Loughlin Maginn In September 1989 RUC chief constable,
Sir Hugh Annesley, ordered the initial enquiry about the circumstances following the August 1989 death of Loughlin Maginn. Maginn, a 28-year-old
Catholic, was shot by the
Ulster Defence Association (UDA) at his home in Lissize, near
Rathfriland. Although Maginn had no paramilitary connections, the UDA claimed he was a
Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA)
intelligence officer. In an attempt to prove the accuracy of their targeting, the UDA published security force documents and a video of police intelligence. (It was later found that the video had been provided by sympathetic soldiers using equipment supplied by UDA double agent
Brian Nelson).
Obstruction Stevens would later claim in a book he wrote that from the investigation's outset there was a concerted campaign to discredit the inquiries among elements of the British media. He also claimed that when he enquired with the British military authorities on whether or not a dedicated
Intelligence Corps unit operated in Northern Ireland, he was told that there were no such units currently operating there. Stevens later discovered that the
Force Research Unit (FRU) was indeed operating in Northern Ireland when senior RUC officers blamed the unit for an arson attack at his Inquiry headquarters. Following their discovery of the then-unknown
Brian Nelson's fingerprints on security documents, the Inquiry team encountered a wall of silence as they tried to investigate further: Brian Fitzsimmons, Acting Head of the
RUC's Special Branch, became evasive, telling Stevens: ''We can't help you with this man;'' and, at the Grosvenor Road station, Nelson's card in the intelligence card system was initially whipped away from the investigators. However, the team persevered and gathered enough fresh evidence to plan a secret operation to arrest Nelson on Monday 10 January 1990. Stevens went home the weekend before the planned arrest. As he returned to Belfast on the Sunday afternoon, there were two
journalists on the plane; they informed him that they had been sent over to cover the raids. It was obvious that there had been a leak, and it was decided to postpone the operation for 24 hours. In the meantime, Nelson escaped to England. That night there was a fire at the team's incident room within the secure complex at Sea Park, the RUC's
Carrickfergus Headquarters. The main team had left at 9pm but four members unexpectedly returned 25 minutes later to find the room alight. Neither the
smoke alarm nor the heat sensors had gone off and the
telephone lines had been cut. They made an attempt to tackle the fire but found that there was no water in the fire protection system. ==Stevens 3==