Greysteel killer back in jail

NOTORIOUS loyalist killer, Torrens Knight, has lost his legal challenge to the decision to suspend his early release licence.

Knight received twelve life terms for his part in the ‘Trick or Treat’ massacre at the Rising Sun pub in Greysteel in 1993 and the seperate killings of four workmen at Castlerock earlier that year.

However, his eraly release under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement (GFA), was suspended after he was found guilty of attacking two sisters at a bar in Coleraine in May 2008.

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Knight had been seeking a judicial review of Secretary of State Shaun Woodward’s decision to send him back to jail. Yet, last Friday, a high Court Judge refused leave to seek a review after rejecting all grounds on which the application was based.

Mr Justice Treacey said: “ "If the Secretary of State had not suspended the applicant's licence in the teeth of a conviction for very serious offences of violence it would almost certainly have attracted public opprobrium and undermined public confidence."

Knight was sentenced to four months imprisonment last December for assault and disorderly behaviour. The Secretary of State ordered his recall to prison due to the new conviction and a determination that he posed a risk to the safety of others.

Knight was released in 2000 under the early release scheme of paramilitary prisoners clause in the GFA. His lawyers argued the suspension of his licence breached his right to liberty and should not have been taken until after an appeal against the convictions is heard.

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It was stressed that the Sentence Review Commissioners have still to determine whether to revoke the licence.

His barrister told the court that since being released Knight had "turned over a new leaf" and disassociated himself with those he was previously involved with.

But Mr Justice Treacy rejected arguments based on the relevant law, alleged inconsistencies and unreasonableness.

The judge said: "In my view the Secretary of State's decision that these convictions indicated that the applicant had breached the condition of his licence not to become a danger to the public is unimpeachable.

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"Whether or not he is in fact a danger to the public will be determined by the Sentence Review Commissioners exercising their powers under the 1998 Act."

He added that, provided the Secretary of State acts rationally and in good faith, his decision is unassailable.

"It is impossible to even contend that the Secretary of State's belief that the applicant had broken his licence condition was irrational."

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