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Donna Maguire

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
IRA Member

Donna Maguire (bornc. 1967 inNewry,County Down,Northern Ireland[1]) is a formervolunteer in theProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) once described as Europe's most dangerous woman.[1]

A formerconvent girl from Newry, Maguire joined the IRA and, according toThe Independent newspaper, was trained byDessie Grew. In early 1989 she travelled to Europe as part of an IRAactive service unit based inThe Hague andHanover.[1] On 12 July 1989 Maguire and Leonard Hardy were arrested atRosslare,County Wexford after arriving on a ferry fromCherbourg, andmercury switches, explosives and photographs ofBritish Army bases in Germany were seized. At their trial at theSpecial Criminal Court inDublin in February 1990 Maguire was acquitted of possession of explosives, but Hardy was sentenced to five years imprisonment.[1] German authorities had requested Maguire'sextradition in relation to a bombing at aBritish Army barracks atOsnabrück on 19 June 1989 and the killing of a British soldier in a car bomb attack in Hanover several days later, but she was not re-arrested when she left court and she immediately returned to Europe.[1]

Maguire was arrested in Belgium near the border with theNetherlands on 16 June 1990, after a farmer reported hearing gunshots in the woods and twohandguns, amachine gun and explosives were found nearby.[1][2] A second IRA member was arrested with Maguire but escaped across the border before being captured by Dutch police, who also arrested a second man who had been travelling with Maguire.[3] Maguire was extradited to the Netherlands on 6 December 1990. In March 1991 she was acquitted of the murder of two Australian tourists mistaken for off-duty British soldiers inRoermond in May 1990, a decision which was upheld at an appeal in July of the same year.[1][4] On 7 October 1991 Maguire was extradited to Germany.[1]

While on trial inDüsseldorf on charges relating to the June 1990 murder of a British soldier inDortmund, German authorities announced on 16 November 1992 she was also being charged with attempted murder over the 1989 Osnabrück bombing.[5] On 9 June 1994 Maguire and three other IRA members were acquitted of the Dortmund murder although the judge said it was "clear they are members of the IRA and trained as IRA volunteers",[6] and also acquitted of involvement in the May 1990 bombing of a British Army base in Hanover.[1][7] She was remanded into custody to await trial on other charges relating to the 1989 Osnabrück bombing,[7] and in June 1995 received a nine-year prison sentence after being found guilty of attempted murder, explosives offences and spying on British Army bases in Germany with intent to sabotage. Due to the length of time spent in custody on remand—during the trial she became the longest-serving remand prisoner in German legal history—Maguire walked free from the court.[1]

On 17 January 1996 Maguire received £13,500 compensation due to a 1985 accident in Newry, when she tripped due to a broken paving stone. She told the court "I have had to give up dancing, jogging and swimming because the ankle swells up. I can't wear high heels and the ankle is not very stable when I walk on rough ground or gravel".[8] The compensation award was described as a disgrace byUlster Unionist Party MPKen Maginnis, andConservative Party MPDavid Wilshire said it was shocking and obscene and called for the law to be changed. Colin Parry, who received £7,500 after the death of his 12-year-old son in theWarrington bomb attacks, called for a review of the compensation system saying "It's a kick in the teeth. Every time these judgments come along, it reminds us how little society appears to value a child's life".[8]

Maguire married Hardy inCounty Louth in July 1996,[9] and she has three children.[10] Hardy was arrested in August 2005 while on a family holiday inTorremolinos, Spain and extradited to Germany in January 2006 to face charges over his role in the 1989 Osnabrück bombing. In April 2006 Hardy was found guilty of attempted murder and deliberately causing an explosion and was sentenced to six years imprisonment. It later transpired Hardy was not sent to prison and had left the court via a side door with Maguire, and a spokesperson for theFederal Ministry of Justice issued a statement saying that "Leonard Hardy is not in detention".[10]

In January 2015, It was announced that Leonard Hardy and Maguire had been arrested by Spanish police inLanzarote as part of an investigation intomoney laundering andsmuggling. Five other people were also arrested and 11 searches were carried out in the provinces ofLas Palmas,Alicante,Málaga andMurcia. They said it involved properties with an estimated value of 10.5 million euros.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefghijJason Bennetto and Steve Crawshaw (29 June 1995)."German court frees IRA bomber Maguire".The Independent. Retrieved7 May 2010.
  2. ^"Belgians and Dutch Seize 2 Suspected of I.R.A. Activity".The New York Times. 17 June 1990. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  3. ^Rule, Sheila (20 June 1990)."Four I.R.A. Suspects Seized in Europe".The New York Times. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  4. ^"Dutch Overturn Conviction Of Irishman in I.R.A. Killing".The New York Times. 6 July 1991. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  5. ^James F. Clarity (17 November 1992)."Irish and British Report the Collapse of Talks".The New York Times. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  6. ^Henry McDonald (12 November 2000)."Maguire fury after IRA shoots brother".The Guardian. London. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  7. ^ab"A Draft Chronology of the Conflict - 1994".CAIN. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  8. ^abDavid McKittrick (18 January 1996)."Maguire faces appeal over £13,500 award".The Independent. Retrieved27 October 2016.
  9. ^Toby Harnden (21 September 1996)."IRA bomber faces fight to keep cash".The Telegraph. London. Archived fromthe original on 7 September 2005. Retrieved25 September 2007.
  10. ^abDonna Carton (23 April 2006)."One Minute IRA Bomber Is Sentenced to Six Years the Next He's Walking out of Court a Free Man".Sunday Mirror. Retrieved21 February 2021.
  11. ^"Former IRA couple Leonard Hardy and Donna Maguire arrested in Spain".BBC News. 5 January 2014.
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1970–1979
1980–1989
1990–1991
1992–1997
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