Man tried for Massereene barracks murders could face retrial

A man whose convictions for murdering two British soldiers were quashed should face a retrial, the Court of Appeal in Belfast has ordered.

The same court ruled yesterday that the convictions against Brian Shivers for the 2009 murders of sappers Mark Quinsey, 23, and Patrick Azimkar, 21, outside Massereene army barracks in Antrim were unsafe.

After the Public Prosecution Service (PPS) applied for a new trial for the 47-year-old from Magherafelt, Co Londonderry, the three Appeal Court judges said it was in the public interest for them to grant the request.

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Earlier, applying for a retrial, Crown barrister Terence Mooney QC said Shivers still had a case to answer.

He told the three appeal court judges: “We submit it’s in the interest of justice that you may order a new trial.”

Shivers, dressed in a shirt and jeans, was in court for today’s hearing.

The English soldiers were gunned down as they collected pizza outside the gates of the barracks. They were just hours away from deploying to Afghanistan.

The Real IRA claimed responsibility for the shootings.

High-profile republican Colin Duffy, from Lurgan, Co Armagh, was acquitted of the murder charges at the same trial that saw Shivers convicted at Antrim Crown Court last year.

Shivers, who suffers from cystic fibrosis, was ordered to serve at least 25 years by trial judge Justice Antony Hart.

His appeal against additional convictions on six counts of attempted murder and one of possession of two firearms and ammunition with intent to endanger life was also allowed by the Court of Appeal yesterday.

He will face a retrial on all original counts.

The court will sit again this afternoon to deal with a bail application by Shivers’s legal team and set a date for the new trial.

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