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Colombia Three man's arms conviction will be quashed

&nbsp;<span style="color: rgb(38, 34, 35); font-family: utopia-std, Georgia, &quot;Times New Roman&quot;, Times, serif; line-height: 26.4px;">Niall Connolly, James Monaghan and Martin McCauley</span>
 Niall Connolly, James Monaghan and Martin McCauley  Niall Connolly, James Monaghan and Martin McCauley

A WEAPONS conviction against one of the Colombia Three is to be quashed, the Court of Appeal ruled yesterday.

Senior judges declared the guilty verdict against Martin McCauley unsafe after hearing claims that senior police lied to prosecutors and tried to manipulate the case.

Secret recordings of events in the Co Armagh farm shed where he was shot and a teenage friend was killed were later found to have been destroyed.

Lawyers for McCauley (52) argued that the tapes could have backed his claim that police issued no warnings before opening fire more than 30 years ago.

They based their case on the findings of an investigation into allegations that the RUC operated a shoot-to-kill policy.

Karen Quinlivan QC, for McCauley, said: "The entire conspiracy was designed to ensure police were immune from prosecution."

McCauley, from Lurgan, Co Armagh, may now sue for malicious prosecution.

Nearly two decades later he was arrested with Niall Connolly and James Monaghan in Colombia in 2001 and accused of IRA training of rebel Farc guerrilla forces.

They were initially cleared only to be convicted on appeal and sentenced to 17 years in jail. They avoided jail by fleeing Colombia in 2004 and turning up in the Republic a year later.

Even though McCauley faces extradition if he returns to Northern Ireland, the Court of Appeal in Belfast examined his conviction for possession of three rifles, for which he received a two-year suspended jail sentence.

He was charged after being shot and wounded by an RUC team at a farm shed near Lurgan where the antique-style guns were discovered in 1982.

His 17-year-old friend Michael Tighe was killed in the operation.

That death was one of six cases John Stalker, the former assistant chief constable of

Greater Manchester Police, and Sir Colin Sampson of West Yorkshire Police investigated to try to establish whether police intended to kill.

McCauley disputed police claims that he was armed and that three warnings were ignored before they opened fire.

His case was referred back to the Court of Appeal by the Criminal Case Review Commission, set up to examine miscarriages of justice.

Central to the challenge are the contents of the Stalker and Sampson reports, which have never been made public.

Last week it was confirmed that the Public Prosecution Service was no longer opposing the appeal because material was withheld from it, the court and the defence at McCauley's trial.

In court yesterday defence counsel Ms Quinlivan set out a series of allegations as she argued for the conviction to be quashed, namely that:

* Police officers removed spent cartridges from the scene and allowed the security services to get rid of the listening device n Special Branch officers were given full access to the scene for 90 minutes without documenting what they did there n senior officers tried to pervert the course of justice by publishing an untrue 'cover story' around the incident n senior officers lied to the then director of public prosecutions and concealed the fact of a listening device n debriefings were used to concoct a lying account of the incident n a recording of the incident was destroyed by a senior RUC officer n military and RUC personnel colluded to falsify records about this destruction n information was kept from the trial judge and the defence.

Following her submissions Lord Chief Justice Declan Morgan, sitting with Lords Justices Girvan and Coghlin, confirmed that the conviction was unsafe and should be quashed.

Full reasons for their verdict will be given at a later date.