Catholic workmen Mr Fox, 44, and Mr Convie, 24, were gunned down while they ate lunch in their car at a building site on North Queen Street in Belfast.

Haggarty claims he was not the gunman on that occasion, but that he escorted the killer to the location, shaking hands with him just prior to him opening fire on the men through a fence.

Mr Murphy told the court: "He said he did not believe the victims were republicans, just soft, easy targets."

Haggarty, dressed in a grey suit, sat impassively in the dock as his litany of crimes were detailed.

Mr Fox's son Ciaran was one of a number of victims' relatives in court as the details of Haggarty's reign of terror were recounted.

Outside court, Mr Fox said: "I knew the truth all along that my father was an innocent man but to hear that Haggarty has admitted before they actually carried out the shooting that my dad and Gary were both innocent, that they were not republicans as they claimed at the time - it was nice to hear that part."

Haggarty also admitted being in the gang that abducted unemployed taxi driver Mr Harbinson in Belfast in 1997 prior to the brutal beating that ended his life.

The loyalist commander claimed he later went to retrieve a gun to deliver a "punishment" shooting on the 39-year-old, but that colleagues had already administered the fatal beating in an alleyway while he was gone.

Due to the need to outline details of all 200-plus offences on Haggarty's charge sheet, the sentence hearing is expected to take at least two days.

Mr Justice Colton will then deliberate before determining the extent of sentence reduction the loyalist will be handed.

He has already spent a number of years in custody on remand, so could potentially serve no further time in prison.

Prosecutors have already announced that he is to be used as a witness in the prosecution of an individual for the murders of Mr Fox and Mr Convie.

However, the vast majority of individuals named by Haggarty in his police interviews will not face prosecution, amid state concerns about a lack of supporting evidence.

Prosecutors have said Haggarty's evidence is insufficient to provide a reasonable prospect of obtaining a conviction against 11 suspected UVF members and two former police intelligence officers, allegedly his then handlers.

As well as the five murders, Haggarty, who is in protective custody, has also admitted five attempted murders, including against police officers; 23 counts of conspiracy to murder; directing terrorism; and membership of a proscribed organisation.

He was interviewed more than 1,000 times by detectives in one of the biggest and most complex cases undertaken in Northern Ireland.

The catalogue of offences stretch over a 16-year period from 1991 to 2007 and include the loyalist murders of Mr Harbinson, Mr McParland, Mr Convie, Mr Fox and Sean McDermott.

Mr McDermott, a 37-year-old Catholic, was abducted and murdered by the UVF in Antrim in 1994.

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