John Creaney

John Alexander Creaney, QC, TA, OBE, DL (born 29 July 1933 – died 3 June 2008) was a Northern Ireland QC, later named Senior Prosecuting Counsel at Belfast Crown Court, beginning in 1978.

Creaney was born in Armagh City, County Armagh to a World War II veteran father who worked as a bus driver. Creaney attended the Royal School, Armagh and Queen's University, Belfast (QUB). He followed in his father's footsteps by joining the Territorial Army's Officer Training Corps (OTC). Creaney helped raise the RIR 5th Battalion for NATO service, keeping the soldiers for the most part out of The Troubles, although Creaney himself was intimidated from his home in South Belfast due to threats from both republican and loyalist paramilitaries, beginning in the 1970s.[1]

Creaney was a pupil of Basil Kelly and began his legal career in 1957, after being called to the Bar. In 1968, he was appointed Junior Crown Counsel for County Antrim, and was named a QC five years later, taking silk in 1973.[1]

Cases

Creaney oversaw or worked on numerous notable trials/prosecutions, including the following:

  • 1966: Malvern Street killings[2]
  • 1991: Danny Morrison (Irish republican)
  • 1992: Brian Nelson (Northern Irish loyalist)
  • 2005: Abbas Boutrab case, Northern Ireland's first al-Qa'eda-related trial[3][4]

Deputy Lieutenancy

He later served as a Deputy Lieutenant of County Down.[5]

Personal life/death

In 1957, he married Evelyn McCormack; the couple had three daughters. Creaney died at his home in Cultra in 2008, aged 74, from leukaemia.[6]

gollark: Yes, this can be derived from the axioms for... rings, I think? What of it?
gollark: Are you ASSUMING two genders‽
gollark: Being nonsophont or whatever. Simple.
gollark: Animals cannot give meaningful consent.
gollark: It's "consistency" in an equivocationy way because obviously situation 1 is totally equal to situation 2 because they share some common factors.

References

  1. "John Creaney: Senior counsel in Northern Ireland who prosecuted many terrorists during the Troubles". The Daily Telegraph. 5 June 2008. Archived from the original on 16 May 2018. Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  2. Boyd, Andrew (1969). "11: The Tricolour Riots". Holy War in Belfast. Retrieved 15 November 2018 via CAIN Project.
  3. "Al-Qaeda terror suspect convicted". BBC News Online. 24 November 2005.
  4. "Al-Qaeda terror suspect is jailed". BBC News Online. 20 December 2005.
  5. "Tributes and appreciations". Queen's University Belfast. Archived from the original on 26 August 2012.
  6. "Prominent barrister Creaney dies". BBC News Online. 5 June 2008. Retrieved 15 November 2018.
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