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The Argus, 11 November 2005:

“We’re overjoyed all we wanted was truth of killing to emerge”

Mrs. Eileen Fox hugged her nephew Jimmy Sharkey for joy when he handed her a copy of the Barron Report on Thursday morning.

For years Eileen had waited for the truth to emerge in relation to the brutal murder of her brother Seamus Ludlow.

Kevin Ludlow and two of his sisters, Nan Sharkey and Eileen Fox pay their respects at the memorial where their brother Seamus was murdered.“I’m overjoyed. All we wanted was the truth,” she said on Thursday. “It’s great news. It doesn’t matter how many years have passed once we have made a bit of headway in finding out what happened.”

Eileen says she never believed the stories that Seamus had been shot by the IRA and says her family were hassled by Gardai as a result of this.

“The Guards used to call to me nearly every day and also go to see my husband when he was working in the woods,” she recalls. “They knew we didn’t believe what they were saying and that’s why they kept calling on us.”

The report paints a picture of Seamus which is familiar to all those who knew him.

It describes him as “a quiet, unassuming man whose life revolved around work and home”.

He was also known for charitable work, and had acted as Santa Claus for children in a Dundalk housing estate for many years.

He was a forestry worker and was employed in a sawmill at Ravensdale Park at the time of his death.

When he had finished working on Saturdays, he enjoyed going for a drink.

He’d had a drink in Dundalk on the evening of his death and was last seen thumbing a lift home on the big Bridge on the Newry Road.

The report states that it seems reasonable to suppose he was picked up around Newry bridge, outside Dundalk, some time between midnight and 12.30am on May 2nd, 1976.

His body was found the next day close to his home. He had been shot a number of times.

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The Argus, 11 November 2005:

Gardai were ordered to ‘abandon’ plans to interview four suspects

by Margaret Roddy

The report by retired High Court Judge, Mr Justice Henry Barron, says that Gardai were prevented from questioning loyalists suspected of killing Seamus Ludlow.

In the report, published last week, Mr Justice Barron says he believes that that the officer investigating the murder, Det Supt Dan Murphy, was ordered to “abandon” plans to interview four suspects who were being held by the RUC three years after the killing.

The only “credible explanation” for the order was that it was issued to avoid having to grant reciprocal rights to the RUC, where officers would interview suspects in the Republic, said Mr Justice Barron.

The report said that the British government at the time was pressing for “hot pursuit” rights across the Border, British military overflights and the right to interview suspects in the Republic.

“These three issues evoked strong reactions amongst ordinary people in the State, and such popular opposition was inevitably reflected in the policies and attitudes of the Gardaí and successive governments” Mr Justice Barron said.

Thirty years on it could not be proven that the Garda would have had to grant reciprocal interview rights, he said. “It is sufficient that senior Gardaí and/or officials from the Department of Justice held a perception that this was so.”

According to the report the RUC indentified four men whom they believed to be involved in the killing to the head of Garda security and intelligence, Chief Supt Michael Fitzgerald in January 1979.

Three suspects

However, the Barron report said that Garda Security and Intelligence had not opened files into three of the suspected killers, while a file held on the fourth had nothing to do with the Ludlow killing and could not now, in any event, be found.

Seamus Ludlow, the 47-year old forestry worker from Thistle Cross, Dundalk, was found shot dead in a lane three miles outside Dundalk on May 2nd.

It is believed his body was dumped there by four members of the Red Hand Commando organisation, who had picked him up the night before and killed him as he returned home after a night out in Dundalk.

In his report Mr Justice Henry Barron said he believed the officer investigating Mr Ludlow's murder, Det Supt Dan Murphy was ordered to "abandon" plans to interview four suspects held by the RUC three years after the killing.

The Barron report, which was submitted to the Government 14 months ago, was released to the Oireachtas Committee on Justice, Equality, Defence and Women's Rights last Thursday. The report said that the British government at the time was pressing for “hot pursuit” rights across the Border, British military overflights and the right to interview suspects in the Republic.

The report outlined how in January 1979 the RUC identified four men to the head of Garda security and intelligence, Chief Supt Michael Fitzgerald, whom they believed were involved in Mr Ludlow's killing.

The four men are identified in the Barron report as Paul Hosking, William Richard Long, Comber, Co Down; Seamus Carroll, Bangor, Co Down; and a then UDR corporal, James Reid Fitzsimmons. Two of the men were in jail in Northern Ireland at the time - Mr Long for the murder of David Spratt a month after the Ludlow killing, and Mr Carroll for firearms offences.

However, the Barron report said that Garda Security and Intelligence had not opened files into three of the suspected killers, while a file held on the fourth had nothing to do with the Ludlow killing and could not now, in any event, be found.

An internal investigation ordered by the then deputy commissioner for operations Pat Byrne, who subsequently became Garda Commissioner, revealed the existence of a 1979 report from Det Supt Courtney, which mentioned the RUC's information about the four suspects and sought permission to interview them.

Mr Byrne ordered a further investigation under the command of Det Supt Ted Murphy, who in January 1997 asked the RUC for co-operation.

The four suspects were arrested in February 1998 and interrogated by the RUC. Garda detectives did not attend the interrogation.

Two of the suspects, Paul Hosking and James Reid Fitzsimons admitted being present when Seamus Ludlow was killed but denied any involvement in it while the other two, William Richard Long and Seamus Carroll, denied knowing anything about it.

In a report to the Northern Ireland Director of Public Prosecutions, the RUC said it doubted if Mr Hosking and Mr Fitzsimmons could be prosecuted. However, it was possible that the two could serve as witnesses if the DPP decided to prosecute Mr Carroll and Mr Long. In October 1999 the DPP decided not to prosecute.

In a letter to the inquiry in January 2004 the North's DPP said a prosecution of Mr Long and Mr Carroll would be “entirely dependent” on the evidence of Mr Hosking and Mr Fitzsimmons. Questions could be raised about the credibility either would have as witnesses, while no forensic evidence could be produced 30 years on.In his report Mr Justice Barron accepted that the statements given by Mr Hosking and Mr Fitzsimmons differed substantially in places. “It is the view of the inquiry, concurred in by the DPP, that this could only have compounded the difficulties faced by a prosecutor in this case,” said the judge.

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Revised: November 11, 2005 .