Stormontgate is the name given to the controversy surrounding an alleged Provisional Irish Republican Army spy-ring based in Stormont, the parliament building of Northern Ireland. The term was coined in October 2002 after the arrest of Sinn Féin’s Northern Ireland Assembly group administrator Denis Donaldson, his son-in-law Ciarán Kearney, and former porter William Mackessy for intelligence-gathering on 4 October 2002.
"the prosecution for the offences in relation to the accused are no longer in the public interest".See BBC News Thursday, 8 December 2005 available here.Sinn Féin claimed that the prosecutions had been politically motivated and were dropped because of lack of evidence. Some unionists suggested that the acquittals were a "reward" for the final act of decommissioning by the Provisional IRA announced on 26 September 2005. See main article.
In his statement Donaldson described the alleged Sinn Féin spy ring in Stormont as "a scam and a fiction".See Guardian newspaper December 17, 2005 available here. Adams has asserted that both the planned leaking of Donaldson's name as an informer and the original Stormontgate allegations were engineered by the security forces to discredit Sinn Féin and cause a crisis in the peace process.See BBC News 17 December 2005 available here. The affair had been investigated by Nuala O'Loan, the Northern Ireland Policing Ombudsman, who ruled that the raid was not politically motivated. O'Loan found that the
"decision to seek a warrant authorising a search of a specific desk in the Sinn Féin offices was reasonable, proportionate and legal"but was critical of the number of vehicles used and the scale of the police operation.See Ombudsman statement for 01 August 2004 available here. Normally the Ombudsman's office is given access to all relevant codenames and reports relating to informants. Yet O'Loan was unaware that Donaldson was by his own admission, an informant. Following the public unmasking of Donaldson, O'Loan stood by her 2004 judgement on the search. The Northern Ireland Office has also strenuously denied that Donaldson was an agent.
"cost hundreds of millions of pounds. I am not going down that road when it is quite clear that it is not in the public interest to do so"See Guardian December 20, 2005 available here.The Irish Taoiseach (prime minister) Bertie Ahern, described events surrounding the incident as "bizarre".See comments of Bertie Ahern available here.
Immediately after the December revelation, unidentified security sources said that a second informer acting independently of Donaldson disclosed the alleged spy ring Former PIRA prisoner and critic of Gerry Adams, Anthony McIntyre, has claimed that a more important British agent is operating in the organisation, and that Donaldson was sacrificed by Sinn Féin to deceive people into thinking that the most serious infiltration had been ended.See The Telegraph report for 20/12/2005 available [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2005/12/20/nira20.xml&sSheet=/news/2005/12/20/ixhome.html here.
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"Stormontgate".
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