
July-August
initialled it. He made this disclosure to two
journalists, Paul Foot of the
Daily Mirror
and
Private Eye
, and Barrie Penrose of
The Sunday
Times.
Wallace retained a copy of ‘73 TPB. It
described how the ‘OC’ or Officer-in-Command
of Tara was “William MCGRATH. He is a known
homosexual who has conned many people into
membership [of Tara] by threatening them with
revealing homosexual activities which he him-
self initiated. He is a prominent figure in
Unionist Party politics and in the Orange
Order”.
Also that McGrath “uses a non-existent evan-
gelical mission as a front for his homosexual
activities and also runs a home for children on
the 236 Upper Newtonards Road, Belfast (Tel:
B'fast 657838)”.
Suffice it to say, this was the address and
telephone number of Kincora.
When Peter Broderick was given ‘73 TPB, he
scrawled the words “Clerks IP” across the top
of it. “IP” stands for Information Policy, the unit
Wallace worked for. In 1990 Broderick spoke
frankly to the renowned journalist Paul Foot
about the ’73 TPB document. On 8 February of
that year, Foot reported in the
Daily Mirror
that,
“This week, for the first time, Peter Broderick,
Wallace’s boss at the time – 1974 - confirmed
to me that he saw the document (The TARA
press brief used by Wallace to highlight
McGrath’s homosexuality and his role in run-
ning a children’s home) and wrote on it. ‘That
is a cer tainly my writing’, he told me. ‘I saw the
document and approved it’”.
Peter Broderick also confirmed this to Barrie
Penrose of
The Sunday Times
on 11 February
1990.
‘73 TPB also bears the handwriting of Lt
Colonel Adrian Peck, who was head of PSYOPS
at HQNI i.e. GSO1 Information Policy in 1973
and early 1974.
Broderick – a hero of this story - was pushed
out of the MoD for telling the truth and sup-
porting Colin Wallace.
OTHER JOURNALISTS
SUPPORT COLIN WALLACE
A number of journalists have confirmed that
they either saw ‘73 TPB or received a briefing
from Wallace in 1973 about Tara based on the
information that was contained in it.
Kevin Dowling of the
Sunday Mirror
was one
of them. He gave the NI Historical Institutional
Abuse Inquir y (aka the Hart Inquir y), which last
year found widespread abuse of children, “a
copy of a telex he had sent to his editor in
1973” as a result of information furnished to
him by Wallace. The telex stated that “accord-
ing to Mr. Wallace the Commanding Officer of
Tara was William McGrath and a homosexual”
and that “McGrath apparently uses a non-exist-
ent evangelical mission as a front to entice
young Protestant men into homosexuality.
Once in they are potential blackmail victims
and soldiers of Tara”.
So, we have a string of journalists, Colin Wal-
lace and Peter Broderick all confirming the
authenticity of ‘73 TPB which bears the hand-
writing of no less a figure than Lt Col. Peck and
also Hugh Mooney.
David Blundy was another journalist who
was not afraid to tell the truth. He was killed
by a sniper aged 44 in 1989.
On 13 March 1977,
The Sunday Times
published an article entitled: “The Army’s
Secret War in Northern Ireland” by David
Blundy. It reported that at a British Army brief-
ing in 1974 “at which a
Sunday Times
reporter
was present, attempts were made to link Pais-
ley with the Protestant para-military group
called Tara, a small, obscure and ineffective
group as Ulster’s para-military organisations
go.
The Sunday Times
has a copy of an Army
intelligence summary on Tara which contains
accurate details about its organisation…One
member, which the summary names, is called
a “homosexual and has conned many people
into membership by threatening them with
revealing homosexual activities which he had
initiated”.
HUGH MOONEY’S
HANDWRITTEN INSERTION
ABOUT ROY GARLAND
A man called Roy Garland had been involved in
Tara but had resigned in 1972. He then spent
years trying to expose McGrath and Kincora
and became another of the heroes of this
appalling saga. He was one of those who told
Captain Brian Gemmell of British military intel-
ligence about the scandal only for Ian Cameron
of MI5 to shut down Gemmell’s inquiries. See
Village
March 2017.
A handwrit ten note appears on the 1973 Tara
The truth about Kincora is still
so sensitive is because of the
influence of the senior Loyalist
paramilitaries, and Unionist
politicians the blackmail
operation behind it ensnared
‘Ian Cameron of MI5 derailed
Colin Wallace’s career because
he tried to end the child rape at
Kincora’
The smoking-gun document; Wallace in the company of Lord Alexander during his time at NI HQ in
the 1970s
Lt Colonel Adrian Peck and Peter Broderick.
Broderick was later pushed out of the Ministry
of Defence for telling the truth about Kincora to
the media and for supporting Colin Wallace