- - - - - - - - - - PUBLIC INQUIRY INTO THE DEATH OF ROBERT HAMILL - - - - - - - - - - Held at: Interpoint 20-24 York Street Belfast on Thursday, 17th December 2009 commencing at 10.30 am Day 77 1 Thursday, 17th December 2009 2 (10.30 am) 3 Closing submissions by MS DINSMORE 4 MS DINSMORE: Good morning, sir. I think in all probability 5 this is our last day of sitting, so before I start on 6 the substantive matters in relation to my submissions 7 this morning I would just like to say a few words. 8 First is that, at all times during the course of the 9 entire year, there is no doubt that the great tragedy 10 that befell the Hamill family has been in the forefront 11 of everyone's minds and that one's thoughts and feelings 12 go with each and every family member, especially when it 13 comes to this time of the year. To lose one's son or 14 lose one's brother, and particularly in very tragic 15 circumstances, is a heavy burden which no family should 16 ever be asked to bear. 17 I respectfully suggest that in the last year we have 18 had an opportunity with enormous diligence on the part 19 of this Inquiry to endeavour to get to the very truth 20 about what happened. One hopes that that in some small 21 measure can make the burden perhaps, perhaps, a little 22 easier to bear. 23 So anything I say this morning I say in the context 24 that none of us must lose sight of the precious family 25 who have lost a precious individual. We have heard talk 1 1 during the course of the submissions about the drive and 2 purposeful drive of the family members to achieve the 3 end of us all participating in this exercise. I would 4 be amazed if there was anyone in this chamber who was 5 not in total admiration of that. 6 Then if I move to the last year, and my colleagues 7 have expressed their thanks to the Inquiry team. 8 I would wish to underscore that thanks and appreciation, 9 not just, of course, the stars, such as Mr Underwood, 10 but the wider team, the unsung heroes behind the scenes, 11 the administrative staff, the computer staff and the 12 amount of professionalism, cooperation, thoughtfulness 13 and the very pleasant and courteous helpful approach 14 that each and every individual which my team and 15 I particularly personally have encountered has been 16 a very uplifting experience. The thoroughness of the 17 team has made our professional duty and every 18 professional here -- it has eased our gross burden 19 greatly. 20 I should also say in addition to the technical team 21 Miss Kemish's recruiting expertise clearly knew no 22 bounds, and I am not just referring to your good self, 23 Mr Chair, on that. I refer also to the technical 24 computer staff that have educated me beyond realms that 25 my son thought was possible and the day-to-day workings. 2 1 Finally, I don't think it is just because I use 2 a walking stick that I have got exceptionally courteous 3 assistance at all times from every member of staff 4 employed in the Interpoint system. I have never come 5 in, since 13th January, to anyone having an unpleasant 6 air towards me. That, believe me, if you are 7 a practitioner at the Northern Ireland Bar, is quite 8 an exceptional experience, particularly over the course 9 of a year. So the workings professionally and 10 personally, I have to say -- and it is no small measure 11 also to your good self, Mr Chair, and your very learned 12 colleagues. This has been both personally and 13 professionally a privilege to have been engaged in. 14 THE CHAIRMAN: Thank you. 15 MS DINSMORE: If I then move to what my remit is today. As 16 everyone knows, I appear on behalf of both Eleanor and 17 Robert Atkinson. It is quite clear that there are two 18 completely distinct issues. There is Robert Atkinson 19 the police officer, who was a member of the Land Rover 20 crew and all that that entailed. I adopt much of what 21 my learned colleague Mr Adair says in relation to the 22 actions of the Land Rover crew on that evening. 23 Then, secondly, there is my brief in relation to 24 Mr Robert Atkinson and Eleanor Atkinson, against whom 25 the gravest of allegations have been levied. That is 3 1 what has become known in this Inquiry as the tip-off. 2 I should say at the very outset, and I concur 3 totally with Mr Underwood in the proper approach to the 4 thinking that each of you bring to consideration of the 5 criticisms, that the appropriate approach is: the more 6 grave a criticism is, the more cogent the evidence has 7 been. 8 Each of you will be only too aware that the gravity 9 for my clients of the criticisms being levied, both 10 within the realms of his contact as an operational 11 policeman, as part of the Land Rover crew, and, 12 secondly, as the person who has been labelled the bad 13 apple, the rotten apple, within the police force, that 14 has given rise to devastation of this man's professional 15 life for decades and decades. The gravity of that 16 allegation is a matter which no doubt will be at the 17 forefront of your minds when you consider: how cogent is 18 the real evidence, the hard evidence? Where is my 19 thinking and reaction to the witnesses taking me? 20 When one thinks how one is going to measure that, 21 one thinks, "I do it bearing in mind exactly what has 22 been alleged". 23 How I am going to break matters down this morning, 24 and I hopefully will not delay you any more than is 25 necessary, I intend -- what I have done is I have looked 4 1 at -- you have our closing. I respectfully suggest on 2 the pertinent issues that they are detailed. I have 3 absolutely no doubt that there is little to be served by 4 me repeating the contents of those. 5 So what I have done, with the assistance of 6 Mr Mallon here, is an audit of the closing submissions 7 of each and every participant. So in the first half of 8 my address to you what I am doing is looking at and 9 exploring each criticism that has been made of my client 10 in those composite closings, and then, on the latter 11 half of this morning, and I would hope -- please don't 12 keep me to it -- that an hour should finish matters, 13 I will deal with what everyone says, without saying it, 14 is the elephant in the room, the tip-off, and I will 15 deal with why on earth would somebody plead guilty to 16 conspiracy. I will deal with what weight you may be 17 minded to put on that. 18 An audit of the closing submissions has given 19 rise -- if we park the tip-off, the audit of the closing 20 submissions has given rise to my identifying essentially 21 eight headings. Many of these have been covered by 22 Mr Adair and I don't intend to repeat Mr Adair's 23 submissions. Quite clearly, your good selves are well 24 able to see where those matters apply every bit as much 25 to me as the other three members in the Land Rover. 5 1 There is the warning. 2 There is what could be seen from the Land Rover by 3 my client. 4 There is the issue about the knowledge of the 5 conversation which took place at the Land Rover with 6 Stacey Bridgett and Dean Forbes. 7 Fourthly, there is the issue of the pulling of 8 Constable Neill out of the Land Rover. 9 Fifthly, there is the issue of when Robert Hamill 10 and D fell to the ground, the attack itself. 11 Sixthly, there are the allegations regarding failure 12 to act or respond appropriately. 13 Seventhly, the making of the statement and the 14 alleged omissions therein. 15 Finally, there is the allegation that 16 Mr Robert Atkinson was a bigot and perhaps on the 17 Loyalist side, which is an allegation to which there is 18 very great exception taken. 19 I have said to you the second half of my submissions 20 will deal entirely with the allegation that either 21 Eleanor or Robert Atkinson telephoned 22 Allister Hanvey/the Hanvey household with the intention 23 of and, in fact, allegedly advising Allister Hanvey to 24 get rid of his clothes, and the later allegation then 25 that I have already referred to, that each of them 6 1 entered into a conspiracy with the intention of, and the 2 de facto consequence of, perverting the course of 3 justice. 4 At all times, each and every aspect of that is and 5 has been denied by my clients and each of them. We will 6 look in some detail as to why I will urge upon you that, 7 when one has had the benefit, the very great benefit, of 8 being here and seeing each and every witness and seeing 9 them being challenged, that the evidence will not lead 10 to a justification that there is truth in any part of 11 those allegations. 12 Finally, before I then move to the substance, 13 I would just wish to make a brief comment apropos the 14 paper which has been furnished by the British Irish 15 Rights Watch and the Committee for the Administration of 16 Justice. I have furnished a brief paper to Mr Underwood 17 in relation to that matter. I am not intending to go 18 through the very many contentions which they have 19 raised. 20 What I would say, and again I have complete 21 confidence in leaving it in your good offices for the 22 appropriate consideration, I would respectfully suggest 23 that very many of the contentions made in that 24 submission are entirely without foundation. They have 25 no evidential basis and are, regretfully, contentious. 7 1 It is a concern which we may well have with the 2 potential of giving rise to a subjective, polarised 3 consideration and a polarised consideration is something 4 that this Inquiry has striven manfully, and in my view 5 succeeded, in avoiding. 6 That submission is peppered with emotive 7 generalisations and they are not supported, I would say 8 to you, by the evidence which has been produced to the 9 Inquiry. 10 Apropos particular aspects relating to my client, 11 they have been furnished in writing to the Inquiry team 12 and I adopt the same approach apropos as that by my 13 learned friend Mr Emmerson. 14 So if I turn, firstly, to the criticism regarding 15 the warning, on doing an audit -- and I can do this in 16 two ways, Mr Chair, and will be somewhat in your hands. 17 I have the reference from each of these submissions on 18 each of these headings. I am quite content to give you 19 the references and leave them to your good selves to 20 consider. I do also have a paper prepared that I can 21 read out what each of them say, but I do not personally 22 consider that would be helpful in outline. I am not 23 addressing a transcript. I am addressing the Panel. 24 I am addressing a Panel who has all the papers and who 25 clearly has the mastery at really quite an exceptional 8 1 level for consideration of those. As I am not 2 addressing a transcript, I don't consider it necessary 3 for me to outline what each reference gives. 4 THE CHAIRMAN: We agree. If you give us the references, 5 that will be helpful and that will suffice. 6 MS DINSMORE: I certainly will. 7 The reference first in relation to the warning. 8 First of all, as I say, I adopt the serving and retired 9 police officers' views that are put out in the composite 10 closing. You will find those at part 5, page 91. 11 The PSNI on this point you will find at part 5, 12 pages 119 and 120. 13 The submission on behalf of Mr Marc Hobson you will 14 find at part 6, page 333. 15 So what I say, when each of you look at the 16 references in those submissions, I would then ask you to 17 consider Mr Atkinson's evidence. I suggest to you that 18 when you do that, that that evidence will show that 19 there is no criticism to be levied of Mr Atkinson. 20 You find Mr Atkinson's evidence on Day 47 at 21 pages 56-59 inclusive and on page 161 we deal with these 22 issues. 23 To sum up then, Mr Atkinson's answer to those 24 considerations is that it is quite clear the evidence 25 shows that Mr Atkinson first became aware of 9 1 Thomas Mallon as he was sitting behind the observer 2 looking forward. He became aware that someone came 3 across in front of the Land Rover. At the same time, 4 two males were coming up High Street on the left-hand 5 side of the Land Rover and they spoke to the man. The 6 observer opened her door. Mr Atkinson did not realise 7 that any warning had been given to the Land Rover crew. 8 That had to be repeated to him. 9 Members, you have all sat in the Land Rover. You 10 can bring your own judgment about that as to how, in 11 fact, we would say that could well have been the 12 position. Mr Atkinson makes no contention about where 13 the Land Rover was parked. It was parked at LR3 when 14 the man walked by. LR3 is near enough to where the 15 Land Rover ended up. You will find that Reserve 16 Constable Atkinson told you that at page 57 of his 17 transcript. It is page 56 you will find he did not 18 realise anything was said. He recalls Reserve 19 Constable Cornett saying something to them at page 58. 20 He did not recall the two youths approaching the 21 Land Rover and talking to the crew. You will find that 22 at page 59. He did not actually hear the warning or the 23 shouting for help when he was inside. 24 So that is the evidence you have before you 25 regarding Mr Atkinson's consideration of the warning. 10 1 Then issue number 2 is: what could be seen from the 2 Land Rover? As I have said to you, I refer you to the 3 position in which Mr Atkinson was placed in the 4 Land Rover, up behind the observer in the back. P40 was 5 much closer to any rear slats if they were open. 6 Mr Atkinson -- I take it, members of the Panel, you have 7 sat in the Land Rover on more than one occasion. 8 Therefore, that is the best evidence, I think, before 9 this Inquiry, the experience that each of you have had 10 of sitting there. It is not in dispute where 11 Mr Atkinson was sitting in that Land Rover. So you 12 bring your thinking as to, if you were sitting where he 13 says he was sitting, does it accord with what he says he 14 could see? 15 Now, this issue about what could be seen from the 16 Land Rover, the references are the British Irish Watch 17 submission, part 6, page 264; the PSNI at part 5, 18 pages 118 and 120; and, as I have said, I also would 19 refer you, members of the Panel, to not just what my 20 learned friend Mr Adair has said, but I would also refer 21 you to the evidence which Mr Atkinson himself gave at 22 the Marc Hobson trial. You will find the reference for 23 that at page [8347] about the restricted view from the 24 Land Rover. 25 You will also find a similar account regarding the 11 1 path of vision of Reserve Constable Atkinson is given in 2 his disciplinary interview. You will find the reference 3 to that at [09491]. It read: 4 "When you are in the back of a Land Rover, your main 5 view is out the front. You really can't see unless 6 you're sticking your head in around you. It's stuck out 7 the passenger door, like." 8 What I say to you is what Mr Atkinson says his view 9 was will accord with what, no doubt, you observed and 10 also what the evidence which he gave at the Marc Hobson 11 trial was and also in relation to the disciplinary 12 interview. 13 Issue number 3 is the conversation at the 14 Land Rover. The references, sir, in relation to that 15 with British Irish Watch are part 5, page 117; part 6, 16 page 259; PSNI, part 5, page 119; and the Hamill family 17 at part 5, page 241. 18 Now, Robert Atkinson's evidence is that he did not 19 take part in any conversation, though he was aware that 20 one took place. 21 I say there is no contradiction of that. 22 P40 discussed matters. P40 was, "Are you at the 23 painting? Maybe get you up to paint my house some 24 time". Reserve Constable Cornett, "Is that a polo 25 shirt? £30? Good value", words to that effect. 12 1 Constable Neill was in the front seat. Members of 2 the Panel, you will recall that that was a matter I was 3 most conscientious about asking each officer about and 4 questioning about Mr Atkinson. In cross-examination 5 no-one suggested Mr Atkinson said anything. 6 So if there is any criticism about a conversation 7 with Stacey Bridgett and Dean Forbes, that falls to no 8 part of Mr Atkinson. The evidence is not there that he 9 participated in any conversation. In fact, quite the 10 opposite. 11 As for the suggestion by British Irish Watch 12 regarding an alibi for Dean Forbes and Stacey Bridgett, 13 that has been dealt with in my paper furnished to the 14 Inquiry, and I doubt if it would be a useful use of your 15 time to go into it in any detail 16 Issue number 4, Neill being pulled from the 17 Land Rover. The references, sir, for the PSNI, that is 18 dealt with in part 6, page 260; Reserve Cornett says he 19 was pulled from the Land Rover at 2.9 of part 6; and the 20 civilians also confirm an approach to the Land Rover. 21 Mr Neill was pulled from the Land Rover and 22 Mr Atkinson's evidence is absolutely clear about that. 23 That was about four minutes after 24 Reserve Constable Cornett -- three to four minutes the 25 evidence before you is, after Reserve Constable Cornett 13 1 had told the boys to move on. 2 If I take you to the transcript in the Hobson trial, 3 it reads: 4 "Question: Okay. You gave evidence about this at 5 the trial of Hobson? 6 "Answer: That's correct." 7 This is the cross-examination before you in relation 8 to the Hobson trial: 9 "Question: There you told the judge there was 10 a three to four-minute gap between the incident when you 11 saw Miss Cornett tell them to push off and the door 12 being pushed open, Mr Neill's door? 13 "Answer: That's right, as far as I can recollect. 14 "Question: Tell us about what -- tell us about what 15 happened. 16 "Answer: We were just sitting in the vehicle. The 17 next thing, the door burst open and I could see 18 Constable Neill going out at an angle as if someone had 19 grabbed him and pulled him out." 20 I say, if you look at his evidence at the 21 Marc Hobson trial, which you will find at [08340], that 22 that is consistent with the account given. I refer you 23 also to paragraph 18 of Reserve Constable Atkinson's 24 statement. He exited the Land Rover when 25 Constable Neill was pulled out. 14 1 So we say to you (a) there is no contention about 2 Constable Neill being pulled out, and that, over and 3 above that, Constable Atkinson is one of the officers 4 who can actually give you some assistance even in 5 relation to the time-line of that, and that he has done 6 that with very great consistency. 7 Issue number 5, men on the ground, the fight itself. 8 This is commented on in the composite submissions by the 9 PSNI at part 6, pages 260, 263, 265, 268. On the 10 Marc Hobson -- sir, am I going a little too fast? 11 THE CHAIRMAN: No, no. 12 MS DINSMORE: Marc Hobson at part 6, pages 261 and 262. 13 British Irish Watch, part 6, pages 263, 264 and 266. 14 The serving and retired officers, you will find their 15 submission on that at part 6, page 306. 16 We say that the outline given by Reserve 17 Constable Atkinson accords with much of what 18 Constable Neill has stated. From the transcript of 19 Mr Atkinson's evidence to the Inquiry: 20 "Question: At what point did you realise there was 21 somebody on the ground? 22 "Answer: When I was having a tussle with this guy. 23 Obviously, I had a baton in one hand. So I was only 24 able to hold on to him with the other hand. I had my 25 flak jacket on, which is about 2 stone weight. It's 15 1 sort of wearing you down. He spun me round and I got 2 a quick look over my shoulder and I could see a body on 3 the ground at that stage." 4 Then at paragraph 21 of his statement, which you 5 will find at [81385], sir, he saw two persons lying on 6 the roadway after separating Constable Neill from 7 an assailant, and a Nationalist individual from four to 8 five Loyalists. 9 Now, there is no doubt that the Inquiry will want to 10 know what Mr Atkinson saw. It is absolutely clear that 11 he has been consistent. What he saw was a fleeting look 12 while he was engaged, as I have outlined from the 13 transcript. 14 I have done an audit of everything which 15 Constable Atkinson has said in relation to this, and 16 I respectfully suggest to you that a reading in the 17 whole of what Constable Atkinson has said justifies that 18 Reserve Constable Atkinson saw persons in or about or in 19 the vicinity of the head of Robert Hamill. 20 In his statement he says -- his statement of 21 27th April, his initial statement given, he says the 22 words "jumping on the head". 23 On Day 47 of his evidence at page 66, line 18, he 24 says: 25 "They were jumping about him." 16 1 At the Hobson trial, and I refer you to document 2 [08343], lines 7-9: 3 "They were jumping in and about the area of his 4 head." 5 Line 18: 6 "Jumping about him." 7 In his witness statement at paragraph 25 he says: 8 "Jumping in or around the head of the male on the 9 roadway." 10 In his police interview at page [09509], 11 paragraph 34: 12 "A couple of boys running in and out at the body 13 that was lying on the road." 14 At page [214543] "jumping on the head." 15 Now, that's the evidence before you. I urge not 16 a particular construction of it. What I would say to 17 you is that Robert Atkinson has been very frank about 18 what he saw and the circumstances in which he saw it, 19 the circumstances being the fleeting glance whilst 20 engaged in a struggle with an individual. 21 When you look at the multiple outlines that he has 22 given, in all probability it is justifiable to take the 23 view that it was in or about the head, though certainly 24 the statement of the 27th says on his head, but I have 25 given you the references and I would urge upon you the 17 1 circumstances in which -- and the opportunity, or, 2 a better way of putting it, the lack of opportunity for 3 a detailed observation which Robert Atkinson had. 4 Issue number 6 which has arisen from the 5 composite closing submissions relates to the allegations 6 regarding failure to act or respond appropriately. 7 Now the references for those, sir, are as follows: 8 Police Service for Northern Ireland, part 6, pages 304 9 and 264 they make comment on this; the serving and 10 retired police officers, they make comment at part 6, 11 pages 251, 266, 277; the Hamill family at part 5, 12 page 242; the British Irish Watch, part 6, page 259, 13 270. This was a laborious task, Chair. 14 The civilian witnesses, they make it at part 6, 15 page 265; Marc Hobson's counsel's submissions are at 16 part 6, page 302. 17 I, on behalf of Mr Atkinson, adopt the submissions 18 of Mr Charles Adair and we say that all that might be 19 said -- and I know I have grave issues to address later 20 on this morning -- all that might be alleged against 21 Reserve Constable Atkinson, and notwithstanding that 22 there has been a very, very great momentum, and efforts 23 made to blacken his name, there is no doubt, I would 24 suggest to you, on the evidence, that, of the four 25 police officers in that Land Rover crew, Robert Atkinson 18 1 was the most active, initially on the scene, the one 2 most active in its entirety on the scene. It was 3 Robert Atkinson and Neill. 4 One does not want to put matters too colloquially, 5 but there is no doubt Robert Atkinson was in there 6 battering away with his baton and struggling to the 7 extent that he got his baton broke. No-one could say 8 that Robert Atkinson was out of that Land Rover turning 9 a blind eye. 10 It is worthy also of note that Colin Murray, who was 11 the policing expert, and no doubt Sir John will bring 12 his vast experience in relation to this, like 13 Colin Murray, who was very aware of the grave 14 allegations that had been made against Mr Atkinson, but 15 he was able to stand back from those unsubstantiated, we 16 say, allegations, when it came to looking at, "How did 17 this policeman act as a policeman at this scene?" he was 18 able to stand back. He was not so blinded by any 19 pre-conceptual bias that Colin Murray finds, as 20 the policing expert, that Reserve Constable Atkinson was 21 one of the most active at the scene. 22 That perhaps says something to you about him as 23 a policeman as well. Further, there is the objective 24 evidence, getting his baton strap broken in the 25 altercation. I refer to his statement at [81385]. 19 1 Further, this accords with the evidence which is before 2 this Inquiry about the type of operational policeman 3 Reserve Constable Atkinson was. 4 Perhaps one of the gems of the Inquiry was 5 Donal Blevins, who certainly was not, I suggest, coming 6 across to you as a man and great supporter having any 7 affection whatsoever of Reserve Constable Atkinson, but 8 how did he describe Reserve Constable Atkinson as 9 an operational policeman? I am not alluding to the bad 10 language. I will move just to the one phrase which 11 perhaps says it all: 12 "He would arrest his ma." 13 That was the sort of policeman Reserve 14 Constable Atkinson was. I would suggest to you there is 15 absolutely no doubt on the evidence before this Inquiry 16 that it can be taken away, regardless of what else one 17 has to look at and what else might or might not have to 18 be answered -- no-one can take away that, as 19 an operational policeman, he was proactive without fear 20 or favour at the scene the night when Robert Hamill 21 sadly died, and he was indeed carrying out his police 22 operational duties with no operational assistance. 23 I make no comment on that. That's for someone else to 24 answer, whether it be resources or whatever, but there 25 is no doubt there is no criticism can be made that 20 1 Robert Atkinson was not out there doing his best for 2 Robert Hamill at that scene. 3 I then move to the making of the statement -- 4 THE CHAIRMAN: Just before we do, it seems to me that the 5 Panel will have to consider each member of the 6 Land Rover crew separately in relation to whether there 7 was any delay on his or her part in being active. It 8 wouldn't be right simply to say, "Well, police were late 9 on the scene" and lump them all together. 10 MS DINSMORE: Absolutely not. 11 THE CHAIRMAN: It depends on the moment of each officer's 12 knowledge. 13 MS DINSMORE: Absolutely. What I say to you with relation 14 to each officer's knowledge, insofar as it relates to my 15 officer, is that my knowledge came from Neill was pulled 16 out of the Land Rover, and one looks at what action he 17 took thereafter. 18 THE CHAIRMAN: Yes. 19 MS DINSMORE: Then if I move on to the making of the 20 statement and the alleged omissions therein, I refer in 21 my entirety to the submission which we have furnished, 22 found at pages [1459 to 1462] of the closing which had 23 been furnished to you, and I have little to add to that. 24 The only aspects which I consider appropriate this 25 morning to highlight out of that are the reasons which 21 1 Mr Atkinson gave as to why he did not include 2 Allister Hanvey's name in his statement. 3 It falls to you whether you are convinced by these 4 reasons or not. 5 The first is he says he only named people with whom 6 he had direct dealings. He had no direct dealings with 7 Allister Hanvey at the scene. Many of the policemen, 8 I say to you, saw Hanvey and did not name him in their 9 statements. I say there is nothing can be construed by 10 the omission by Reserve Constable Atkinson unless one 11 wants to, and, I suggest, quite improperly, bring to 12 bear on one's thinking unsubstantiated allegations. 13 The explanation given for the omission records 14 exactly what the other policemen did. The only person 15 whom you could possibly, if one was doing a fine-toothed 16 comb exercise -- there was any suggestion of untoward 17 dealings between Atkinson and Hanvey at the scene is 18 Trevor Leatham. I have dealt with him in very great 19 detail in our submission. He could not even remember 20 anything at the scene. 21 When you look at it, even if you wanted to believe 22 Trevor Leatham, which I would respectfully suggest to 23 you is not a course I could imagine you being attracted 24 to, even if you did, it doesn't amount to very much 25 other than him saying Atkinson said Hanvey was high on 22 1 drink and drugs. I would respectfully suggest to you 2 Trevor Leatham is sadly of little or perhaps no 3 assistance to your good selves. 4 Now, there is another that I would call perhaps 5 a Northern Ireland gem in relation to the reasons why 6 Hanvey's name was not included by Atkinson and it was 7 given quite innocently and directly by Mr Atkinson. 8 If you look at his transcript, page 80 on Day 57, he 9 was asked about why he did not name him in the statement 10 and he said: 11 "Well, I was giving evidence we had been involved in 12 an incident at Bellaghy, and that, after that, I didn't 13 put in anybody I hadn't direct dealings with." 14 So quite clearly policemen get their fingers burnt 15 in trials. Policemen get their fingers burnt by people 16 with enormous expertise like Mr Underwood, Mr Adair or 17 Mr McGrory. There are people like that challenging them 18 about what they have put in their statements, and 19 clearly Mr Atkinson got his fingers badly burnt in 20 relation to some issue at Bellaghy. After that, he was 21 keeping his statements tight. He was keeping his 22 statements, "Nobody will be able to say to me, 'You put 23 that in your statement. You didn't see it', and make 24 a fool of me". 25 I say that is a very telling and real and convincing 23 1 explanation. Also, he is no different from any of the 2 other policeman. Many of them saw him at the scene and 3 did not name him. 4 Also, it is not as if Robert Atkinson was hiding 5 him. Robert Atkinson had named him. He had named him 6 at the scene to P89. Then, when one says "Well" -- 7 because a lot has been made of this statement. It all 8 falls into perspective when one looks at Bradley, who 9 was the man taking and dealing with the statements. You 10 have to remember there may be criticisms that you wish 11 to levy regarding briefing and debriefing and suchlike. 12 It is not for me to comment on that, but it is a context 13 in which you will consider any criticism or potential 14 criticism of my client in relation to including that in 15 his statement. 16 It was very telling and all boiled down when I was 17 cross-examining Detective Constable Bradley. On Day 49 18 you will find the reference, page 75, lines 1-5. I was 19 exploring with him this allegation of complaint or 20 omission on the part of Robert Atkinson. What was his 21 answer to me: 22 "Answer: I am still not complaining." 23 So I say to you there is no criticism. One can see 24 why, quite wrongly, quite improperly, but perhaps in 25 enthusiasm -- one could then want to read into a leaving 24 1 out of Allister Hanvey's name because it gives rise to 2 a piece of a jigsaw of a picture someone wants to make 3 apropos the tip-off. I say there is no foundation for 4 finding that piece of the jigsaw. These pieces of the 5 jigsaw will mean the picture is not going to be 6 complete, but we will come to that. 7 So what I say to you is there is no foundation 8 whatsoever by considering -- and you have a statement of 9 the 27th, and I suggest to you it is a full statement, 10 a very full statement. If there are any weaknesses, 11 they are systematic weaknesses. One of the wonderful 12 things about an Inquiry like this is, you know, better 13 will be possible and good will not be enough, and if 14 better is possible, then the weaknesses that maybe give 15 rise to statements not being a counsel of perfection 16 will be remedied, but there is no criticism whatsoever, 17 in the times that we're in it, of the approach 18 Mr Atkinson took to his statement. 19 Then I look to the allegation, and this is one to 20 which great exception is, in fact, taken. That is that 21 Robert Atkinson was a bigot. There is an allegation in 22 the British Irish Watch: 23 "... perhaps on the Loyalist side." 24 Now, there is no evidence, no evidence before this 25 Inquiry, of any such allegiance. That was 25 1 notwithstanding the very best efforts of Mr McGrory. 2 Mr McGrory himself in his closing accepted that he tried 3 and admitted defeat on that about the allegiance. There 4 is no evidence of this allegiance that is alleged. 5 There is no evidence of bigotry. There is no sin in 6 being a Protestant and ending up a policeman. That 7 doesn't make you a bigot. It doesn't make you part of 8 the Loyalist side. 9 This ludicrous -- with all due respect to my learned 10 colleague -- suggestion that there is a raison d'etre 11 for this alleged tip-off that this man was courting 12 favour in a desire to rehabilitate himself within his 13 community. This man had been in the Police Service, it 14 is quite clear from his statement, since 1974. He had 15 served in the most grave, grave areas within 16 Northern Ireland. The evidence before this Inquiry, 17 which is not refuted, is he has had his home attacked by 18 both sides of the community. He had shots fired into 19 his house with his wife and children there. He had 20 devices put on his car and his caravan. 21 There is no disputing just what Mr Atkinson and his 22 family have suffered from both sides, to the extent the 23 police wanted to move him, wanted to move him to 24 Coleraine. You will see the evidence in the statements 25 to that effect, but they had a mother and mother-in-law 26 1 and he was not going to give into that. 2 So this is a man who has spent his life putting his 3 wife, his children's lives, in misery at times in 4 pursuit of his career. To have to up sticks and move 5 because of a Loyalist threat, I mean, where is the 6 Loyalist side to him in the face of that, members of the 7 Panel? This man was an ordinary policeman at his job, 8 would arrest his ma, taking no nonsense from nobody. 9 That was his career. Whatever it took, he was going to 10 do it. There is great exception taken to an allegation 11 of bigotry and allegation of a Loyalist. 12 So you will be glad to hear that that is the 13 entirety of the first half of my address to you. 14 I expect I will take no longer than maybe another 15 15 or 20 minutes. I am in your hands as to whether you 16 want a break of fifteen minutes, Mr Chairman. 17 THE CHAIRMAN: We will have a break now then. 18 Fifteen minutes. 19 (11.30 am) 20 (A short break) 21 (11.45 am) 22 MS DINSMORE: Sir, I now turn, as I indicated, to deal with 23 the issue of the tip-off. I adopt our submissions in 24 their entirety which start at page [485]. I do not 25 intend to take your time today by repeating them. 27 1 I have total confidence that each and every one of the 2 points made therein has been considered and noted and 3 will be given due weight. 4 So what do I want to do then? What can you add in 5 these circumstances? 6 Firstly, I want to adopt Mr Tony McGleenan's 7 forensic and superb outline to the Inquiry regarding 8 Tracey Clarke. I would ask you to read, not just our 9 submissions on the tip-off in light of what I say to you 10 today, but also what Mr McGleenan said to you in his 11 closing, and also, because I was embarrassed when I read 12 Mr McGleenan's, when we got the composite submissions, 13 the good points he had that I had missed, I am asking 14 you to read, not just our tip-off submission, but also 15 Mr McGleenan's. I say that therein you will find many 16 of the answers to what the evidence amounts to. 17 I am going to address you, and I am going to allow 18 myself between 12.10 and 12.15 at the very latest, on 19 three matters. The first is going to take me very 20 little time, because I know I am at the feet of a great 21 master in relation to the assessing of evidence and 22 missing evidence and finding evidence and spotting what 23 is missing. Therefore, I am not going to presume to 24 explain to the Chair where all the evidence on the phone 25 call actually lies, what I call the hard evidence. I am 28 1 going to briefly deal with that. 2 Then what I intend to do is deal with Andrea McKee 3 and Tracey Clarke. 4 Then, thirdly, what I am going to do is suggest to 5 you that when each of you bring your wealth of 6 experience, professional and personal, that you have had 7 in life to looking at what I would call the damaged 8 people who gave evidence, this Inquiry is full of 9 tragedy, and I alluded at the outset to the ultimate and 10 devastating tragedy to the Hamill family, but, sadly, 11 before this Inquiry there have been other victims in 12 relation to allegations, and I would say to you that my 13 client is the greatest fall guy for that, but also it 14 was quite clear in life's rich tapestry and the 15 participants in 1997 who were then visited in 2000 that, 16 sadly, you have had very damaged people before you, 17 people who were living in dysfunctional families, not 18 all people -- I am saying there are some individuals -- 19 and I am going to come to how they can assist you in 20 relation to: is Tracey Clarke telling the truth or is 21 Andrea McKee telling the truth? Because people like 22 that, they have not got a motive. Jim Murray is not the 23 sort of man who has a motive, who hasn't got his 24 strategy thought through. I will come to that. 25 Those are the three things I will deal with in the 29 1 next fifteen minutes. 2 What does the hard evidence amount to? It amounts 3 to an indication that there are two telephone calls 4 which are accepted were made from the Atkinson household 5 to the Hanvey household. There is no hard evidence as 6 to who made them. There is no hard evidence who 7 received them. More importantly, and this is a point 8 which I have taken much comfort in being completely 9 satisfied that our learned Chair is very, very alert to, 10 there is not a scrap of evidence as to what was said in 11 the alleged phone call, not a scrap. 12 Now, Mr McGrory said we had tens of thousands of 13 papers, and believe me, we have, but in those tens of 14 thousands of papers there is not one admission, not one 15 admission, alleged by anyone. Poor old Michael McKee 16 didn't even, because the Inquiry have not called him, 17 the Inquiry have no statement in from him, and I have to 18 say I watched like a hawk when his interview was read 19 out. Even in his interview, there is never, ever, ever, 20 even when you were prepared to have evidence of such 21 very questionable capacity to be given much weight to, 22 even if I had to fall on that sword, it is very, very 23 telling that, even then, there is not a line in the tens 24 of thousands of papers before this Inquiry that 25 Robert Atkinson ever admitted what has been alleged 30 1 against him. 2 Therefore, there is no evidence, none whatsoever, 3 about what the contents of that phone call that's 4 alleged to have been made were, other than the grand 5 scenario of Andrea McKee's hearsay. 6 You might think it remarkable that, over the many 7 years and all the papers, there has never been that bit 8 of evidence that you could hang a coat on. 9 So this Inquiry, I would respectfully suggest, 10 cannot make a finding that a call was made to the effect 11 alleged. 12 Really that's all I want to add to the submission on 13 that. There are ten points in the submission before 14 you. You have all of that. 15 So where does that bring us then? That brings us 16 to: what about what Andrea McKee said? I also note that 17 I have what is not a light burden, and that is to deal 18 with, why would she plead guilty? A different question 19 is the conspiracy. The contents of the phone call is 20 one issue. The other is the conspiracy. 21 In relation to the conspiracy, again that all 22 revolves around Andrea and Michael McKee. I know you 23 will say, because you have been very alert to it, 24 Mr Chairman, and you have regularly alluded to it, 25 understandably, that, "There is the plea of guilty and 31 1 the risk of going to prison". I have dealt -- I am 2 going to come to some of the points on that. I intend 3 in the next few moments to outline to you that bearing 4 in mind how very grave the allegation is, can you be 5 satisfied from all that you have seen, heard and read 6 that there is, in fact, cogent evidence, and that the 7 cogent evidence is the fact that Andrea McKee pleaded 8 guilty? 9 What I am saying to you this morning is this. Yes, 10 it is a factor. Yes, weight needs to be given to it. 11 You alluded with my learned friend Mr Emmerson to it. 12 Yes, the DPP gave it weight, gave it consideration. It 13 was a factor, but what we must not run away with, and it 14 would be easy to do, we must not run away with the fact 15 it is not a trump card. It is a factor. The weight 16 lies to your good selves, and the weight is not just the 17 certificate of conviction. The weight is your 18 assessment of Andrea McKee and the circumstances. I am 19 going to suggest to you that, when you look at all of 20 those circumstances, the weight to be attributed is 21 grossly, grossly diminished, but it is not and cannot be 22 a trump card. If it was treated as a trump card, that 23 would mean that relevant factors were not taken into 24 consideration. It does not obliviate all else. 25 Then really it comes down to Andrea McKee and 32 1 Tracey Clarke. When one looks at it, you have the 2 arguments. There is no point in me starting to explain 3 all the truths and untruths which were admitted to by 4 Andrea McKee. That's all before you. There are 5 a couple of things, however, that I am going to 6 highlight to you. 7 One is: who was staying allegedly at Andrea McKee's 8 that night? When you look at her statement, there is 9 very great detail, great detail, about Prince Naseem 10 boxing being on, great detail about Sky, blah, blah, 11 blah. It was Mr and Mrs X. I think they have 12 anonymity, don't they? Then, oh, whoopsy, it transpires 13 that Mr and Mrs X did not even know each other at the 14 relevant time. 15 Now, Andrea McKee had endless recall about that 16 evening. Oh, whoopsy, she did not subscribe to Sky. 17 Oh, whoopsy, there is no -- Prince Naseem or whoever he 18 is, the boxer, was not on that night. All that level of 19 detail is wrong. Andrea McKee says, "Got that wrong, 20 but I am completely sure Joy Kitchen and Rodney Smith 21 stayed." 22 Now, that's having made up the other people who 23 didn't even know each other. Then we look at 24 Rodney Smith and Joy Kitchen. You heard them. They 25 don't remember being at her house. Just think how 33 1 incredibly devastating a night 27th April at that time 2 was in Portadown, and we know that a theme of this 3 Inquiry is it was the talk of the town. That night was 4 the talk of the town. 5 Now, if you had been staying at somebody's house 6 that night, you would remember it. You have heard them. 7 They didn't remember it. Andrea seems to remember it, 8 having remembered the other people who didn't even know 9 each other. She seems to remember it, but they don't. 10 Now of all the nights to forget you were staying at 11 somebody's house ... hard to believe. 12 I have to pay tribute to Mr Mallon in relation to 13 this. Mr Mallon has been relentless in his pursuit of 14 the telephone call that was allegedly made from the 15 McKees' house at 1.30 that morning, as if that's another 16 trump card about, "Well, there you are. There is a bit 17 of objective evidence. Phone call. Well, it is Smith 18 spelt differently. That means Andrea remembers there 19 was a Smith staying", even though they don't remember. 20 Then, when we looked into it, and Mr Mallon has made 21 numerous enquiries to Mr Underwood, and Mr Underwood at 22 all times has cooperated and exercising enquiry after 23 enquiry after enquiry, that telephone bill has never 24 been produced. That telephone record has never been 25 produced. That, of all the tens of thousands of 34 1 pages in this Inquiry, is the one thing that's missing. 2 It is the one bit that's allegedly objective, that folk 3 were at the McKees that night. I leave it to your good 4 selves in relation to that. 5 So that's only a snippet of the sort of untruths and 6 approach of Andrea McKee. 7 There is a saying that goes, "There is a crack in 8 everything and that's how the light gets in". Now, the 9 cracks in the individuals of Andrea McKee, 10 Tracey Clarke, Jim Murray, Tracey Clarke's mother, the 11 light that is pouring through those cracks is going to 12 illuminate your way as to: is Tracey Clarke to be 13 believed or is Andrea McKee to be believed? 14 Tracey Clarke. If ever there was a justification 15 for having a public Inquiry operationally as opposed to 16 the tragic consequences, I mean, people say, "Why do you 17 need public inquiries? You have tens of thousands of 18 pages and you have lawyers looking at them and looking 19 at them. What can it possibly add?" 20 I say in this case the key is the hearing and seeing 21 of those individuals. It was quite properly put and 22 accepted by Mr Emmerson that, of course, you are looking 23 at maybe the same circumstances, but with lots of added 24 layers of approach and consideration that were not open 25 to the learned PPS office, who I would say, as we have 35 1 said in our submissions, we have no doubt went about 2 their business with due diligence. 3 When one looks at all of that, what does that show 4 us? That shows us that Tracey Clarke -- now, you think 5 back to that girl on that video. Now, there is one 6 thing that British Irish Rights have got right. There 7 is one phrase with which I find myself in total 8 agreement. That was that Tracey Clarke was 9 press-ganged. Even British Irish Rights Watch could 10 identify that. She was press-ganged. You think on her. 11 I have urged you in our submissions to go back to her 12 transcript that day, but I want you to do more than 13 that, I want you to think about how -- the way we say 14 when we are closing to juries, "They are there because 15 you see them and you can see their body language", and 16 all this. Tracey Clarke's body language was 17 devastatingly telling, I say to you. 18 When you think of it, think of the little things 19 that girl said. "I was a mess." We know from the 20 medical records that she is very, very damaged. "I was 21 a mess". She was 17. She had a vindictive, ill, 22 physically and mentally, mother. She was living with 23 a stepfather who was an alcoholic. The wee girl was 24 industrious. She had two jobs. She got in tow with 25 Allister Hanvey. It was far from a loving, supportive 36 1 relationship. What did that wee girl, who is a woman 2 now, show and tell you? 3 She said something which I must say took me aback. 4 She said "I was doing drugs. I have never told anyone". 5 I don't know how you read that, and I am not saying I am 6 reading it right, but I got the impression that that was 7 the first time that girl had admitted to anyone that she 8 was doing drugs at that time. That just came out in her 9 evidence. 10 When I put to her what is the true situation, we 11 say, apropos Andrea McKee and the influence of her -- we 12 all know she lives right beside her. We all know 13 Michael was her uncle. We all know they were 14 gossipping, gossipping. We know all that. We know 15 Andrea says she gave her money. 16 What does see do? When I put it to her, I said, 17 "You would basically have done anything Andrea McKee 18 asked of you", and she couldn't answer me. She started 19 to cry. She nodded and I had to say, "I am afraid the 20 tape does not pick up a nod", and she said, "Yes". 21 Her presentation, I urge upon you, was totally 22 authentic. 23 Secondly, Jim Murray. Jim Murray must be the most 24 convincing witness that appeared before this Inquiry, 25 because Jim Murray, "I was never sober". No shame about 37 1 him. "I am what I am and I am just here to tell you 2 what I know. I don't remember anything about writing 3 that statement", and the thrust of his evidence was it 4 was in an alcoholic stupor. 5 Now, that was three years later. In 2000, he gave 6 his statement, as did Tracey Clarke's mother. They are 7 the big corroborating evidence about Tracey being all 8 annoyed about a jacket, three years later, with the 9 problems Tracey's mummy had and the problems that 10 Jim Murray had, what are the chances of those two coming 11 up with recall in those statements and that being true? 12 Those had to come from somewhere and I say everybody 13 knows where they came from. It came from Andrea McKee. 14 No-one is in the game here of wanting to humiliate 15 anyone, any individual. There, but for the grace, go 16 any of us with problems, but like Michael McKee, 17 Michael McKee, I mean, Michael McKee was undoubtedly -- 18 the evidence you have from him, which is paltry, but it 19 is pathetic insofar as he says what he was; he was 20 a hopeless drunk at that time. He was a broken man when 21 he made that plea, a man who had been a victim of 22 Andrea McKee, which I am coming to. He is a broken man. 23 You read his interviews again. Did he strike you as 24 a man with a real story to tell you about or did he 25 strike you as a man who was wanting out and getting it 38 1 done? 2 You don't need me to labour you about Tracey Clarke 3 in the police station. You have seen her and heard her. 4 We know what we know about Andrea McKee, and you have 5 seen her too. I mean, she could do plenty of talking. 6 If any of -- it is a matter for you. You might find it 7 hard to believe that Andrea McKee could sit for hours in 8 a police station and keep her mouth shut, which is 9 alleged. Right? 10 I urge upon you Mr McGleenan's submissions about the 11 circumstances of Tracey coming to that. 12 So why did Tracey say those things and why did she 13 not tell anyone? She said them because, if you look at 14 the evidence, it is riddled with, "I am excited". It 15 was exciting. It was something to talk about. People 16 became players. People had an identity with it. People 17 were the subject of attention if they knew or talked 18 about it and it was the talk of the town. 19 So Tracey became somebody by having been there. She 20 says she made it up. Mr McGrory threw me a very good 21 bone, which I had not actually thought of. He referred 22 to Allister Hanvey being boastful, boasting. I am not 23 here to speculate. That's where you bring your 24 experience to your deliberations, but to deal with the 25 point that Mr McGrory said, if Tracey is saying she has 39 1 fallen out with him -- they seem to fall out on and off; 2 nobody knew whether they were on or off -- and she says, 3 "I am go going to go to the police", as a threat to him. 4 Did Allister Hanvey strike you as the sort of man who 5 would say, "Please don't do it, pet. I love you", or 6 does he strike you as the sort of boy who would say, "Do 7 what you want. I have got friends"? 8 I mean, it is speculation, but Mr McGrory hit on it. 9 Allister Hanvey was a bum. He was. He was a blow. If 10 he was going to -- so he might well have said some 11 rubbish like that to be the big fellow. You might well, 12 having heard and seen him, think he likes to think of 13 himself as a big fellow. I will leave that with 14 yourselves, members of the Inquiry. 15 Then one looks at why then? So I say to you there 16 is no doubt -- it is a human tragedy for each and every 17 one of those people, but there is no doubt, I would 18 respectfully suggest to you, that the resources that 19 went into this Inquiry were entirely merited when one 20 saw how Tracey Clarke could change one's thinking from 21 what one reads in the papers, but that's your call and 22 I leave that with you. 23 Then I turn to my final bit, because I am running 24 over. Why would Andrea McKee plead? Why would she? 25 First of all, Andrea McKee pleads, oh, she is just so 40 1 wracked with her wrongdoing. Right? Wracked with her 2 wrongdoing. She has broken from him. She is living in 3 Wales. Does she phone anybody and talk about it? No. 4 There is a lovely gem in this Inquiry about that. What 5 do girls talk about with their best friend? They talk 6 about what's worrying, annoying them and fussing them. 7 Right? 8 Now, Andrea McKee had nobody left in Portadown or 9 Northern Ireland except Glynnis Finnegan. They phoned 10 each other maybe once a week. What does Glynnis Finnegan 11 say? She says the conversations were really about 12 complaining about xxxxx and Michael. I know it is 13 important, but really there was not much interest in the 14 "Robert Atkinson thing". 15 So what we know is this Andrea McKee, who is meant 16 to have been devastated with her wrongdoing and wanting 17 to put things right, she is phoning her mate, and when 18 she is phoning her mate, what she's saying is, "What is 19 Michael doing? How is Michael?" 20 That is what girls do when they are pre-occupied 21 with men. Her pre-occupation was with Michael and that 22 bore fruit when one looks at the letter that she wrote, 23 the letter where she said, "I will blacken you in 24 Portadown". I am not going to read the bad language out 25 or anything else. You can read the letter. It was 41 1 very, very strong. A very determined woman with a very 2 strong attitude. She was determined. 3 What happened? An opportunity arose. She didn't 4 phone because she was devastated by her wrongdoing and 5 wanting to put life straight. Oh, no. McBurney et al 6 turn up and give her an opportunity. She is treated 7 like a queen. They get her a Queen's Counsel 8 solicitor -- people who turn Queen's evidence solicitor. 9 They get it all set up for her. She calls the shots and 10 during the course of it, it is unambiguous that she 11 lied, unambiguous. I mean, the forensic analysis of 12 Mr Emmerson in relation to Pendine, etc, was masterful 13 and irrefutable. Therefore, she is unambiguously 14 a liar. That has to be found to be the case on that 15 point. 16 Mr Chairman, I know I wake up at night thinking 17 about how on the point you are about how you can be 18 lying about one point and telling the truth about 19 another point. I know that is a problem, but I am going 20 to say to you that when you look at, not just the lies 21 that she has definitely told, beyond peradventure, when 22 you look at the submissions of Mr Emmerson, beyond 23 peradventure she has told lies, but look at the 24 circumstances she told those lies into, and look at what 25 Mr Simpson said: a brazen liar. I am not talking now 42 1 about an assessment of prosecutorial duties. What do 2 they, as experienced people, make of her? A brazen 3 liar. 4 Another gem in this Inquiry was Christine Smith when 5 she said -- you know, you asked a question, Mr Chair, 6 and Miss Smith answers, "Now, when I just think on it 7 now, it was just one of those things that strike you. 8 Andrea McKee struck me as someone thinking what was in 9 it for Andrea McKee". 10 I say to you here was a woman who was given 11 an opportunity, an opportunity to get an end. The end 12 was to absolutely -- nothing they say is as bad as 13 a woman scorned, and this woman was scorned by 14 Michael McKee and she was going to do what she could do 15 and she met with Mr McBurney hungry, hungry. 16 I am not going to go into all of the stuff we have 17 had this week about the influences of Mr McBurney, the 18 impetus from higher echelons or whatever, but there was 19 a strong political climate. There was a very 20 enthusiastic Secretary of State diligently asking 21 questions. The Attorney General was at the hub of it. 22 Andrea McKee was met with a very hungry Mr McBurney. He 23 presented her with the perfect opportunity. She was 24 gilded through it like Catherine Jagger you will recall. 25 She said in her evidence, "Oh, yes, I talked to the 43 1 police before I met my client. I wrote the letter that 2 the police then sent", and when I believe it was myself 3 pressed her, I said, "Really, was it exceptional what 4 occurred here with you?" She said, "Yes, it was not 5 normal". So yes, it was exceptional. 6 Everyone said there was a risk she would go to 7 prison. Well, you can bring your extensive experience 8 to that. A woman living in a new jurisdiction with 9 a young child embarking on a new career, many years past 10 the alleged incident? I mean, what real risk was there 11 of her going to jail? Why did Michael McKee plead? He 12 was a broken man. 13 I am going to conclude by saying -- I apologise; 14 I am a little over -- I have said very little about 15 Mr Atkinson other than, no matter what else you are 16 going to say, he was a very active policeman. It would 17 be a very, very sad indictment that on the basis of 18 unsubstantiated gossip, systems that became hungry for 19 a scapegoat, it would be very sad indeed if strands 20 which have no place together are put together to condemn 21 an individual who had given his life to his profession. 22 I say to you there is not cogent evidence that could 23 possibly withstand the gravity of what has been alleged 24 against both Mr Atkinson and Mrs Atkinson and I leave it 25 in your good hands. Thank you. 44 1 THE CHAIRMAN: Thank you, Mrs Dinsmore. 2 Yes, Mr Wolfe? 3 Closing submissions by MR WOLFE 4 MR WOLFE: Sir, members of the Panel, I think somebody joked 5 earlier it is supposed to be the best wine served last. 6 Sir, as you know, I make my submissions on behalf of 7 the Police Service of Northern Ireland. At this stage, 8 you have read and heard extremely detailed written and 9 oral submissions. You now have before you almost every 10 conceivable side and facet of the arguments. 11 I have, however, in mind the fact that you have 12 received submissions from various aspects of the 13 policing perspective, from Mr Adair, Ms Dinsmore, 14 Mr O'Connor, Mr McGuinness and Mr Lunny. You will be 15 conscious, sir, that we all serve different masters and 16 that differences of emphasis or viewpoint can clearly 17 arise. 18 You do, of course, have our written submissions, 19 which I now take the opportunity to supplement, not 20 repeat. 21 Before I develop my oral submissions, I want to 22 emphasise the following. In 1997, policing in 23 Northern Ireland was in a very different place compared 24 to where it is today. Normal policing along the 25 lines of the conventional British model was largely 45 1 impossible, but nevertheless, sir, the RUC and the 2 officers which served it endeavoured to provide, so far 3 as was reasonably possible, a normal policing service to 4 the community which it served. 5 The RUC, of course, was not immune from the 6 religious and political schisms which run through this 7 society. By being charged with the responsibility of 8 enforcing the laws of this jurisdiction, the RUC was 9 cast in the light of holding, or was at least perceived 10 as holding, a political affiliation which, through no 11 fault of the organisation and its members, adversely 12 affected its relationship with the community. 13 It is an interesting dynamic, we say, that by 1997, 14 many on each side of the community, that is the 15 Protestant/Catholic, Unionist/Nationalist divide, 16 perceived the police as being responsible for enforcing 17 policies which were in opposition to their political 18 community and political interests. 19 All of this, sir, took place against the background 20 of violence which shaped attitudes and thinking on all 21 sides and not always helpfully from a policing 22 perspective. 23 Sir, you will have read, of course, the report of 24 Professor McEvoy, which in large measure sets out that 25 context. 46 1 What I want to say in these submissions will deal 2 with the main chunks of the debate before you. I don't 3 pretend in these submissions to cover all of the 4 minutiae, and indeed I don't think it is appropriate to 5 do so. At this stage, I think all of us and 6 particularly you, sir, and your Panel, are probably 7 suffering information overload. 8 The chunks, sir, that I wish to explore in due 9 course are the Land Rover crew. I want to look at 10 Reserve Constable Atkinson. I also want to look in some 11 respects at what has been called the golden hours and 12 particularly the issue of debriefing, upon which some 13 significant matters appear to turn. Clearly, sir, 14 I want to deal with the systemic allegation of collusion 15 and in turn that brings me to look, albeit briefly, at 16 the role of Mr McBurney. 17 Sir, there are no perfect policemen or policewomen, 18 just like there are no perfect professionals in any 19 sphere of life, a point Mr Adair has repeatedly, 20 I think, rung in our ears. The RUC, of course, was not 21 a perfect policing organisation. In the policing 22 response to what I call the Robert Hamill incident -- 23 and let me briefly define that, because I will use that 24 shorthand probably regularly. It is the incident 25 itself. It is the response to the incident on the 47 1 night. It is the aftermath in terms of the 2 investigation. 3 You will find, sir, and you might be entitled to 4 find, that mistakes were made around the Robert Hamill 5 incident. 6 I say, sir, that if mistakes were made to the extent 7 that police officers should be deemed to be culpable, 8 then you should find that these mistakes fall into the 9 category of honest, human mistakes. 10 The debate has been clouded by allegations of 11 sectarian agendas and of improper motives. I say that 12 the evidence is clear that there were no sectarian 13 motives or improper agendas at work, but only police 14 officers doing their best to deliver proper and decent 15 standards of policing, which, in limited respects, you 16 may find wanting. 17 I will have something to say in due course about 18 Reserve Constable Atkinson. I have listened carefully 19 to what Ms Dinsmore has expertly said on his behalf this 20 morning, but in due course I will expand upon the 21 submission which I have already made in my written 22 submissions that we don't accept her perspective or her 23 client's view on this issue. We say that the evidence 24 persuades us that he is the exception to the rule that 25 the Robert Hamill incident, as I have called it, was 48 1 otherwise policed by decent police officers who have 2 given of their best in all of the circumstances. 3 You have been tasked to consider, sir, whether there 4 are other exceptions to this rule, whether decent 5 policing has been subverted by improper and unlawful 6 motivations, and in that respect, I am specifically 7 referring to the allegation that Mr McBurney engaged in 8 a conspiracy to bury the investigation into Reserve 9 Constable Atkinson, and, in particular, the allegation 10 that, at the very top of the force, in the person of the 11 chief constable, there was a guiding hand to advance 12 that or to permit that collusive conspiracy, as 13 Mr McGrory has called it, to proceed. 14 Perversely, it may be said that we, the PSNI, 15 welcome the fact that the collusion debate has been 16 brought before you. I heard Mr Adair decry it because 17 of the direct impact that this will have on others, and 18 most particularly the widow of DCS McBurney, and 19 I understand that perspective. 20 However, the allegation which Mr McGrory and the 21 British Irish Rights Watch ask you to consider, indeed 22 what they say is at the very heart of this Inquiry, is 23 one that has assumed the status of gospel truth in some 24 pockets of this society and further afield. Therefore, 25 it is better that it is dealt with thoroughly and openly 49 1 by an independent Inquiry such as this. 2 The Police Service has nothing to fear from the 3 allegation. My client says that the evidence points in 4 the opposite direction to collusion, that it points in 5 the direction of trying to bring to justice all of those 6 who murdered Mr Hamill and those such as the corrupt 7 Reserve Constable Atkinson who would have assisted one 8 of the murderers. 9 Let me, before moving into the detail of those 10 chunks, sir, say something about the Police Service's 11 attitude or view of this Inquiry. 12 In his opening to the Inquiry on 13th January 2009, 13 Mr Underwood declared that the purpose of the hearings 14 was to bring a powerful and unbiased spotlight on the 15 public concerns that give rise to the Inquiry being 16 established so that the truth can be revealed. 17 At that time I welcomed the Inquiry on behalf of the 18 PSNI as providing an opportunity to participate in 19 a process which was designed to uncover the truth for 20 all to see. 21 I also reflected a commitment given by my client to 22 participate in the Inquiry in a manner which was both 23 open and transparent. 24 We trust that when your report comes to be written, 25 sir, that you will be able to reflect upon whether the 50 1 PSNI has made good on its commitments. In this spirit 2 of openness and cooperation I know that my instructing 3 solicitor, Mr Ferguson, and his team within the PSNI has 4 worked tirelessly in attempting to service the 5 documentary needs of the Inquiry. Plainly the Police 6 Service has held many of the thousands of documents 7 which this Inquiry has had to consider, and I believe 8 that I can speak without fear of contradiction in saying 9 that voluminous papers have been disclosed without any 10 hint of rancour or dispute. 11 I am conscious a continuing obligation to assist the 12 Inquiry ad hoc requests for documents and information 13 have been handled in the same spirit; cooperatively, 14 diligently and openly. We know, and we can give this 15 commitment, sir, that if the Inquiry requires assistance 16 in examining the precise scope of any recommendation 17 which may be deemed to be necessary in order to address 18 any lacuna which you might find in policing policies or 19 procedures as having existed in 1997, then the PSNI will 20 cooperate to the fullest extent. 21 It is also the case, sir, that very many police 22 witnesses have willingly presented themselves to the 23 Inquiry to answer questions and to be probed about the 24 events of 12 years ago. Those who have not been able to 25 come to the Inquiry to give evidence through ill-health 51 1 or death have nevertheless been interviewed by the 2 Inquiry or provided the Inquiry with statements. 3 The PSNI has always recognised the inquisitorial 4 nature of this process. My client may have adversaries 5 in this process, in the sense that there are parties who 6 have competing views about what has transpired, but the 7 PSNI has not felt itself to be participating in 8 an adversarial process. 9 The public interest in getting to the truth, or at 10 the very least a best sense of the truth as the 11 available evidence will permit, is an interest which 12 outweighs any narrow, selfish or sectional interest 13 which the PSNI might have and which it might 14 legitimately pursue in any other form of proceedings. 15 That is why in our written submissions the PSNI has 16 given ground and shown a preparedness to make 17 concessions, to accept failings and weaknesses where the 18 evidence suggests to us that these have occurred. 19 It is usually a sign of a bad lawyer if I quote 20 myself, but if I can remind you, sir, of what we said in 21 the opening on 13th January, something else we said. 22 I said that the PSNI would not seek to defend or 23 exculpate before this Inquiry any officer whose act or 24 omissions are properly and fairly deserving of censure, 25 nor, for that matter, will it seek to excuse 52 1 organisational or systems failures where they have 2 demonstrably occurred. 3 It may be, sir, that the Panel will not agree with 4 all of the submissions that have been made on behalf of 5 the PSNI. However, we trust that, when the report comes 6 to be written, the Panel will reflect the fact that the 7 PSNI has provided every possible assistance to the 8 Inquiry in its efforts to shine the unbiased spotlight 9 where it needs to be shone. 10 The Inquiry will be conscious it has not received 11 the cooperation of every person who has appeared before 12 it. There have been those who have sought to thwart the 13 Inquiry's objectives. In this Christmas season I think 14 it is apt to remember the pantomime of those who 15 performed before you at an early stage, feigning no 16 recollection greater than they may have been in the 17 centre of Portadown on 27th April 1997 and drunk. 18 It is something of the tragedy of this Inquiry that 19 nobody has seen fit to come forward and tell you 20 anything about who committed this dastardly crime. 21 I hesitate to say from the Bar, sir, that the 22 performance was planned and orchestrated. I will leave 23 you to judge that, but it was certainly the most squalid 24 aspect of the whole proceedings and utterly regrettable. 25 However, in many ways that performance was 53 1 insightful, because it gave you an indication of the 2 challenges which face policing and have faced policing 3 in Northern Ireland for too many years. 4 Sir, this Inquiry takes an important place in the 5 peace process in Northern Ireland. I think you all 6 appreciate, in coming from outside this jurisdiction, 7 the important responsibility that you hold. The 8 cooperation and support which the PSNI has given to this 9 Inquiry has been born in substantial measure by its 10 commitment to democratic and accountable policing. Part 11 of this commitment involves a recognition that the 12 legacy of our troubled past requires answers to hard 13 questions. If the peace process is to be meaningful, 14 those public authorities, and the policing service is 15 one of those public authorities, which participated in 16 the civil conflict or had a role to play in the civil 17 conflict, must do their best to answer those hard 18 questions to the extent that they can. 19 The death of Mr Hamill was an appalling tragedy. 20 For his family, the hurt left by his passing may never 21 be healed. The incident which led to his death is one 22 significant example of an event or an incident from 23 which hard questions arise. As Mr Adair observed 24 yesterday or the day before, it is not only the Hamill 25 family which demands answers to these hard questions. 54 1 Police officers and the police organisation have been 2 demonised for allegedly playing a part in Mr Hamill's 3 death. Those police officers, and indeed the 4 organisation they served, will undoubtedly welcome the 5 answers which the Inquiry can provide to the hard 6 questions. 7 We hope, sir, and it is a sincere hope, that in your 8 report and in the conclusions that you can provide that 9 you may in some small but significant way provide 10 signposts which might provide in turn guidance and 11 assurance in terms of what has happened in the past so 12 that perhaps a repetition of the hurt which many people 13 have suffered as a result of this incident, not least, 14 of course, the Hamill family, may not be repeated. 15 Your work, sir, stands alongside the work of other 16 aspects of the peace process, and by that I am thinking 17 of the Office of the Victims Commissioners, some of whom 18 have attended these hearings and have introduced 19 themselves to me, and are clearly looking to your work, 20 sir. The consultative group on the past chaired by 21 Eames and Bradley reported in January of 2009, and while 22 I think it is important to note that their 23 recommendations did not achieve universal acclaim or 24 agreement, that their work provides a forum for healthy 25 debate. Of course, there is also the work which the 55 1 PSNI continues in conjunction with the Police 2 Ombudsman's Office with the historical enquiries team to 3 look at unsolved murders and serious crime of our past. 4 Plainly, sir -- I don't say this as part of the historic 5 enquiries team -- the book on Mr Hamill's murder remains 6 open, and plainly, if there was evidence to come forward 7 which could lead to the prosecution of anyone involved 8 in that murder, then the PSNI would, of course, want to 9 hear that. 10 THE CHAIRMAN: Is that a convenient moment to break off? 11 MR WOLFE: I think so, sir. 12 THE CHAIRMAN: We are breaking off early. I am afraid 13 Sir John will not be able to be with us this afternoon. 14 I hope he will not mind me saying he is not well and we 15 should not keep him here. 16 MR WOLFE: I understand. 17 THE CHAIRMAN: 1.45. 18 (12.45 pm) 19 (A short break) 20 21 22 23 24 25 56 1 I N D E X 2 3 Closing submissions by MS DINSMORE ............... 1 4 Closing submissions by MR WOLFE .................. 45 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 57