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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
National
Rebecca Black

Coroner delivering findings on fatal shootings involving British Army

Relatives of those killed during the Springhill Westrock killings with their solicitor Padraig O Muirigh of O Muirigh Solicitors, arriving at Belfast Coroner’s Court (Liam McBurney/PA) - (PA Wire)

A coroner is delivering findings following an inquest into the killing of five people in shootings involving the British Army in west Belfast 50 years ago.

A priest and three teenagers were among those killed in the Springhill and Westrock areas on July 9 1972.

Families and friends of Father Noel Fitzpatrick, 42, father-of-six Patrick Butler, 38, John Dougal, 16, David McCafferty, 15, and Margaret Gargan, 13, gathered at Belfast Coroner’s Court for the long-awaited findings.

There was applause as they walked together holding a banner which read “time for truth”.

The group included former Sinn Fein president Gerry Adams, Junior Minister Aisling Reilly, West Belfast MP Conor Maskey and People Before Profit MLA Gerry Carroll.

The inquest concluded in April 2024, just hours before the former government’s guillotine on conflict-related court cases as part of new legacy laws came into effect.

It was the last of the coronial investigations into Troubles-related deaths completed before the May 1 deadline of the Legacy Act, which is currently being reviewed under the Labour Government.

It had been a fresh inquest ordered by Northern Ireland’s attorney general in 2014 after an original inquest in 1973 returned an open verdict.

Relatives of those killed during the Springhill Westrock killings with their solicitor Padraig O Muirigh of O Muirigh Solicitors, holding a banner and pictures of the victims (Liam McBurney/PA) (PA Wire)

Addressing Belfast Coroner’s Court on Thursday morning, Mr Justice Scoffield apologised to the families for the length of the wait for the findings, saying he had taken some time to consider matters.

He said his findings number some 640 pages.

Earlier in a joint statement, the Butler, Gargan, Dougal and McCafferty families said they “stand together after almost 54 years of grief, loss, and unanswered questions”.

“The deaths of our loved ones that occurred at Springhill and Westrock on 9th July 1972 have cast a long shadow over our lives,” they said.

“Each of those who died was an individual – deeply loved and still deeply missed.

“For us, this is not history; it is something we have lived with every day.

“We have consistently maintained that those who died were innocent civilians, and that the force used on that day was indiscriminate and unjustified.

“For over five decades, our families have raised serious concerns that those initial investigations failed to properly establish the truth.

“We now await the coroner Justice Scoffield’s findings.

“We do so with both hope and apprehension – hope that the findings will reflect the full circumstances of what happened, and apprehension because of the weight this moment carries for all of our families.”

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