Northern Ireland Secretary Paul Murphy deliberately misled the House of Commons when delaying a public inquiry into the murder of Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane, Belfast High Court was told yesterday.
The accusation was made by Mr Seamus Treacy QC, representing the Finucane family, during a judicial review aimed at forcing the British government to proceed with an independent inquiry.
The British government has given the go-ahead for three public inquiries into the murders of Lurgan solicitor Ms Rosemary Nelson, LVF leader Billy Wright and Mr Robert Hamill, from Portadown, following the publication of reports by retired Canadian Judge Peter Cory into alleged security force collusion.
Mr Murphy told the House of Commons the day the reports were published that he was delaying the inquiry into the Finucane case because of the impend- ing trial of a man charged with his murder. He also told the Commons that as a result of the ongoing investigation into the murder, there was a possibility that further prosecutions could follow and the inquiry could not go ahead until criminal proceedings were completed.
Mr Ken Barrett is to be tried in September with the murder of the solicitor in 1989 and other charges including membership of the Ulster Defence Association.
Mr Treacy told the court that in a letter to Mr Finucane's widow, Geraldine, on April 1st, Mr Murphy said he was acting on the advice of the British Attorney General. But he said this conflicted with information given to the Finucane family by Metropolitan Police Commissioner, Sir John Stevens, and his team who are investigating the circumstances of Mr Finucane's death.
According to Mr Treacy, Sir John had told Mrs Finucane that the advice they had received from the Attorney General was that Mr Barrett's trial was the only obstacle to a public inquiry.
"As far as the Stevens' team were concerned they were quite confident that as far as there was any impediment, it was only the Barrett case." He added that a detective from the Stevens' team told the Finucane family they were being encouraged to say there was a string of prosecutions in the pipeline and this was being used to block a public inquiry.
He told the judge, Mr Justice Gillen: "Nowhere in the statement to the House of Commons did the Secretary of State refer at all to the advice he had received from the Attorney General. The Secretary of State in this case has misled the House of Commons, he misled Mrs Finucane and was prepared to allow your lordship to be misled as well."
The judicial review was adjourned until April 28th. - (PA)