MASSEREENE BARRACKS MURDERS: SHIVERS FOUND NOT GUILTY

Brian Shivers has been acquitted of Massereene barracks murders on Friday

Brian Shivers has been acquitted of Massereene barracks murders on Friday

A MAN who was originally convicted of the Real IRA murders of the Massereene barracks murder of two soldiers has been found not guilty in a retrial.

Brian Shivers, 47, had been jailed for killing sappers Mark Quinsey, 23, of Birmingham, and Patrick Azimkar, 21, of London, in Antrim in 2009.

Mr Shivers was also cleared of several other charges including six counts of attempted murder.

Sappers Patrick Azimkar and Mark Quinsey shot dead by the Real IRA

Sappers Patrick Azimkar and Mark Quinsey shot dead by the Real IRA

Trial judge Mr Justice Deeny said he was not convinced of the prosecution view that matches found in the getaway car containing Shivers’ DNA had not got there by some innocent explanation.

He had been convicted of the offences in January 2012 but was retried following a successful appeal.

The soldiers were shot hours before they were due to fly to Afghanistan.

They served with the 38 Engineer Regiment.

They had ordered pizza and left the base to collect it at about 21:20 GMT on 7 March 2009, when they were attacked by two gunmen.

Four other people were seriously injured in the shooting.

They were the first soldiers to be murdered in Northern Ireland since Lance Bombardier Stephen Restorick was killed by an IRA sniper in 1997.

Following the decision on Friday at Belfast Crown, Patrick Azimkar’s mother Geraldine said: “We are in shock.”

Rejecting the prosecution assertion that the presence of Shivers’ DNA on the matches and mobile phone proved that he was involved in helping the killers, Mr Justice Deeny said:

“He may have done so (touched the items). But even if he did so it does not necessarily mean that he was assisting the person who carried out this murder.

“It could have been a quite innocent touching. And of course the transfer may have been secondary and not direct; shaking hands with someone who then handled the phone.

“In the same regard the DNA on the matches does not indicate contact with the box of matches used by the person who did set fire to the vehicle on 7 March. But that contact with that object might have been an entirely innocent one.”

Mr Justice Deeny said that the presence of DNA on the items from up to five other individuals added a “further difficulty” for the prosecution case.

Scenes of crimes officer Rosemary Johnston admitted that she had pushed the back seat of the getaway car down on to the two matches while searching the vehicle at the scene.

Ms Johnson said she had not been aware that DNA could be retrieved from matches.

The court also heard that another scenes of crimes officer, Mark Robinson, had placed the two matches into the same evidence bag, potentially contaminating vital forensic evidence.

Trial judge Mr Justice Deeny said it was “somewhat surprising in the circumstances” that the matches had not been removed from the car until four days after the attack.

He said it was “clear” that they should have been put into different packages as DNA could have been on one match and then transferred to the other.

The DNA from another scenes of crimes officer was found on the keys of the getaway car.

The judge said that the evidence had only come to light “at a very late stage in the trial” after tests were requested by Shivers’ defence team.

Mr Justice Deeney said this showed that the investigator’s claim that he had not touched the key was either untrue or showed how easily DNA could be transferred by an experienced crime scene investigator wearing gloves.

The prosecution case was further damaged when it emerged that the DNA of the police recovery driver, Robert Greer, who removed the getaway car from the scene was later found inside the vehicle, despite his claims that he had never entered it.

Mr Justice Deeny rejected the driver’s claim that he had not entered the car and said “it did not inspire confidence in the Crown case that this mistake was made and that it was then explained in a way which I find to be wholly suspicious”.

The judge referred to Mr Shivers’ significant medical disability and his previous good character and said those factors suggested he would be an unlikely associate for “this determined gang” to rely on.

Mr Justice Deeny said that he asked himself if he was satisfied beyond reasonable that the prosecution had proved Shivers’ guilt and the answer was “clearly no” and as a consequence the 47 year-old was not guilty on two counts of murder, six charges of attempted murder, and other charges relating to the attack including assisting offenders.

 

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