Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Belfast Live
Belfast Live
National
Michael McHugh

Cookstown tragedy police 'have done a good job' says chief constable

Police investigating the deaths of three teenagers in a crush outside a disco have done a good job, a senior officer has said.

Lauren Bullock, 17, Morgan Barnard, 17, and 16-year-old Connor Currie died near the Greenvale Hotel in Cookstown, Co Tyrone , on St Patrick's Night last month.

PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton said the hotel owner's arrest and subsequent de-arrest in a drugs probe was a regrettable "distraction" from the focus of the investigation.

He added: "The organisation I am responsible for, as far as I am concerned, is competent in this matter.

Cookstown tragedy: 619 people in Greenvale Hotel car park now identified by police  

"The investigation team and local police have done a good job, not to be self-congratulatory in such tragic circumstances.

"It is a human endeavour and sometimes judgments are not quite right."

Mr Hamilton told his Policing Board scrutiny committee in Belfast he had referred his force's handling of initial reports of the tragedy to the independent Police Ombudsman for review.

Cookstown Hotel tragedy: Initial police response to be investigated  

The owner of the Greenvale, Michael McElhatton, identified himself as the one of those arrested and later released on suspicion of manslaughter.

He accused police of trying to "blacken" his name over swiftly-dispelled drugs suspicions after officers searched his home and found unidentified powder.

Mr Hamilton acknowledged the episode did not look good.

He said: "It is regrettable that it took the attention away from the investigation for a few days.

"For me, that distraction regarding the drugs arrest and de-arrest was exactly that.

"The officers who carried out the arrest did so on the basis of having the reasonable suspicion required.

Cookstown hotel deaths: 40-year-old released on bail  

"That was all done appropriately and we certainly would not have been putting out the identity of anyone arrested prior to charge in the courts."

Police have identified hundreds of witnesses to the teenagers' deaths.

The area outside the hotel was packed with young people dropped off by buses just before the popular nightspot opened.

Investigators said teenagers were trodden underfoot during the crush near the entrance to the disco.

The head of the Catholic Church in Ireland said the area had become a "valley of tears" following the tragedies.

Three back-to-back funerals were held in the Dungannon area and were attended by large numbers of mourners.

Keep up-to-date with all the very latest news, what's on, sport and everything else in Belfast and beyond with the Belfast Live app.  

Only select news that interests you by picking the topics you want to display on the app's homepage. Plus, our enhanced user experience includes live blogs, video, interactive maps and slick picture galleries. Download it now and get involved.  

Click here to get it from the App Store or here for Google Play .

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.