McCrea was convicted in 1971 of riotous behaviour in
Dungiven and sentenced to six months imprisonment. In 1972, McCrea issued a press release, saying, "We call on all Loyalists to give their continued support to the
Ulster Defence Association as it seeks to ensure the safety of all law-abiding citizens against the bombs and bullets of the
IRA. As the Catholic population have given their support to the IRA throughout this campaign of terror so must Loyalists grant unswerving support to those engaged in the cause of truth." In September that year McCrea spoke at a rally in the Shankill Road area of Belfast protesting the conduct of the
British Army's Parachute Regiment stationed locally, telling the crowd: "We never asked for the Army to come in. The loyalist people of Northern Ireland could have finished it themselves with the forces in this community." Uniformed UDA members checked cars entering the Glencairn estate before the protest and a UDA
Land Rover patrolled in the vicinity. In 1975 he led a prayer service at the funerals of paramilitary members
Wesley Somerville and
Harris Boyle. The two terrorists were part of the
Glenanne gang which carried out the
Miami Showband killings and were accidentally blown up when the bomb they were planting in the band's minibus went off prematurely, killing them instantly. At the DUP annual conference of April 1986, McCrea interrupted councillor Ethel Smyth when she said she regretted the death of Sean Downes, a 24-year-old Catholic civilian who had been killed by a plastic bullet fired by the
Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) during an anti-internment march in
Andersonstown in August 1984. McCrea shouted, "No. No. I’ll not condemn the death of John Downes [sic]. No Fenian. Never. No". In Northern Ireland and Scotland, the word
Fenian is used as a slur for Roman Catholics. Speaking in the
Northern Ireland Assembly in March 1984 following an attempt on the life of Sinn Féin president
Gerry Adams by the UDA which left him seriously wounded McCrea stated: In December 1986, McCrea aroused controversy when in an interview with
Hot Press magazine following a recent threat by the "Ulster Freedom Fighters" (the UDA's
cover name used to claim responsibility for attacks) to bomb Dublin, he commented that the
Republic of Ireland "must reap what they sow" for its role in the
Anglo-Irish Agreement. McCrea also claimed that the Agreement had come about because of IRA violence, and so people living in the Republic "must expect if they live by the sword they must die by the sword." McCrea was the target of a
parcel bomb to his home on 9 August 1988, when a package sent by the
Irish People's Liberation Organisation was disarmed. McCrea had become suspicious when he noticed the package had a
Dublin postmark. In September 1991, following the murder of Sinn Féin councillor Bernard O'Hagan by the UDA (who claimed the shooting under its outlawed "Ulster Freedom Fighters" cover name) in Magherafelt, County Londonderry, McCrea said "He who lives by the sword often dies by the sword" and "[O'Hagan] without apology stood for the policy of the Armalite in one hand and the ballot box in the other". In February 1992 McCrea sent a message of sympathy to the family of RUC Constable Alan Moore, who had committed suicide after shooting dead three people and injuring two others at a Sinn Féin advice centre on the Falls Road, Belfast. Moore's family lived in Ballymena, outside McCrea's constituency; McCrea did not send any message of condolence to the families of the three Catholic men who died in Moore's attack. McCrea was criticised when he appeared on a platform at a
Portadown rally in support of the senior
Ulster loyalist paramilitary
Billy Wright, who had been threatened by the
Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) leadership, in September 1996. Wright was the founder and leader of the
Loyalist Volunteer Force (which had broken away from the UVF), and had been threatened after he broke the UVF ceasefire by ordering the death of Catholic civilian Michael McGoldrick. In 2000, McCrea was the subject of an early day motion by two MPs,
Harry Barnes and Sir
Peter Bottomley. The motion referenced a claim that McCrea had visited Wright's successor as LVF leader in order to persuade the LVF not to decommission any of its weapons. This claim has yet to be substantiated.
Call for British airstrikes against Irish towns A
Northern Ireland Office memo released under the
thirty-year rule in December 2014 revealed that McCrea had called for the
Royal Air Force to carry out "strikes against
Dundalk,
Drogheda,
Crossmaglen and
Carrickmore" at the DUP's annual conference in April 1986.
Alternative medicine McCrea is a supporter of
homeopathy, having signed several
early day motions in support of its continued funding on the
National Health Service, sponsored by
Conservative MP
David Tredinnick. ==References==