The
published 100-page Barron Report names all of the loyalist
suspects and Judge Barron is highly critical of the Gardai for
their failure to go after the suspects after 1979.
Though
it names the four suspects, the Barron Report has not been
able to clearly establish who killed Seamus Ludlow, but
Justice Barron did say that the Dundalk forestry worker's
death was a random sectarian killing of an innocent Catholic
by loyalist extremists.
Mr
Justice Barron says the murder of Seamus Ludlow was never
properly investigated.
"From
the evidence available to it, the Inquiry believes that the
only credible explanation for the failure to pursue these
suspects is that a direction was given which led the
investigating officer, D/Supt Dan Murphy to abandon plans to
have the suspects interviewed outside the jurisdiction.
"As
to why such a direction mifght have been issued, only one
credible explanation has been offered - that it was done in
order to avoid a siuation where gardai might feel obliged to
reciprocate by allowing RUC officers to attend interviews of
suspects in the State." From
the Barron Report (Conclusions: page 83)
Most
damning of all he alleges gardai were prevented from
questioning the four loyalist suspects in the North because of
fears that the RUC might have demanded reciprocal rights in
the Republic. Political considerations were allowed to dictate
the failure of the murder investigations.
Justice
Barron's report (at page 14) reveals that "according to
the investigation report, there was a Garda checkpoint in
operation near the Newry Bridge during the relevant time.
Registration numbers of cars noted during this time were
followed up (mostly with the RUC) but nothing emerged to
connect any of them with the murder."
It
seems extraordinary that the killers' car passed through this
Garda checkpoint, situated in the vicinity of the Lisdoo Arms
bar, both going into Dundalk and heading back out towards the
border. They must have stopped to lift Seamus Ludlow within
sight of the gardai on duty!
This
distinctive northern registered two-door Datsun sports type
car, carrying four male occupants, aged in their twenties and
thirties, should have aroused Garda suspicion. These were
dangerous times along the border with south Armagh, and it was
only six months since the murderous loyalist car bombing
of Dundalk in which two local men lost their lives. It would
seem clear that this car should have prompted some inquiry in
the hours after the body of Seamus Ludlow was discovered.
The
Barron Report does not answer several questions still asked by
the Ludlow family. Was the loyalist killers' car stopped by
the Garda outside the Lisdoo Arms? Did the Garda take note of
the car and its registration number? Did the Garda talk to the
driver and any of his passengers? Were any inquiries made
about the car with the RUC in the aftermath of the murder?
If
such inquiries were made the RUC would have had cause to ask
why the driver, a 38-year-old serving UDR soldier from
Killyleagh, north County Down, was in Dundalk on the night of
Seamus Ludlow's murder. If the RUC failed to pass on such
information to the Garda then clearly that force has serious
questions to answer. It could mean that the RUC must have
known from the beginning that loyalist UDR soldiers were
involved in the murder of Seamus Ludlow.
Justice
Barron does not report any evidence that this car was noted by
the Garda or investigated in the aftermath of the murder! If
the Garda had noted the killers' car passing through the
checkpoint this would have given cause for the suspects to
have been investigated many years before 1998.
Mr
Justice Barron reports that files are missing from Gardai
Headquarters and the Department of Justice. In one instance he
offers incomplete information about one file that could
indicate that the Garda and the RUC had advance information
about this murder raid into Dundalk!
Justice
Barron reports (on page 7): "Some garda documents are
either missing or were never brought into existence. Foe
example, there are no Security and Intelligence (C3) files on
three of the suspects about whom information was received from
the RUC in 1979. There was a file on the fourth suspect that
had been opened in 1976 as a result of unrelated information
received from the RUC, but unfortunately it is missing."
Disturbingly,
Justice Barron only expanded upon this missing file on 16
February 2006 in answer to a specific question at a hearing of
the Oireachtas Justice Sub-Committee. He referred to an RUC
letter, dated 27 April 1976, received by the Garda, just a few
days before the murder of Seamus Ludlow.
In
their completed Final Report
(March 2006) the Oireachtas Sub-Committee comment:
"During the hearings it emerged that a letter was
communicated to the Gardai naming one of the four suspects as
a person in whom the police should take an interest. The
letter pre-dated the murder of Seamus Ludlow. On behalf of the
family, Mr McGuill said that they had not adverted to the
existence of this document since it was only obliquely
referred to elswhere. He pointed out that it was not addressed
in Mr Justice Barron's report."
The
letter from the RUC did not expressly suggest that any of the
seven loyalist suspects named, including the one who is now
believed to be a suspect for Seamus Ludlow's murder, was
engaged in cross-border activity or posed any danger to people
south of the Irish border, but given that the RUC saw fit to
identify them as dangerous individuals at that partcular time,
it can be suggested that there may have been prior knowledge
of the raid into Dundalk.
There
is nothing to suggest that the Garda did anything to verify
the movements of the persons named by the RUC so as to
eliminate them from their inquiries. There is nothing to
suggest that gardai manning checkpoints in and around Dundalk
were given information about any of the individuals, such as
photographs and descriptions, or asked to look out for them.
Did
the Garda ask the RUC to investigate the movements of any of
these individuals in the immediate aftermath of the discovery
of the body of Seamus Ludlow? Could anything have been done
that could have prevented the death of Seamus Ludlow?
Unfortunately, the Barron Report, which does not refer to the
RUC letter in any detail, completely fails to offer answers to
these important questions.
Given
the importance of this letter from the RUC, and the serious
implications it has for this case, it seems rather strange
that Mr Justice Barron did not give sufficient details of it
in his written report. Given, also, that the letter and any
other corespondence related to it are lost it is difficult to
get an accurate view of exactly what the Garda knew in 1976
about at least one of the loyalist suspects in the murder of
Seamus Ludlow.
Perhaps
this is the very reason for why this and other important files
and documents are lost!
Mr
Justice Barron points the finger of blame for the failure to
prosecute at Laurence Wren, a former Assistant Garda
Commissioner.
The
Barron Report says the decision was probably made by Deputy
Commissioner Laurence Wren, but that he was likely to have
discussed it with senior gardaí and with the Department of
Justice.
At
the time of Seamus Ludlow's killing in 1976 and until
1979, Deputy Commissioner Wren was in charge of the C3
Security & Intelligence section of the gardaí.
In
a letter sent three weeks before publication, Mr Wren warned
Mr Justice Barron that he had no intention of accepting the
conclusions about his role that appear in the published
Report. He wrote: "If the report is eventually published
as it now stands, I will be compelled to take corrective
action to clear my name."
In
an interview broadcast on RTÉ Radio, Mr Wren said he had
never heard of the four suspects in the case being named
before he went before Mr Justice Henry Barron for his report.
According
to the Barron Report, Mr Wren was likely not to have pursued
the men because the RUC might demand reciprocal rights in the
Republic.
But
speaking on 4 November 2005, Mr Wren said that it was a
well-established policy that in political cases police did not
cross the border in either direction.
In
the Barron report, the former Garda Commissioner, Pat Byrne,
acknowledged that garda management was 'somewhat remiss' in
doing its job. He said the failure to pursue the four men lay
with all senior management.
However,
Mr Wren said the matter had not been his direct concern and
therefore he did not consider himself to have had a part in
this failure.
It
appears that Mr Wren is expected to carry the can for what was
undoubtedly a collective decision which may well have been
authorised by others above him in the gardaí and the
Department of Justice. These faceless others hope to avoid
being exposed for their role in this scandalous injustice
against the late Seamus Ludlow and his family.
-
"There
appears to be no justification for the failure to notifty
Kevin Ludlow of the date of the inquest into his brother's
death. Given the nature and circumstances of his brother's
death, other family members should also have been
notified.
-
"The
failure to notify Kevin Ludlow is partially explained by
the fact that he was on holiday in County Cavan at the
time. But this does not excuse whichever Garda member was
deputed to notify him of the time and date of the inquest.
If the member concerned failed to make contact with him,
he should have persisted. He should certainly have
reported this failure to his superiors.
-
"The
identity of the member or members who were given
responsibility for contacting Kevin Ludlow remains
unknown. It should have been expected that as the murder
occurred in Dromad district, a Garda officer attached to
Dromad station would have been instructed to notify Kevin
Ludlow. If so, that would explain why, when Kevin Ludlow
went to Dundalk Garda Station, no-one there had any
relevant knowledge. On the other hand, in his letter of 16
January 1997, local Garda Sergeant Jim Gannon said that
the task was given to a member attached to Dundalk Garda
Station.
-
"According
to Kevin Ludlow's wife, she was told by Gardai that the
inquest could not be put back. There is no explanation as
to why she was told that, since the question of whether or
not to postpone was a matter for the coroner to decide;
not the police.
"In
the end, the fact that the inquest proceeded reflects a belief
that, as the cause of death was undisputed; the inquest
procedure was a formality. While this was technically true,
the decision to proceed in the absence of family members
caused them unnecessary hurt and annoyance, at a time of
extraordinary sadness and difficulty in their lives." From
the Barron Report (Conclusions - page 86)
Mr
Justice Barron did not find evidence of collusion, but that is
hardly surprising since the British authorities in the North
gave him practically no cooperation, and many files in Dublin are
missing, incomplete or were never mmaintained. He was not
allowed to find the evidence of collusion. All the more reason
in the Ludlow family's view, for a public inquiry.