Soldier F pleads not guilty to murder on Bloody Sunday
A former British soldier has pleaded not guilty to charges of murdering two men on Bloody Sunday more than half a century ago.
In June, lawyers for the ex-paratrooper known as Soldier F applied to have the case against him dismissed ahead of his trial.
Judge Mr Justice Fowler dismissed the application at Belfast Crown Court on Friday.
Soldier F is accused of two murders and five attempted murders when members of the Parachute Regiment opened fire on civil rights demonstrators in Londonderry on 30 January 1972.
Thirteen people were shot dead and at least 15 others injured when soldiers opened fire in the Bogside.
Who is Soldier F?
- A former British soldier who served with the Army’s Parachute Regiment in Northern Ireland during the Troubles
- He cannot be named due to an interim court order granting his anonymity
- Soldier F is being prosecuted for the murders of William McKinney and James Wray on Bloody Sunday
- He also faces charges of attempting to murder Patrick O’Donnell, Joseph Friel, Joe Mahon, Michael Quinn and an unknown person on the same date
The decision on whether to prosecute Soldier F involved several legal challenges and U-turns.
Having weighed up 125,000 pages of material, prosecutors said in March 2019 that they would send Soldier F to trial for the murders of Mr Wray and Mr McKinney, as well as several attempted murders.
However, in 2021, prosecutors dropped the case after the collapse of the trial of two other Army veterans who were accused of another Troubles-era killing.
At the time, the families of the Bloody Sunday victims said the decision was a “damning indictment of the British justice system” – their legal challenge against the decision was successful.
The court then rejected an attempt by the Public Prosecution Service (PPS) to have its own appeal referred to the Supreme Court.
Prosecutors subsequently announced that they had decided to resume the prosecution in September 2022.
He was returned for trial in December 2023, a decision subsequently challenged by his lawyers in June.
That hearing was the first time Soldier F had appeared in court in person since being charged.