Northern Ireland

Loughinisland journalists demand apology from PSNI chief after search warrant quashed

Journalists Trevor Birney (right) and Barry McCaffrey (centre) speak to the press outside the Hight Court in Belfast today as solicitor Niall Murphy (left) looks on. Picture by Hugh Russell 
Journalists Trevor Birney (right) and Barry McCaffrey (centre) speak to the press outside the Hight Court in Belfast today as solicitor Niall Murphy (left) looks on. Picture by Hugh Russell  Journalists Trevor Birney (right) and Barry McCaffrey (centre) speak to the press outside the Hight Court in Belfast today as solicitor Niall Murphy (left) looks on. Picture by Hugh Russell 

Two journalists have called for an apology from the PSNI chief after the Court of Appeal quashed a search warrant used to raid their homes and offices.

Barry McCaffrey and Trevor Birney were arrested over the alleged theft of a police watchdog document that appeared in their film No Stone Unturned on the notorious loyalist massacre in Loughinisland during the Troubles.

Last year judges ruled search warrants used by police had been "inappropriate".

This resulted in the criminal probe into the journalists being discontinued.

Today, a panel of judges sitting in the Court of Appeal ruled the conduct of the hearing to obtain the search warrant fell "woefully short" of the standard required to ensure that the hearing was fair.

Read more: Police wrongly obtained warrants to search Loughinisland journalists' homes and offices, High Court rules

Six men were murdered at Loughinisland
Six men were murdered at Loughinisland Six men were murdered at Loughinisland

The Lord Chief Justice Sir Declan Morgan delivered the judgment on behalf of a panel which included Lord Justice Treacy and Mrs Justice Keegan, telling the court that the journalists had at all times acted as investigative reporters adhering to their professional code.

"We see no overriding requirement in the public interest which could have justified an interference with the protection of journalistic sources in this case," he said.

The PSNI responded with a statement saying: "The Police Service of Northern Ireland will now take time to consider the judgment."

peaking outside court, Mr McCaffrey and Mr Birney demanded an apology from PSNI Chief Constable Simon Byrne.

"I hope that Simon Byrne this evening sees that he has to now apologise, this didn't happen on his watch but the responsibility falls on his shoulders to put this right and he should be putting it right immediately," Mr Birney said.

"He doesn't need time to study this judgment. He lost 10-nil in court, police should never have arrested us, they should never have searched our homes and offices and they should not have put us through this ordeal."

Mr McCaffrey added: "Journalists throughout Ireland and the UK were waiting for this judgment because it has now copper-fastened protections. The highest court in the land has protected our right to protect sources and to ask the difficult questions.

"All we did was our job."

The NUJ hailed the judgment as an historic victory for journalism.

Michelle Stanistreet, NUJ general secretary, said: "We very much welcome the decision of the judges to quash the warrants and the bold emphasis they have placed on the right of journalists to protect their sources.

"Journalists must not be treated as criminals, they must not have their homes and offices raided, simply for doing their jobs."

Read more: Police wrongly obtained warrants to search Loughinisland journalists' homes and offices, High Court rules