Judical Review applied for in Mc Bride case /
PFC publishes Restricted MOD document listing 'exceptional reasons'
On Friday December 10 2000, solicitors acting for the Mc Bride family applied for leave to judicially review the decision of an Army Board to retain two Scots Guards convicted of the murder of their son Peter. Leave was granted and a full hearing will be held in the near future. The Mc Bride case will also be debated in an adjournement debate in Dail Eireann, the Irish parliament, this week. The motion calling for a debate is cross party and has been submitted by deputies Cecilia Keaveney, Fianna Fail and Austin Currie, Fine Gael, representing the two largest parties in parliament. See below for exceptional reasons as outlined by the Army Board.
The ‘exceptional reasons’ outlined by an Army Board justifying retention of two Scots Guards convicted of the murder of Peter Mc Bride on September 4 1992.
In a Parliamentary reply, dated 30.11.00, Mr Kevin Mc Namara MP was informed that the ‘exceptional circumstances’ taken into account by the Army Board in the case of Scots Guardsmen Wright and Fisher could not be put in the public domain. Dr Moonie MP said, "This is a confidential matter for the employer, the Army, and the employees." The Pat Finucane Centre strongly disagrees with the view that the ‘exceptional reasons’ taken into account should remain a ‘confidential matter’. We are therefore releasing this information into the public domain. The Army Board is duty bound in our view to justify its actions since the retention of two convicted murderers in the Armed Forces is clearly a matter of considerable controversy. Those members of the Army Board who made the decision, John Spellar MP, Minister of State for the Armed Forces, General Mike Jackson, Commander in Chief Land Forces, Major General DL Judd, Quartermaster General and the Legal Advisor to the Board, Major General G Risius, Director Army Legal Services, should and must be made publicly accountable.
RESTRICTED-STAFF
18. The Board decided in the light of further discussion after the hearing and at subsequent meetings that the following factors taken together did amount to exceptional reasons:
- Both Guardsmen were young and relatively inexperienced when the incident took place on 4 September 1992. Guardsman Fisher was born in 1968 and enlisted in December 1989. Guardsman Wright was born in 1973 and enlisted in 1990. Fisher had been in the Battalion for ten months and Wright for seven months. This was their first tour of duty in Northern Ireland and they and only been there for four months.
- The general security situation was tense and particularly so in the New Lodge Area where the unit had suffered recent casualties including a fatality. At the team briefing on 4 September they had been advised that the situation was high risk and that there was an expectation that those associated with terrorist groups would be likely to be carrying personal weapons. Furthermore, the threat of coffee-jar bombs at the time of the offences was very real: soldiers had been maimed and, on occasion, killed by this weapon. The coffee-jar bomb was a device which was very easy to conceal until the moment of throwing. While this dangerous and volatile situation might have rightly led to heightened awareness, there was no evidence of individual or collective premeditation to commit a criminal offence.
- The Army undertook a considerable amount of training to prepare soldiers for duty in these circumstances, and was acknowledged to be a world leader in this field. However, even with the comprehensive training provided, it could not prepare an individual for every eventuality.
- Guardsman Wright had expressed genuine concern for Mr McBride’s children when he gave evidence before the Board. Guardsman Fisher had expressed regret for Mr McBride’s death in the statement he made in May 1995, and the Board was satisfied that it, too, was genuine.
- Neither Guardsman had any previous criminal record, either civil or military. Furthermore, their conduct in custody after conviction had been exemplary.
- The Board was convinced that there was absolutely no danger of repetition; on the contrary, the two Guardsmen appeared to have learned a bitter and lasting lesson.
- Guardsmen Fisher and Wright had been utterly loyal to the Army throughout the eight years of the judicial process, their imprisonment, and subsequently the Army Board process. Both very clearly wished to continue to serve their county. Their present Commanding Officer had spoken very highly of them, not least regarding the part they had played in operations in Macedonia and Kosovo in 1999. In the course of those operations the Guardsmen had been placed in situations of tension and stress where it was vital that their personal conduct was of the highest standard, and they had acquitted themselves well. It was in the Board’s view clearly exceptional - indeed, unprecedented - that any soldier should successfully resume his service; that he should then be formally retained in service; that he should then see the decision quashed; and that he should then continue serving for an extended period with the possibility of removal from the Army handing over his head pending a fresh decision. Their exemplary service since December 1998 should be seen against this background.
19. Having carefully balanced the reasons listed in paragraph 18 against the fact that the Guardsmen had been convicted of one of the most serious crimes known to the law, and also against:
- the trial judge’s finding, in particular that the Guardsmen:
- had sufficient time to decide whether or not to fire and ,although both were aware that they had no justification for doing so, both discharged aimed shots at Mr McBride knowing he posed no threat to them;
- [were not] in any panic situation or in any situation which called for split second reaction;
- lied about critical elements of their version of events...and deliberately chose to put forward a version which they both knew to be untrue;
- all the matters raised by and on behalf of Mrs McBride and others in the representations as to why the Guardsmen should not be allowed to remain in the Army,
the Board concluded that, taken together, the reasons listed in paragraph 18 made the Guardsmen’s retention desirable.
20. The Board therefore rejected the applications to discharge 24776043 Guardsman Fisher and 25001649 Guardsman Wright M D and directed that they should be permitted to continue their Army service. In all the circumstances the Board concluded that it would be inappropriate for the Guardsmen to serve in Northern Ireland again without the Board’s leave, and further directed accordingly.
Dated the 21st day of November 2000
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John Spellar Esq MP
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General Sir Mike Jackson KCB CBE DSO
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Major General D L Judd
Quartermaster General
Peter McBride