Husband and wife in court on weapon plot charges


23 June 2006
Press Association
Alan Erwin


A husband and wife were among three people who appeared in court today accused of an alleged international weapons plot by dissident republican terrorists. The conspiracy involved machine guns, explosives, and anti-tank weapons, it was claimed. Belfast Magistrates Court was also told the alleged plot stretched to Portugal.
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Trio in Belfast court accused of international weapons plot


23 June 2006
Agence France Presse


Three people close to a dissident republican paramilitary group in Northern Ireland were accused in court Friday of participating in an international weapons plot. Belfast Magistrates Court heard that the alleged conspiracy involved machine guns, explosives and anti-tank weapons, and stretched as far as Portugal and France. The three -- all remanded in custody -- were believed to be close to the Real IRA, a dissident group opposed to the peace process between Protestants and Catholics in Northern Ireland. They were among 10 people arrested Monday in a major police operation involving 200 officers.
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3 suspected IRA dissidents charged with trying to smuggle arsenal into N. Ireland


23 June 2006
Associated Press Newswires


Three suspected Irish Republican Army dissidents, including a husband and wife, were arraigned Friday on charges of trying to smuggle weapons into Northern Ireland. Desmond Kearns, 41, his wife Alison Kearns, 37, and Michael Gregory, 37, were ordered held without bail until their next court appearance July 28.
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Three charged following searches


23 June, 2006
BBC News

Three people have been remanded in custody following searches earlier this week by police in Armagh and Fermanagh. Police said at the time they believed they had stopped an international gun smuggling operation. Desmond Kearns, 41, and his wife Alison Patricia Kearns, 37, from Tannaghmore Green, Lurgan, were charged in a Belfast court with procuring weapons. Michael Dermot Gregory, 37, of Concession Road, Crossmaglen, was charged with making assets available.
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Three charged in Belfast over weapons plot


23 June 2006
Reuters News Belfast


Three people including a husband and wife appeared in a Belfast court on Friday charged with a string of terrorist offences following a police operation earlier this week against dissident Irish republicans. The three were among 10 people detained on Monday after some 200 police officers backed by the British Army carried out raids in Counties Armagh and Fermanagh, disrupting what police described as "a potential major terrorist conspiracy".
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Dissidents arrested


23 June 2006
Associated Press - Belfast

Three suspected Irish Republican Army dissidents, including a husband and wife, were arraigned Friday on charges of trying to smuggle weapons into Northern Ireland. Desmond Kearns, 41, his wife Alison Kearns, 37, and Michael Gregory, 37, were ordered held without bail until their next court appearance July 28. Detective

Chief Inspector Neil Graham, a police officer who interrogated them following their arrest Monday, testified that all three were suspected of trying to smuggle a vast array of weaponry via Portugal and France into Northern Ireland.
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Have Danger, Will Advise


30 May 2006
The New York Times
Sara J. Welch


Three years ago, Christopher Exline, a Dallas businessman, decided to open a branch of his furniture-rental company in Baghdad after he saw all the looting there on TV.

''I witnessed all of these liberated Iraqis embarking on their own redecorating schemes by looting the palace and office buildings,'' said Mr. Exline, who is chief executive officer of Home Essentials, which leases furniture to employees of government agencies and private companies in Iraq. ''I realized that any good furniture that did exist was now gone.''

Since then, Mr. Exline has expanded his company into Kabul, Afghanistan, and recently decided to open a showroom in Tripoli, Libya. ''I don't perceive this as risky,'' he said. ''Entrepreneurs define risk differently than other people.''
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Derry Dissident Deported from U.S.


23 Nov 2005
Irish Voice
Sean O'Driscoll


A Derry dissident Republican has been deported from the U.S. after refusing an FBI and British intelligence offer to become an informer in exchange for a new house in Portugal and large cash payments.

Sean Devine, who has fundraised for dissident Republican prisoners, was recently questioned at Newark Airport for over six hours by a five man team lead by the FBI, the Northern Ireland Special Branch and the British Intelligence organization, MI5.

Devine was able to provide the Irish Voice with unusually precise information about the interview, including a phone number in Strabane, Northern Ireland he was told to ring if he agreed to become an informer.
He was also given the first names of the MI5 and Northern Ireland Special Branch officers who questioned him.

Speaking from his home in Dungiven, Co. Derry, Devine said that he was shocked by how much those questioning him knew about his life, including his plans several weeks ago to holiday on the Isle of Man, which lies between Britain and Ireland. "They obviously have a very good source somewhere along the line," he said.

He said he was refused contact with a lawyer and a representative from the Irish Embassy and was told that the conversation officially "didn't exist."

"They were all very friendly. It was really like they were my friends and they wanted to help me out if I would help them out, but I think that would only be as long as they could use me," he said.

He said that the Northern Ireland Special Branch officer gave him specific names of "people he knew very well," and he was told that any money problems he had would be taken care of. He was also offered a visa waiver to return to the U. S. if he agreed to become an informer.

Devine agrees that he split from the Provisional movement in 1997 in protest at the approaching Good Friday Agreement, which he describes as a "sell-out." His story mirrors that of another New York-based Irish Republican interviewed by the FBI in the last two months.

Congressman Peter King took up that case after the man was told that one of his family members would be deported back to Northern Ireland if he did not become an informer. The man was aligned with the mainstream Provisional Republican movement and was in favor of the Good Friday Agreement.

The latest case began at Belfast Airport, when Devine was due to fly to Newark earlier this month. He was told by U.S. immigration officials that there was something wrong with his Irish passport and it would not be accepted by U.S. officers in Newark. He took the train down to Dublin and got an emergency passport and then flew out of Belfast on the following Saturday, arriving in Newark at 11 am. When he reached the immigration inspection point, he was told to follow an immigration official.

"The man took me away to a wee room and then the FBI agent came in and named himself. He said there are people here who want to speak to you. I was taken into a larger room that looked like a dining room with a lot of chairs," Devine said.

He says that the three other people identified themselves, one saying he was "Stewarty" from MI5, the other two identified themselves as "Declan" from the Northern Ireland Special Branch and another identifying himself as "Mervyn" from the Police Service of Northern Ireland. Mervyn spoke with a strong Derry accent. The officers told hum they had been waiting for him to arrive in the U.S. since Thursday and knew that he had planned to visit the Isle of Man some weeks earlier.

"They were acting like my friends and they were very, very nice," he said. "I asked for a lawyer and a member of staff of the Irish Embassy to be there. They told me that what was happening didn't exist. They were there to help me and if I worked for them they would take me anywhere in the world," he said.

Devine said the officers named three or four different countries, most specifically naming Lisbon, Portugal as a place where they could provide him with a house. "They said if I had any money problems, they would be taken care of, as much money as I needed and I'd be well looked after. They said what they wanted to do was put these people in jail," he added.

"They also said they would put me on a flight and take me anywhere I wanted for a holiday. They said a lot of the same things a lot of times." Devine said he was asked about Republicans who rejected the Good Friday Agreement, commonly referred to as "dissident Republicans."

"I wouldn't call them dissident Republicans, I would call them traditional Republicans. The Special Branch officer wanted information on people in the Derry area. They named some people that I knew well," he said.

Devine said he listened to what they had to say and took a card from Declan with a number in Strabane in Northern Ireland.

The Irish Voice has since phoned the number, which rang out for a long time and didn't include an answering machine message. After the interview, Devine was handed over to immigration officials, who put him on an 8 p.m. flight back to Belfast. "I was glad to go at that stage. I knew I wasn't going to have anything to do with it. It was time for me to get home," he said.

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Dungiven Man ‘Disgusted’ At US Arrest


11 Nov 2005
Derry Journal


A Dungiven man has said he is ‘totally disgusted’ at the way he was treated after he was stopped entering the United States last week and pressurised into becoming an informer for the PSNI. The man, Sean Devine, also said he is deeply perturbed at the extent of the surveillance he must have been kept under in order for the security services to know so much about him. Mr. Devine said that he had been involved in work for republican prisoners in Maghaberry but had never been before a court on any sort of charges. He told the Journal what happened:
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Deportee's Real IRA Links


30 Nov 2005
Irish Voice

Sean O'Driscoll


A Derry man who was deported from the U.S. earlier this month is a fundraiser for a Republican prisoner welfare group which the U.S. government considers a front for the Real IRA, the Justice Department has confirmed.

Sean Devine, from Dungiven in Co. Derry, told the Irish Voice last week that he was offered a new home in Portugal if he became an informer for MI5 and the Police Service of Northern Ireland.

However, Devine agrees that he fundraised for the Irish Republican Prisoners Welfare Association (IRPWA), which is on the Treasury Department's list of foreign terrorist groups, as a fundraising front group for the Real IRA. Members of the IRPWA are banned from entering the U.S., and U.S. citizens are banned from giving it any "material support."

In 2001, the U.S. government banned the IRPWA along with the 32 County Sovereignty Movement, the Real IRA's political wing. The 32CSM later lost a challenge in Washington to lift the ban. However, Devine and other fundraisers for the IRPWA have strongly denied the claim and say that their fundraising is legitimate.

Devine, a fundraiser for the Derry section of the organization, was questioned at Newark airport in New Jersey for over five hours by a five man team lead by the FBI, the Northern Ireland Special Branch and MI5. He said he was offered large amounts of money to become an informer and that he was refused contact with a lawyer and a representative from the Irish Embassy.

Devine agrees that he split from the Provisional movement in 1997 in protest at the approaching Good Friday Agreement, which he describes as a "sell out."
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