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1989 on the Edenappa Road, South Armagh, near the
Border with the South, after he had left a meeting at
Dundalk Garda Station.
Breen of course was at the centre of the Republic’s
Smithwick Tribunal into allegations of Garda collu-
sion in his death. It reported in 2013. Village has
previously shown how the last-minute receipt of
murky evidence from the RUC resulted in Smithwick,
who seemed committed to finding Garda collusion,
being left without anyone upon whom to pin the col
-
lusion. His intention to find collusion by Owen
Corrigan was blown apart by evidence. He neverthe-
less found collusion, in the abstract. Collusion but no
colluder.
• John Weir implicates Breen.
In a long statement in 1999, John Weir, by then out of
prison, alleged that in the 1970s Harry Breen, then a
Chief Inspector in uniform, was aiding Loyalist para
-
militaries by supplying them with weapons and
encouraging their activities. Breen was close to an
RUC Sergeant who was an expert gun-maker for the
UVF, he claimed.
Among the allegations Weir made was that “RUC
Officers from Newry RUC Station - McBride, Breen
and myself…[were supplying] weapons to the UVF in
Portadown”. He claims that when he privately told
Breen about the murder of an innocent Catholic,
Breen told him to “forget about it”. John Weir later
somewhat modified his story and in 2006 com-
mented that while Breen “knew all about our
activities, he was not for one minute directly linked
to the UVF. He was doing his job as a policeman but
could not say that publicly” (Interview with Frank
Connolly, Politico 2006). Weir was later to say that
he was encouraged in the “bad apple” theory in order
to limit the spread of collusion allegations against
more senior RUC Officers.
Liam Clarke, famously well-connected, repeated
most of this in the Sunday Times in the early 2000s.
However, sources formerly in the Security Forces
have recently claimed to Village that Breen was, later,
sympathetic to Ulster Resistance and gave them
information during the searches for the Armagh
weapons in 1988/89 when he was in a pivotal posi-
tion in the RUC.
"If Breen had lived
there would have
been no Ceasefire”
was the opinion of
one former member
of the UDR in Armagh
.. I chaired Divisional meetings with 2 UDR about searches in the
Division. Travelled to Gough Barracks and Newry South RUC
Station and briefed [redacted] re. searches planned for 22.9.’88.
.. Meeting in Armagh with 2 UDR. Directed ops. Liaison with CID,
Special Branch and ACC Rural East.
.. Liaison with Special Branch and CID and Directed Ops.
.. Attended brieng re searches (for Loyalist weapons).
.. Loughgall, Newry, Warrenpoint.
.. Tandragee, Gilford, Banbridge.
.. Duty re searches; liaised with Special Branch, and CID and visited
scenes of nds of arms and ammunition in Loughgilly area.
To Gough met Special Branch and CID and discussed arms nds
etc. Duty to Bessbrook and met 1 para re operation on 22.11.88.
To searches of arms nds in Armagh, and Hamiltonsbawn area.
.. DAC meetings. Duty re searches for arms and munitions. Liaison
with CID and Special Branch.
.. Liaison with Special Branch and CID re searches in the area. Duty
with [redacted] in Armagh, Hamiltonsbawn and Glennane areas re
searches. Duty with [redacted] in same area. (Glennane was
searched for weapons).
.. Duty with CID, Special Branch and Ops Planning re [redacted].
• Breen's RUC Diary
Tending to confirm this, Village has obtained details
of all Breen’s movements between March 1988 and
March 1989, when he was shot dead by the IRA. It is
apparent from that information that Breen had access
to the planning meetings associated with the
searches in Armagh; and that he was on-site for many
of them.
Although based in Armagh, Breen’s itinerary
between mid March 1988 and 1989 shows a high level
of activity on the ground: visiting RUC stations and
the site of searches and carrying out routine admin-
istration. Breen was at the site of searches for both
IRA and Loyalist arms. He also crossed the Border on
a number of occasions to Dublin, Drogheda, Dundalk
and Monaghan.
The diary shows the comprehensive extent of
Breen's involvement in all the arms searches in
Armagh and South Down in the period up to his
death.
Whenever there was a search, Breen as Divisional
Commander would turn up, though his presence was
not necessary. And of course the arms were never
found.
Loyalist and Security sources have told Village that
Breen liaised between the arms-hiders and the arms-
searchers to ensure the arms were moved when
necessary, and so were never found.
The significance of all this is that it shows Breen
spent a lot of time in Tandragee, Hamiltonsbawn,
Richhill and Markethill. This is the Loyalist/Orange
Order heartland and where the arms were - not Glen-
nane which is much further South where less
informed RUC officers believed the arms were stored.
It suggests he had inside information from Loyalists
and that he may have been attempting to defuse the
efficacy of search operations for the arms.
Breen's Diary: i suggess he hd inside informion from Loyliss nd h he my hve
been emping o defuse he efficcy of serch operions for he rms.