Margaret Keeley claimed Freddie Scappaticci, who the Army gave the codename Stakeknife, tortured and degraded her.
The British government has provisionally agreed to pay £10 million to the families of those abducted, murdered or ...
‘The cases relate to allegations of collusion between state agencies including RUC Special Branch, Force Research Unit and ...
He denied that he was Stakeknife, the code name of a high-ranking British mole in the Irish Republican Army during the Northern Ireland conflict. By Alan Cowell Reporting from London He died as he ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Freddie Scappaticci, pictured in west Belfast in 2003, denied being the former Army agent known as Stakeknife [PA Media] Naming ...
A final report into an Army spy operating at heart of the IRA during the Troubles in Northern Ireland has been published Freddie Scappaticci, who the Army gave the codename 'Stakeknife', was a member ...
The interim report published this month from Operation Kenova, the police investigation into the British spy “Stakeknife”, confirmed that British agents within the Provisional Irish Republican Army ...
"It is very clear that Stakeknife was Freddie Scappaticci. What isn't clear is who else was involved," he added. Solicitor Kevin Winters, who represents the families of 12 victims, said the ...
NOTORIOUS IRA killer Freddie Scappaticci was today confirmed as the ex-British army agent known as Stakeknife. During statements on the Report of Operation Kenova, Taoiseach Micheal Martin told the ...
Freddie Scappaticci grew up in the Markets area of south Belfast, the son of Daniel Scappaticci, an Italian immigrant, who arrived in Belfast in the 1920s. Scappaticci, like his father, was a ...