Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Barry Petticrew, Bomb Factory

Barry Petticrew Bomb Factory

Barry Petticrew, 45, was caught on a farm with enough explosives to build the largest bomb ever seen in the region.

A mechanic originally from the Irish Republic has been jailed for 11 years by a Northern Ireland court for running a bomb factory that contained enough explosives to build what could have been one of the biggest bombs ever used by terror groups in the region.


Barry Petticrew was caught on a rural farm in County Fermanagh that had been transformed into a workshop building bombs. Petticrew was one of the Guard of Honour at the funeral of Seamus McKenna in 2013.

Antrim crown court was told that Petticrew had been under surveillance by the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) at the farm near Kinawley, close to the border with the Irish Republic.

The surveillance operation was part of a security drive on October 2014 against dissident Irish republican activity in the county, the court heard.

Petticrew was said to have tried to run across fields in the direction of the border when armed police raided the farm. When captured, he told PSNI officers: “I’m not involved in terrorism. This house belongs to a friend of mine.”

The PSNI found high-grade explosives, pipes, timer units and ammunition at the property.
The court heard there were enough explosives to build the largest bomb ever seen in Northern Ireland before or after the Troubles.

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In sentencing the 45-year-old, from Swanlinbar in County Cavan, on Tuesday, Judge Gordon Kerr QC pointed out that Petticrew had allowed himself to be associated with dissident republicans five years after he had been convicted of a terrorism-related offence at the Republic’s non-jury special criminal court in Dublin.

DI Davy Lowans from PSNI said: “This haul contained many of the components used by a terrorist group, everything from time power units and fertiliser to a coffee grinder, ammunition and forensic suits.


“We believe this was for use by dissident terrorists in Fermanagh and other parts of Northern Ireland. The quantities and range of items recovered would have enabled a number of explosive devices to be constructed. The seizure will have an impact on the terrorists’ capabilities and undoubtedly has saved lives.”

Michael McMonagle Sinn Fein

Michael McMonagle Sinn Fein PSNI Chief Constable Jon Boutcher Police Service of Northern Ireland Police Headquarters Brooklyn 65 K...