A British soldier who killed a “totally innocent” teenager when he fired close to a crowd of youths was unjustified in discharging the fatal round, a coroner has ruled.
Manus Deery (15) was killed as he stood in an archway near a chip shop in Derry socialising with friends in May 1972.
His sister Helen Deery said her family's campaign for a new inquest had been vindicated by the coroner's ruling. "We always knew Manus was innocent," she said.
The teenager, who had just started his first job two weeks before he died, was struck in the head by fragments of a bullet that ricocheted off a wall.
It was fired by a soldier from a fortified observation sanger high above the Bogside area on Derry’s historic city walls.
Coroner Mr Justice Adrian Colton, who presided over a fresh inquest into one of the most contentious deaths of the Troubles, rejected the soldier’s claim that he fired at a gunman.
Armed man
Private William Glasgow, now deceased, insisted he had fired on a man armed with a rifle, but missed and hit the wall.
Mr Justice Colton told Derry courthouse he had concluded there was no such gunman. “The discharge of the round was unjustified,” he said.
“Neither Manus nor anyone close to him was acting in a manner that could reasonably have been perceived as posing a threat of death or injury to Private Glasgow or any other person.”
However, the coroner said he was unable to determine whether the Royal Welch Fusilier was under an “honest belief” that he had seen an armed man, citing his inability to question the late serviceman during the inquest.
“Even if Private Glasgow had an honest belief that there was a gunman present, the force used was disproportionate to the threat perceived and therefore more than was absolutely necessary in the circumstances,” he said.
Mr Justice Colton said the Army’s rules of engagement at the time, the “Yellow Card”, had not been adhered to.
“Private Glasgow was not justified in opening fire,” said Mr Justice Colton.
The killing occurred months after the Bloody Sunday shootings in Derry, when soldiers killed 13 civil rights demonstrators and fatally injured another on the streets of the Bogside.
‘Perceived stain’
The coroner said the Deery family’s pursuit of a new inquest was fuelled by a burning desire to wipe away a “perceived stain” on Manus’s character related to insinuations he may have been involved in paramilitary activity, or had even been the gunman spoken of by Pte Glasgow.
Delivering his ruling in the non-jury inquest, he said he had “no doubt” the boy was blameless.
“Manus Deery was a totally innocent victim,” he said.
“He didn’t pose a threat to soldiers or anyone else.”
During inquest proceedings, the Ministry of Defence acknowledged that the shooting was unjustified.
In a statement given the day after the incident, Pte Glasgow claimed he fired at a gunman standing beneath an archway beside a pub in the Bogside. He was not prosecuted.
A new inquest was ordered by Northern Ireland’s attorney general John Larkin in 2012. The original inquest in 1973 returned an open verdict.
The coroner said official Army and police investigations of the shooting in 1972 were “flawed and inadequate”.
Helen Deery, who long campaigned for a second inquest, said she was delighted her brother’s name had been cleared.
“It has been a long, drawn-out process and there’s been lots of hurdles along the way, but it’s been worth it,” she said.
“My emotions today are I love my brother, so I am just a bit sentimental and peaceful too.
“I’ll probably go to the cemetery at some stage. But this was about Manus and all the witnesses and clearing all their names.”
She said Manus was a “beautiful wee boy with his whole life in front of him”.
“I hope other families will persist in justice and persist in truth and know that it can be done,” she added.
Emotional meeting
The commanding officer of Pte Glasgow held an emotional meeting with the teenager's family to express regret, the inquest heard. The coroner commended the admirable act of Trevor Wilson and the grace with which the Deery family received it. Mr Wilson was not present at the fatal incident but was the commanding officer of the company of the Royal Welch Fusiliers of which Pte Glasgow — was a member.
The private meeting with the Deery family happened after he gave evidence to the fresh inquest. “He cried his eyes out,” Manus’s sister Helen said. “In fact my sister’s hair was wet with his tears. I accepted his apology and I believed him.”
“It meant the world to us, and it meant the world for us to see he was so sorry about it,” she said.
Coroner Mr Justice Adrian Colton highlighted the significance of the behind-closed-doors encounter as he delivered his ruling.
“If this inquest achieves nothing else then at least the meeting between Mr Wilson and the family vindicates the efforts that had been made to properly inquire into the circumstances surrounding Manus’s death,” he said.
-PA