Suspect charged in 82 London attack

Author : gluconate1903
Publish Date : 2021-04-07 17:50:52


A man has been charged with the murders of four members of the Royal Household Cavalry in a 1982 IRA attack in London, the UK Crown Prosecution Service said in a statement Wednesday.

The suspect is named as John Anthony Downey, 61, of County Donegal, Ireland.

The four cavalry members were killed in London's Hyde Park on July 20, 1982, as they rode from their barracks to Buckingham Palace. Seven horses were also killed.



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Downey is accused of the murders of Roy John Bright, Dennis Richard Anthony Daly, Simon Andrew Tipper and Geoffrey Vernon Young, a Crown Prosecution Service statement said.

He's also charged with intending to cause an explosion likely to endanger life.

'We have determined that there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and that these charges are in the public interest,' said Sue Hemming, head of Special Crime and Counter-Terrorism at the Crown Prosecution Service.

Downey made an initial court appearance, at Westminster Magistrates' Court, on Wednesday afternoon.

In 1987, IRA member Gilbert 'Danny' McNamee was ordered jailed for 25 years for making the bomb. The conviction was later overturned, and McNamee was freed.

The Good Friday peace deal in 1998 largely brought to an end three decades of violence over the question of whether Northern Ireland should stay under British control or join the Republic of Ireland, as republicans want.

Downey is accused of the murders of Roy John Bright, Dennis Richard Anthony Daly, Simon Andrew Tipper and Geoffrey Vernon Young, a Crown Prosecution Service statement said. Downey is accused of the murders of Roy John Bright, Dennis Richard Anthony Daly, Simon Andrew Tipper and Geoffrey Vernon Young, a Crown Prosecution Service statement said. The Good Friday peace deal in 1998 largely brought to an end three decades of violence over the question of whether Northern Ireland should stay under British control or join the Republic of Ireland, as republicans want. A man has been charged with the murders of four members of the Royal Household Cavalry in a 1982 IRA attack in London, the UK Crown Prosecution Service said in a statement Wednesday. The four cavalry members were killed in London's Hyde Park on July 20, 1982, as they rode from their barracks to Buckingham Palace. Seven horses were also killed. The suspect is named as John Anthony Downey, 61, of County Donegal, Ireland. The Good Friday peace deal in 1998 largely brought to an end three decades of violence over the question of whether Northern Ireland should stay under British control or join the Republic of Ireland, as republicans want. The four cavalry members were killed in London's Hyde Park on July 20, 1982, as they rode from their barracks to Buckingham Palace. Seven horses were also killed. In 1987, IRA member Gilbert 'Danny' McNamee was ordered jailed for 25 years for making the bomb. The conviction was later overturned, and McNamee was freed. The four cavalry members were killed in London's Hyde Park on July 20, 1982, as they rode from their barracks to Buckingham Palace. Seven horses were also killed. In 1987, IRA member Gilbert 'Danny' McNamee was ordered jailed for 25 years for making the bomb. The conviction was later overturned, and McNamee was freed. Downey made an initial court appearance, at Westminster Magistrates' Court, on Wednesday afternoon. The four cavalry members were killed in London's Hyde Park on July 20, 1982, as they rode from their barracks to Buckingham Palace. Seven horses were also killed. In 1987, IRA member Gilbert 'Danny' McNamee was ordered jailed for 25 years for making the bomb. The conviction was later overturned, and McNamee was freed. Downey is accused of the murders of Roy John Bright, Dennis Richard Anthony Daly, Simon Andrew Tipper and Geoffrey Vernon Young, a Crown Prosecution Service statement said. 'We have determined that there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and that these charges are in the public interest,' said Sue Hemming, head of Special Crime and Counter-Terrorism at the Crown Prosecution Service. Downey is accused of the murders of Roy John Bright, Dennis Richard Anthony Daly, Simon Andrew Tipper and Geoffrey Vernon Young, a Crown Prosecution Service statement said. In 1987, IRA member Gilbert 'Danny' McNamee was ordered jailed for 25 years for making the bomb. The conviction was later overturned, and McNamee was freed. He's also charged with intending to cause an explosion likely to endanger life. He's also charged with intending to cause an explosion likely to endanger life. He's also charged with intending to cause an explosion likely to endanger life. 'We have determined that there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and that these charges are in the public interest,' said Sue Hemming, head of Special Crime and Counter-Terrorism at the Crown Prosecution Service. 'We have determined that there is sufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction and that these charges are in the public interest,' said Sue Hemming, head of Special Crime and Counter-Terrorism at the Crown Prosecution Service. The suspect is named as John Anthony Downey, 61, of County Donegal, Ireland. In 1987, IRA member Gilbert 'Danny' McNamee was ordered jailed for 25 years for making the bomb. The conviction was later overturned, and McNamee was freed.

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