 THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY. Twenty-six men were convicted on the word of Harry Kirkpatrick. On their appeal against those convictions could well rest the future of the 'Anglo-Irish Agreement'
THE TROUBLE WITH HARRY. Twenty-six men were convicted on the word of Harry Kirkpatrick. On their appeal against those convictions could well rest the future of the 'Anglo-Irish Agreement'  
('The Hillsborough Treaty') . Based on a full transcript of the Kirkpatrick trials , the story of how these convictions were obtained shows why the 'Supergrass System' is a pale shadow of justice. By Derek Dunne. From 'MAGILL' magazine, February 1986. Life in the annex of 
  Crumlin Road Prison  wasn't too bad for 
  Henry 'Harry' Kirkpatrick .  It was here that he was serving 
  five life sentences   for murder and over seventy other offences. There was a black and white television and a record player in the room and , just down the hallway from his room , there was a colour television set which he could avail of . And he had a guitar , which he played when he sang a song he had composed about 
  'Supergrasses' .  He had company in that high security annex - on and off nine or ten 'grasses' had spent time there .
Just now , 
  William 'Budgie' Allen  and 
 James Crockard   (see piece dated 'Thu 21st Feb 1985')   were there , two loyalist 'supergrasses' . The food wasn't too bad either , as the annex had it's own kitchen , separate from the main jail , as the inmates were afraid that they would be poisoned otherwise. 
For almost two years , 
  Henry 'Harry' Kirkpatrick   had 'lived' there . The only times he had been out was when he had gone to 
  Castlereagh Interrogation Centre   to make statements , or to court . Between the time the 'trial' of the twenty-seven men he named had started and Kirkpatrick took the 'witness' stand , British Crown counsel had spent over forty hours with him in Castlereagh over a perion of seven days . An adjournment was sought and granted to him on the basis of 'ill health' . When he got on the stand , it was the first time the defence knew that he had all those 'visits'
....... (MORE LATER).   THE HOWARD MARKS AFFAIR. Customs Officers in England have arrested a man who could blow the lid off an embarrassing British Intelligence operation against the Provisional IRA , when he answers drug smuggling charges in London later this year.From 'MAGILL' magazine, July 1980. By James Curtis.
THE HOWARD MARKS AFFAIR. Customs Officers in England have arrested a man who could blow the lid off an embarrassing British Intelligence operation against the Provisional IRA , when he answers drug smuggling charges in London later this year.From 'MAGILL' magazine, July 1980. By James Curtis.Customs Officers in England have arrested a man who could blow the lid off an embarrassing British Intelligence operation against the Provisional IRA , when he answers drug smuggling charges in London later this year . 
The man is 
  Howard Marks,  34, an Oxford University graduate and a 
  former agent of MI6 , Britain's external intelligence gathering department . He is also a former associate of the  'Irish Pimpernel' ,
 James McCann.  Howard Marks   was picked up in the bar of a quiet country hotel in Lavenham , Suffolk , in England , on Friday May 16th 1980 , during a series of customs raids in Britain which netted cannabis allegedly worth £10 million on the street market . During the swoop , a 50 ft yacht , 
  'The Bagherra',   was detained and searched at Oban in Scotland ; four tons of cannabis were found at a farm building near Fort William , in Scotland , two tons of cannabis were impounded at a house in Kettering in Northampshire and a further four tons were seized at a farmhouse near Basildon in Essex . Customs investigators describe the drugs as a record haul and pulled in twelve people for questioning , seven of whom , including Howard Marks , were charged with dealing and conspiracy to smuggle drugs
.......(MORE LATER).   A BATTLE FOR HEARTS AND MINDS.......A look at issues raised by Liz Curtis' recent book. From 'IRIS' magazine, August 1984.Review by Trisha Fox.Liz Curtis ,
A BATTLE FOR HEARTS AND MINDS.......A look at issues raised by Liz Curtis' recent book. From 'IRIS' magazine, August 1984.Review by Trisha Fox.Liz Curtis ,   a member of the 
 'Information On Ireland'   group , sees it as essential that people like herself are not only engaged in writing academic books , but work on all fronts of the cultural struggle to challenge the British propaganda machine . The 
 'Information On Ireland'  group has been involved in producing booklets on the British media , 
plastic bullets and arguing for a British withdrawal . 
Recently the group took part in an event organised by 
the GLC's media working group as part of the London ' Anti-Racist Year' campaign - they spoke at a conference entitled 'British Media and British Imperialism' , which was addressed by two members of Belfast Sinn Féin as well as by speakers from black , third world and anti-imperialist organisations , and the Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom . At present , 
 'Information On Ireland' is producing a short book on anti-Irish racism in Britain
....... (MORE LATER).