William James Carson Explained

A member of the Provisional Irish Republican Army, William James Carson was killed on 25 April 1979 by Billy Dodds and John Mullan, both members of the Ulster Defence Association.

Murder

On 24 April 1979, a Loyalist Ulster Defence Association death squad consisting of William John Mullan and Billy Dodds visited Carson's home on Rosevale Street in Belfast with the intention to kill him. They were told by his young son and daughter that their parents were not home, and left. They returned an hour later, and since the 32-year-old Carson was still not home, the men sat with his 11-year-old daughter watching television, until he returned, at which point they shot him in front of his child. He died in hospital in the early morning hours.[1] [2] [3] [4]

Aftermath

Mullan served 14 years for the murder, and was re-arrested while planning a robbery at First Trust Bank in 2004. Charges were dropped in the bank robbery, but he was deemed to have broken parole conditions in the action, and returned to prison.[1] [5]

Notes and References

  1. McGuigan, Ciaran, Belfast Telegraph, "UFF killer’s compo bid is rejected", 9 December 2007
  2. [Irish Times]
  3. Sutton, Malcolm. Index of deaths from the conflict in Ireland
  4. Relatives for Justice, Time for the truth
  5. [BBC]