British soldier machine-gunned 23-year-old man to death when finger slipped on the trigger, final Troubles veteran prosecution hears as 52-year-old goes on trial charged with 1988 killing
- David Jonathan Holden, 52, is accused of the manslaughter of Aidan McAnespie
- Mr McAnespie, 23, was shot moments after walking though security checkpoint
- Holden, a former Grenadier Guardsman from England, is on trial in Belfast
- Non-jury case proceeds amid plans to prohibit Troubles-related prosecutions
- The Government has yet to table legislation that would ban future prosecutions
A soldier acted with gross negligence when he shot and killed a man at a cross-border checkpoint in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, a court has been told.
David Jonathan Holden, 52, is on trial at Belfast Crown Court accused of the manslaughter of Aidan McAnespie in February 1988. He denies the offence.
A prosecuting barrister told the non-jury trial, being presided over by Mr Justice O’Hara, that Holden’s account that his finger had slipped and he had fired the shots by accident was ‘not credible’.
Mr McAnespie, 23, was killed in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone, moments after walking through a border security checkpoint.
He was on his way to a local Gaelic Athletic Association club when he was shot in the back.
Members of his family attended the court hearing on Monday.
Holden is a former Grenadier Guardsman from England, but court documents say he is now living in Belfast.
Aidan McAnespie was 23 when he was killed in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone, moments after walking through a border security checkpoint
Opening the trial, prosecuting barrister Ciaran Murphy QC said: ‘On Sunday February 21 1988 Aidan McAnespie was killed by one of three bullets fired from a general purpose machine gun, also known as a GPMG.
‘The gun was mounted in the army sangar situated at a permanent vehicle checkpoint in Aughnacloy, about 1km on the Northern Ireland side of the border.
‘The defendant fired the gun resulting in the death of Mr McAnespie.’
Mr Murphy added: ‘The defendant discharged three bullets from the GPMG as Mr McAnespie was walking along the Monaghan Road.
‘One of the bullets ricocheted off the road and it struck Mr McAnespie when he was approximately 300m from the sangar.
‘The explanation given for the shooting by the defendant at the time was that his finger had slipped on to, and pulled, the trigger by accident.
‘That explanation is not accepted by the prosecution.
‘Although even if that version is accepted as fact, we say it was nevertheless a grossly negligent act and we submit that the court conclude that the defendant failed to give adequate regard as to whether the gun was in a non-firing state when he pulled the trigger.
‘Given the level of duty of care upon the defendant as a soldier in possession of a deadly and lethal weapon in those circumstances, we say the killing of Mr McAnespie was an unlawful act.’
Grainne Teggart from Amnesty International (left), Sean McAnespie, Aidan’s brother (centre) and Aidan’s cousin Brian Gormley (right) speaking to the media in Belfast where former Grenadier Guardsman David Holden is charged with the unlawful killing of Aidan McAnespie
Mr Murphy told the trial that in the moments before the shooting, a colleague of Holden’s had told him that Mr McAnespie was making his way across the border.
He added: ‘That was the trigger for Mr Holden to direct his attention towards Mr McAnespie.
‘During his interview with police the defendant accepted he took an interest in the deceased as he had previously been advised he may be a person of interest.
‘A short time later there was a burst of fire from the machine gun while being controlled by the defendant.’
The barrister said Holden’s account that he had fired the weapon by accident because his hands were wet was unlikely.
He said: ‘Given the defendant’s account that he was holding the weapon with a loose grip and that he had squeezed the trigger, taken together with the admission from him that it had been some time since he had been cleaning the weapon, we say that account is not credible and the theoretical possibility of such a sequence occurring is unrealistic.
‘The fact that two of the three shots fired landed within yards of Mr McAnespie, someone whom the defendant accepted he was interested in and concerned he was a member of the IRA, support the inference that the defendant was training his gun in the region of the deceased at the time he engaged the trigger.’
The case at Belfast Crown Court is proceeding amid the continuing controversy over Government plans to prohibit future Troubles-related prosecutions.
A small number of protesters gathered outside the court and unfurled banners calling for an end to Troubles prosecutions.
Conservative MP and former veterans minister Johnny Mercer, and Northern Ireland’s veterans’ commissioner Danny Kinahan also attended the trial.
But members of Mr McAnespie’s family, supported by Amnesty, said that there should not be an end to Troubles prosecutions.
Speaking outside court, Grainne Taggart from Amnesty said: ‘Today represents the due process that the UK Government is seeking to shut down for victims.
‘Their plans to legislate for an effective amnesty would permanently deny justice to other victims.
‘It is imperative that the UK Government heed the opposition to those proposals.’
Despite announcing its intent last summer, the Government is yet to table draft legislation in Parliament that would ban future prosecutions of military veterans and ex-paramilitaries for Troubles incidents predating April 1998.
The Holden case is one of a series of high-profile prosecutions of veterans that have been pursued in Northern Ireland in recent years.
In October last year, 80-year-old Dennis Hutchings died in the middle of his trial after contracting Covid-19.
A former member of the Life Guards regiment, Hutchings, from Cawsand in Cornwall, had been accused of the attempted murder of John Pat Cunningham, a man with learning difficulties, in County Tyrone in 1974.
Mr Cunningham, 27, was shot dead as he ran away from an Army patrol across a field near Benburb.
Six months earlier, the case against two other veterans who were accused of murdering republican leader Joe McCann in 1972 collapsed in the early stages of the trial.
The Crown said it would offer no further evidence against soldiers A and C after the judge ruled key statements given by the former paratroopers inadmissible.
Mr McAnespie was on his way to a local Gaelic Athletic Association club when he was shot in the back in Aughnacloy, County Tyrone (pictured)
Official IRA leader McCann, 24, was shot dead by soldiers as he attempted to evade arrest by a plain-clothes police officer in the Markets Area of Belfast in April 1972.
The judge’s ruling in the McCann case subsequently prompted prosecutors to discontinue the prosecution of the only former solider charged in connection with the Bloody Sunday killings in Londonderry in January 1972.
Soldier F had been charged with the murders of James Wray and William McKinney, but Northern Ireland’s Public Prosecution Service dropped the case before it reached trial amid concerns it could collapse over the same sort of admissibility issue.
However, last week the High Court in Belfast quashed the PPS move and told prosecutors to reconsider their decision to halt the case against the veteran paratrooper.
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