Governor lied to escape inquiry
Sensational claims at Whitemoor trial
BY LIAM O COILEAIN
In what is fast becoming a sensational trial into the
breakout from Whitemoor Prison in September 1994, the prison
governor has given evidence in court, under oath, that he
misled the Woodcock Inquiry into the escape.
The trial of six men - Republican prisoners Liam O'Duibhir,
Peter Sherry, Liam McCotter and Paul `Dingus' Magee,
miscarriage of justice victim Danny McNamee and English
prisoner Andy Russell - began on Monday 13 January at
Woolwich Crown Court in London.
Prison Governor Brodie Clarke has provided the most
controversial evidence. A 22-year veteran of the prison
service, Clarke was appointed Governor of Whitemoor in May
1994. The prosecution case is that the items used in the
escape were all smuggled in by visitors, including the guns
and a bulky bolt cutters. Clarke gave evidence that the
security procedures for searching visitors were inadequate,
that there was no X-Ray machine, no metal-detecting portal
and no use of hand-held metal-detecting wands. Later this
evidence was directly contradicted by a junior governor at
the prison, Governor Vert, while visitors to Whitemoor who
have spoken to An Phoblacht recall stringent security
measures, including metal detecting equipment.
Clarke also gave evidence that the men, all High Risk
Category A prisoners, had no Category A books during their
time in Whitemoor SSU. He later retracted this evidence and
said that the books had been there but were not used. A
prisoner who is ``on the book'' routinely has his every move
recorded in that book by prison staff, his photo is in the
book and any disciplinary actions recorded. The book always
travels with the prisoner. Michael Mansfield, appearing for
Liam McCotter, quoted prison rules to the governor, showing
that not to have filled in the books was a complete flouting
of those rules. Andrew Russell, who is defending himself,
put it to the governor that the books were not available to
the court because they would show that he was having a
shower in the SSU at the time the fence was cut and that
none of the other men were in the yard. The judge ordered
Clarke, who is in line for a promotion, to produce the
books.
Michael Mansfield then asked Clarke how many visits he had
made while governor to the SSU. Clarke was adamant that he
had made between six and a dozen visits. Mansfield than
produced the security gatebook for the SSU which showed that
Clarke had not been in the SSU between July and December
1994. Clarke said there must have been an error. Mansfield
than referred Clarke to his statement to the Woodcock
Inquiry into the September 1994 escape. In that statement he
said he had visited the SSU at most three times. ``Did you
lie to this court or did you lie to Sir John Woodcock?''
asked Mansfield. Clarke then said that if that was what was
written down then he must have misled Woodcock.
It also emerged during cross examination that prison staff
had been invited by the Prison Service to a training session
in September 1996 to cover a briefing and role play for
staff giving evidence at the trial. Clarke claimed that the
role play had prepared the staff for the trial in a manner
that would not obstruct the course of justice. He rejected a
suggestion by Tony Jennings, counsel for Danny McNamee, that
the purpose of the session had been to ``all get together and
sort it out'.
The six men are charged with breaking from the prison,
possession of two guns with intent and with intent to commit
a felony. Magee is also charged with causing grevious bodily
harm. All have pleaded not guilty. Magee has chosen not to
attend the trial.
The breaking charge is significant as it differs from the
more usual charge of escaping. `Breaking' is an archaic
charge going back to Fenian times, when dynamite was often
used in escape attempts. The maximum sentence under English
law for escape is seven years. For breaking it is life.
However, for the prosecution to prove the breaking charge
they have to prove that the men caused physical damage to
prison property while making their exit from the prison.
This task is proving difficult. Although two perimeter wire
fences were cut, the prison authorities claim to have no
surveillance tape pictures of the fence being cut, nor of
the men firing any shots despite all the sophisticated
surveillance equipment around the prison
Crown Counsel Waters told the court in his opening address
that the fence had been cut at a `blind spot' for the
cameras, that the first fence was not alarmed, that the
alarm only sounded in the prison's control booth after the
men scaled the SSU wall and reached the second fence. He
also asked the jury to believe that there was no camera
cover for the cutting of the second fence and that the
surveillance camera system had no automatic recording
facility. He claimed that it was more than four minutes
after the men reached the second fence, in the process
setting off a trembler alarm, before an inexperienced prison
officer finally remembered to push a manual record button.
The prosecution case also includes evidence that a security
camera which should have rotated to sweep the SSU exercise
yard had been fixed in one direction when a prisoner
complained of paranoid feelings that the camera was
following him. The first sight of the men on the
surveillance tape that has been made available to the court
begins just inside the outer prison wall.
Michael Mansfield QC has this week suggested to various
prison officers that the men did not cut the fences but that
this task had been carried out by prison officers.
Already there are indications that the prosecution may ask
the court to drop the breaking charge and replace it with a
charge of escape. The case continues.