
A Bible in one hand and a bomb in the other, unrepentant Provo priest Fr Paddy Ryan died with blood on his hands
The hands of a Catholic priest who died this week were blood-stained by some of the most notorious atrocities of the Troubles, including the murder of three off-duty British Army soldiers in the Netherlands, the Brighton bomb and the 1982 Hyde Park bombing.
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Glasgow Times
17 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Glasgow man threw incendiary device at window
Barry McQuillan last month admitted recklessly throwing the glass jar with a cloth and white spirit at a window in Strauss Avenue, Clydebank. It broke the window to the danger of those inside and the address on May 6, 2023. When he appeared over the charges in May 2023, he was granted bail with a 7pm to 7am curfew. He subsequently broke that three times, accumulating more breaches of bail as he did. Appearing from custody on June 17, Dumbarton Sheriff Court heard the first failure was on July 10. READ NEXT: Former Catholic priest admits repeated abuse of boy more than 40 years ago READ NEXT:Serious organised crime unit cop sentenced for sexually assaulting colleagues on duty McQuillan called curfew monitor G4S just after 7pm and said he had been slashed and was going to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital for treatment. They checked a couple hours later and he hadn't appeared at any hospital, said fiscal depute Kirsty McKenzie. McQuillan reappeared at home at 10.22pm. Police found him clearly intoxicated and with superficial injuries. There was a knife nearby. He gave them various accounts of what happened, and officers concluded the injuries were self-inflicted. The 39-year-old was arrested and bailed. A week later, G4S told police McQuillan wasn't home for curfew. Police arrived just before 1am and found the front door unlocked, but the man wasn't there. He later turned himself in at Clydebank police office and said: "I've been fleeing violence." Again, he was arrested and bailed. In October, G4S were unable to get into his then home to fit a new tag monitor. Police couldn't trace him but McQuillan later got in touch and said he had moved because the property had been broken into. Officers had seen no evidence of this. As well as admitting the incendiary device charge, he pleaded guilty to the breaches of curfew and bail, the last of which had lasted from October 6 to 20. At sentencing, McQuillan's defence solicitor said his client's position was he had been attacked. He left to go to a friend's home and was going to phone an ambulance from there. "His position was he was fleeing violence," said the solicitor of the bail breaches. He should have told G4S or his solicitor of his change of address. Drug addiction issues had a "significant impact on his thinking" and McQuillan would need to address that to stay away from courts in future, he added. Sheriff Frances McCartney jailed him for 18 months for the incendiary device, plus nine months of supervised release when he's free. Another 11 weeks and two months were also added on for curfew breaches. The sentences were backdated to May 14.


Scotsman
20 hours ago
- Scotsman
Three nuns in dock at Edinburgh Sheriff Court charged with abuse at children's homes
Three nuns have appeared in court accused of carrying out historical campaigns of torture and abuse at two Scots children's homes - including allegations of forcing children to eat their own vomit and drink washing up liquid. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Carol Buirds, Dorothy Kane and Eileen McElhinney are alleged to have assaulted and used cruel and unnatural treatment towards at least 27 children at the two homes run by the Catholic congregation the Sisters of Nazareth. Buirds, 75, Kane, 67, and McElhinney, 78, appeared in the dock at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Thursday, where they pleaded not guilty to a total of 29 allegations on indictment. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Edinburgh Sheriff Court (Photo: TSPL) Buirds is facing 11 charges of cruel and unnatural treatment and eight of assault allegedly committed at Nazareth House in Lasswade, Midlothian, and Nazareth House in Kilmarnock. The pensioner is claimed to have tortured and assaulted children under her care including rubbing urine-soaked bedding into their heads, forcing soap into their mouths and making another to chew on cigarettes. Buirds, from Wallsend, Tyne and Wear, is facing allegations of making youngsters to take cold showers, forcing food into one child's mouth causing them to vomit and then ordering them eat the sick. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Prosecutors allege on one occasion the nun made a female child stand naked with her hands above her head while she was menstruating, remove bloodied sheets from her bed and throw them out of a window while other children watched on. She is also said to have assaulted children at the two homes in Lasswade and Kilmarnock by striking and kicking them to the head and body and hitting them with a hairbrush and a slipper. The abuse allegedly carried out by Buirds is said to have involved 18 victims, who cannot be identified, and been committed between September 1975 and May 1981. Kane, from Lasswade, Midlothian, is facing three charges of cruel and unnatural treatment and one of assault allegedly carried out against four children between March 1980 and August 1981. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad She is alleged to have reported one child to staff members after supplying him with cigarettes in the knowledge he would be punished 'with the result he was forced to drink washing up liquid and slapped on the head'. The indictment also claims Kane dragged one child along a corridor and after kneeling on his chest she 'failed to provide him access to medical attention' when he said was in pain. McElhinney from Bishopbriggs, East Dunbartonshire, is alleged to have carried out four offences of cruel and unnatural treatment and two of assault against five children between November 1972 and May 1975. The OAP is claimed to have caused children unnecessary suffering and injury to their health by committing acts including forcing youngsters to sit in a cold bath and striking them to their body. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad McElhinney is also facing one charge that she tied the hands of one boy behind his back and 'putting him to bed thereby restricting his movement and placing him in discomfort and potential danger throughout the night'. Sheriff Iain Nicol was told some evidence relating to the case is still to be released to the defence teams and set down a date in October this year for a trial that is expected to last around six weeks.


Belfast Telegraph
20 hours ago
- Belfast Telegraph
A Bible in one hand and a bomb in the other, unrepentant Provo priest Fr Paddy Ryan died with blood on his hands
The hands of a Catholic priest who died this week were blood-stained by some of the most notorious atrocities of the Troubles, including the murder of three off-duty British Army soldiers in the Netherlands, the Brighton bomb and the 1982 Hyde Park bombing.