Northern Ireland

Murdered prison officer Adrian Ismay joked with wife after explosion

Christopher Robinson at Belfast Crown Court today where he is on trial for his alleged involvement in the booby-trap van bomb killing of prison officer Adrian Ismay. Picture by Hugh Russell 
Christopher Robinson at Belfast Crown Court today where he is on trial for his alleged involvement in the booby-trap van bomb killing of prison officer Adrian Ismay. Picture by Hugh Russell  Christopher Robinson at Belfast Crown Court today where he is on trial for his alleged involvement in the booby-trap van bomb killing of prison officer Adrian Ismay. Picture by Hugh Russell 

Prison warder Adrian Ismay who initially survived a booby-trap bombing joked with his wife Sarah Ann - "I don't think we will go to the rugby tonight" - as he instructed those who pulled him from his VW van how to treat and bandage his wounds.

Belfast Crown Court also heard that the 52-year-old father of three, as if reading his wife's mind, "wiggled his feet" to show that he had not lost a limb in the no-warning blast outside their Hillsborough Drive home in east Belfast.

Details of the exchange between husband and wife were given as a former St John's Ambulance man went on trial today for the March 2016 murder of Mr Ismay, who had worked with him in the past as a volunteer first-aider.

Christopher Alphonson Robinson, of Aspen Park, in the Poleglass area of west Belfast denies the murder of the 45-year-old father of three who initially survived the blast from the undercar improvised explosive device detonated under his VW transporter.

However Belfast Crown Court heard that on March 15, 2016, 11 days after the explosion detonated as he drove from his Hillsborough Drive home in east Belfast, Mr Ismay died from a pulmonary embolism as a result of clotting caused by sharpnel from the blast.

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The prosecution in the non-jury Diplock style trial claimed today that 48-year-old Robinson was "part of a joint enterprise" to plant the undercar device, allegedly transported to the area in Robinson's sister-in-law's Citroen C3 car.

Robinson allegedly picked up the car keys from the hostel where his brother worked, and that the Citroen was captured on CCTV travelling through Belfast to the street of prison warder's home.

Murdered Prison Officer Adrian Ismay
Murdered Prison Officer Adrian Ismay Murdered Prison Officer Adrian Ismay

Footage taken from an undertakers' in Hillsborough Drive, shows a Citroen car driving along the street, and then parked up with its headlights off.  A man is also seen running and - the prosecution claim - getting "oddly" into the back of the car, behind the driver.

When the vehicle was seized two days after the blast, two child seats were found strapped in the car, in the front passenger seat, and on the rear seat immediatley behind it.

Trial judge Mr Justice McAlinden was told it was the prosecution contention, that when all of the "evidence is viewed in the round there is an inescapable inference that Christopher Robinson was involved in the joint enterprise to plant the device under Mr Ismay's car with the intention of killing or seriously injuring him".

Opening the prosection case, the senior Crown lawyer said while he "did not seek to ascribe a precise role to him ... we do not have to ... the court may, in due course, be satisfied as to that role .... in that he provided, at the very least, intentional assistance or encouragement to the joint enterprise, to plant the device, cause the explosion and murder Mr Ismay".

A booby-trap bomb exploded under Mr Ismay's van. A dissident republican group admitted responsibility
A booby-trap bomb exploded under Mr Ismay's van. A dissident republican group admitted responsibility A booby-trap bomb exploded under Mr Ismay's van. A dissident republican group admitted responsibility

In addition to the murder charge, Robinson also denies causing the explosion which initially injured Mr Ismay, who, the court heard, had confirmed in a statement prior to his death, that the two men had been in St John's Ambulance together, and that Robinson would have known he was a prison officer.

Robinson also denies a third, alternative count, of providing his sister-in-law's Citroen C3 car, knowing or suspecting it would be used for the purposes of terrorism.