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MI5 impeded inquiry into Stakeknife agent who murdered for IRA, says official report

The inquiry found MI5 and British Army prioritized protecting agent Stakeknife despite links to 14 murders and 15 abductions, with over 3,500 intelligence reports analyzed.

  • On Tuesday, Kenova's final report found `MI5 was involved in briefing and tasking Stakeknife via the throughout his operation as an agent,` widely believed to be west Belfast man Freddie Scappaticci who died in 2023.
  • Amid NCND protections, the government refused to identify the agent, with the British Army recruiting him in the late 1970s and MI5's Central Resettlement Unit discussing his relocation after 2003.
  • Investigators found the agent linked to 14 murders and 15 abductions; Kenova recovered 3,517 intelligence reports, handlers ran him from the "Rat Hole" and flew him abroad on military aircraft.
  • Kenova urged the UK government to name Stakeknife, citing public interest, despite the £40m inquiry producing no prosecutions as MI5 files arrived post-Scappaticci and legacy Act limits.
  • The report warns of lost investigative opportunities as Kenova found MI5's late disclosure hindered justice, while PSNI Chief Constable Jon Boutcher called government objections 'untenable and bordering on farce.
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For years, British security services protected a top spy who had infiltrated the Irish Republican Army (IRA), even though they knew he had committed at least 14 murders while working as an agent. Decades after the bloody conflict in Northern Ireland, the truth about the spy, codenamed "Stakeknife," remained hidden. This is according to the final report of a police investigation into his activities.

·Antwerp, Belgium
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A 50 million pound investigation into the double life of Scappaticci, torturer and informant. Victims' families demand a fine from the British government

·Italy
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The Telegraph broke the news in London, United Kingdom on Tuesday, December 9, 2025.
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