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Lawyer explains attempt to ‘launder his reputation’

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Julian O’Neill

BBC News NI crime and justice correspondent

PA Gerry Adams is wearing orange round glasses and has short white/grey hair and a white/grey beard. He is wearing a navy suit jacket, red tie and a light blue shirt. He has two pins on his lapel, one is a gold circle and the other a red flower on a white background. PA

Former Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams outside the High Court in Dublin on Thursday

Gerry Adams is “attempting to launder his reputation” by suing the BBC, a barrister representing the corporation has told a libel trial at the High Court in Dublin.

Paul Gallagher SC made the claim during a closing address to the jury.

Mr Adams, 76, claims he was defamed in a 2016 programme and online article in which a contributor alleged the former Sinn Féin leader sanctioned the murder of British agent Denis Donaldson a decade earlier.

Mr Adams denies the allegation.

Mr Gallagher said Mr Adams’ reputation as having been an IRA leader is a central issue in the case, which is in its fourth week.

The jury should remember IRA atrocities and Mr Adams cannot argue his reputation has been injured by the story, the barrister argued.

He said: “The IRA was a terrorist organisation which held this county hostage for three decades.

“To have a reputation of being on the army council is something which is very significant and goes to the heart of the case.”

Referring to Mr Adams’ legal action, he said: “This is, in truth, a cynical attempt by Mr Adams to launder his reputation.”

He stated the Spotlight story and an accompanying online article were produced in the public interest and it is wrong to suggest they were based on the single contributor, Martin.

There had been five other sources supporting his allegation.

In this regard, the case “was brought on a fundamental mistake,” Mr Gallagher claimed.

He said the BBC did not have to establish the truth of the allegation – “if truth was the only defence it would be difficult to see how a free media could tell us what was happening”.

He cited the defence in law of fair and reasonable publication.

Mr Gallagher said “a striking feature” of the evidence of reporter Jennifer O’Leary was the “care” she took researching the story.

The case continues.

Who was Denis Donaldson?

PA Media Martin McGuinness, Denis Donaldson and Gerry Adams are all looking to their right. All three are wearing glasses. Mr McGuinness and Mr Adams are both wearing dark suits, shirts and ties. Mr Donaldson is wearing a tanned coloured jacket and a denim shirt. There are three microphones in front of them.PA Media

Denis Donaldson was a key figure in Sinn Féin and worked closely with former leaders Martin McGuinness and Gerry Adams

Mr Donaldson was once a key figure in Sinn Féin’s rise as a political force in Northern Ireland but he was found murdered in 2006 after it emerged he had been a spy.

He was interned without trial for periods in the 1970s.

After the signing of the Good Friday Agreement, Sinn Féin appointed Mr Donaldson as its key administrator in the party’s Stormont offices.

In 2005, Mr Donaldson confessed he was a spy for British intelligence for two decades, before disappearing from Belfast.

He was found dead in a small, run down cottage in Glenties, County Donegal.

Who is Gerry Adams?

Mr Adams was the president of republican party Sinn Féin from 1983 until 2018.

He served as MP in his native Belfast West from 1983 to 1992 and again from 1997 until 2011 before sitting as a TD (Teachta Dála) in the Dáil (Irish parliament) between 2011 and 2020.

Mr Adams led the Sinn Féin delegation during peace talks that eventually brought an end to the Troubles after the signing of the Good Friday Agreement in 1998.

He was detained in the early 1970s when the government in Northern Ireland introduced internment without trial for those suspected of paramilitary involvement.

Mr Adams has consistently denied being a member of the IRA.


BBC News

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