An important witness has not been interviewed by gardaí investigating the murder of Sinn Féin spy Denis Donaldson in Glenties, an inquest has heard today.
Mr Donaldson was shot dead more than six years ago by gunmen in a rural cottage with the Real IRA claiming later it was responsible.
The former senior Sinn Féin official had confessed to spying for police Special Branch and secret service MI5 just months before he was killed.
The Irish Examiner reports that Senior gardaí told an inquest in Letterkenny, Co Donegal, that a file had been submitted to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) and they anticipated a decision on whether to pursue the criminal case within four months.
Fiona Doherty, a barrister for the family, told the inquest: “The family does welcome the fact that a file has been submitted, if only because it means there has been some progress in the case.
“However, the family have had ongoing contact with the gardaí about the progress of the investigation and they are concerned about the manner in which the investigation has been carried out.
“There has been one witness in particular that they know has not been spoken to by the Garda, a witness they regard as very, very important.”
Lawyer for the police Stephen Byrne said it had been a good investigation.
“There is nothing to suggest, any evidence to suggest, that there has been anything other than a proper and bona fide criminal investigation carried out and that is a matter of record and it has resulted in a file being submitted to the DPP, which is a step I would have thought the family would seek to encourage in the hope that whoever is responsible is brought to account in the proper forum, in a criminal court,” he said.
Donegal coroner Denis McCauley has opened the inquest into Mr Donaldson’s death 10 times and each time it has been adjourned.
The sequence of events surrounding his death dated back to 2002 after three men, including Mr Donaldson, were arrested following a raid on Sinn Féin’s Stormont office. The power-sharing executive between unionists and nationalists collapsed and Government restored direct rule to the North a week later.
In 2005 charges against three men were dropped and within days Sinn Féin said Mr Donaldson was a British agent and expelled him from the party. He later said he had worked as a spy since the 1980s.
In April 2006 Mr Donaldson was found shot dead in the remote Glenties area of Donegal.
The coroner said his investigation would focus on five areas:
:: Mr Donaldson’s life and experiences in the UK, including his work and his supposed exposure and the fact he was recognised to be an informer;
:: What happened in the time leading up to his flight to Donegal and his death;
:: His interaction with gardaí, given that he was a vulnerable person at risk;
:: How he died;
:: The investigation into his death.
He welcomed the fact that gardaí had submitted a file to the DPP and said if a decision was not made to hold a criminal trial, he hoped to have the inquest under way next year.
The family’s legal team has urged that the inquest take into account European Article 2 law surrounding the right to life and submitted case law from Ireland and the UK. The coroner urged them to revise their submissions before he makes a decision.
Garda superintendent Michael Finan told the inquest he would expect a decision from the DPP within four months. Mr Byrne urged the coroner not to write to try to speed up the DPP’s deliberations to avoid any taint on her independence.
The case was adjourned to March 21 next year.
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