Sign up for our free daily newsletter
YOUR PRIVACY - PLEASE READ CAREFULLY DATA PROTECTION STATEMENT
Below we explain how we will communicate with you. We set out how we use your data in our Privacy Policy.
Global City Media, and its associated brands will use the lawful basis of legitimate interests to use
the
contact details you have supplied to contact you regarding our publications, events, training,
reader
research, and other relevant information. We will always give you the option to opt out of our
marketing.
By clicking submit, you confirm that you understand and accept the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy
The recordings concern one of the most brutal murders of the past conflict in Northern Ireland -- that of a mother of 10, Jean McConville -- and British officials maintain the tapes are relevant to a criminal investigation.
Fear of incrimination
The interviews were recorded on the understanding that the tapes would not be released until after the interviewees died, the Boston Globe reports. Boston College researchers for the project, Ed Moloney and Anthony McIntyre, allege that turning over the tapes would obfuscate the truth because certain players in the conflict will never speak frankly again for fear of incrimination.
‘My clients have raised issues of exceptional importance, including the constitutional right to free flow of information to the American public in the face of a foreign subpoena, the protection of important academic research, and the harm which the release of these materials would cause,’ said Mr Dornan, one of the lawyers representing the researchers.
The tapes are currently in the hands of the US Department of Justice until the legal battle is fully resolved. The decision on Wednesday extends a previous stay granted by Justice Stephen Breyer until 16 November.
Email your news and story ideas to: [email protected]