Lord Justice Gibson and his wife were killed by a remote controlled
car bomb as they drove over the
Irish border back into
Northern Ireland on 25 April 1987 after a holiday in the United States. As the judge's car reached Drumad, the
townland on the
County Louth side of the border, he stopped to shake hands with the
Garda Síochána security escort who had completed their part of the assignment. The couple had only a short drive to meet the
Royal Ulster Constabulary escort to
Belfast. Between the two points lay the bomb, near a
petrol station near
Killean in
County Armagh. The explosion threw the Gibsons' vehicle across the road, killing the couple immediately. The explosion also injured
Ireland national rugby union team players
Nigel Carr,
David Irwin and
Philip Rainey who were in a car on the same road. The case was investigated by the
Cory Collusion Inquiry into cases of collusion between security forces and paramilitaries after persistent questions over whether the
Garda Siochana had tipped off the IRA of the Gibson's travel arrangements. Cory found insufficient evidence to warrant a public inquiry into the incident. The later
Smithwick Tribunal found that Cory had been "mistaken" in questioning the reliability of intelligence that a member of the Garda had helped the IRA in the Gibsons' murders, and in May 2014, former Northern Ireland First Minister
Lord Trimble called for an inquiry into whether there was collusion. ==References==