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POLICE FRAME-UP EXPOSED
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British Special Branch invented `IRA' personnel
LAST MONDAY, 24 January the trial of four young Irish
republicans began in the Old Bailey, London. Three of the
young men bravely stood up in the court and admitted bombing
soldiers pubs in Guildford and Woolwich in October 1974 and
for which innocent people were serving life imprisonment.
These dramatic admissions sent shockwaves through the
establishment in England, exposing the frame-up tactics of
the British police, and bringing into relief the 80 or so
convictions of Irish people sentenced on `conspiracy
charges' and on `confession' evidence.
In the autumn of 1974 two English pubs frequented by British
soldiers in Guildford and Woolwich were bombed, it is now
known, by active service units of the Irish Republican Army.
IRA units proved so elusive that the English police and
Special Branch invented IRA personnel and arrested three
Belfast people resident in England and an English girl. They
were interrogated and tortured for seven days and forced to
sign false confessions admitting the bombings.
These four people - Paul Hill, Gerald Conlon, Patrick
Armstrong and Armstrong's girlfriend Carol Richardson - were
found guilty on 22 October 1975 on 33 charges, including
seven of murder. It was one of the biggest farces British
justice has so far produced.
Republican News, 29 January 1977.