The
1973 Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape occurred on
October 31, 1973, when three Provisional Irish Republican
Army (IRA) volunteers escaped from
Mountjoy
Prison
in Dublin
, after a
hijacked helicopter landed in the prison's exercise yard.
The escape made headlines around the world and was an embarrassment
to the Irish
coalition
government led by
Fine Gael's Liam Cosgrave, which was criticised by
opposition party
Fianna Fáil. A
manhunt involving twenty
thousand members of the
Irish
Defence Forces and
Garda
Síochána was launched for the escapees, one of whom,
Seamus Twomey, was not recaptured until
December 1977. The
Wolfe Tones wrote a
song celebrating the escape called "
The Helicopter Song", which topped the
Irish popular music charts
despite being banned by the government.
Background
Following
the outbreak of the Troubles in 1969,
the IRA had conducted an armed campaign
that sought to create a united
Ireland by ending Northern Ireland's
status as part of the United Kingdom. As a
result of increasing levels of violence in Northern Ireland,
internment without trial was introduced
in August 1971, and in the Republic of Ireland the coalition
government led by Fine Gael's Liam Cosgrave was attempting to curb
IRA activity. Fine Gael had come to power on a
law and order ticket, with a policy
of "getting tough on crime". Suspected IRA members were arrested
and accused of IRA membership by a
superintendent in the Garda
Síochána, a crime under the
Offences against the
State Act. They were tried at the juryless
Special Criminal Court in Dublin,
where the traditional IRA policy of not recognising the court
resulted in a
fait accompli
as no defence was offered and IRA membership carried a minimum
mandatory one-year sentence, resulting in internment in all but
name. In September 1973 IRA
Chief of Staff Seamus Twomey appeared at the Special Criminal
Court charged with IRA membership, and stated "I refuse to
recognise this British-orientated quisling court". He was found
guilty and received a five-year sentence. By October 1973 the IRA's
command structure was seriously curbed, with Twomey and other
senior republicans JB O'Hagan and Kevin Mallon all being held in
Mountjoy Prison.
Planning of the escape
The IRA immediately began making plans to break Twomey, O'Hagan and
Mallon out of the prison. The first attempt involved explosives
that had been smuggled into the prison, which were to be used to
blow a hole in a door which would give the prisoners access to the
exercise yard. From there, they would scale a
rope ladder thrown over the exterior wall by
members of the IRA's Dublin Brigade who would have a
getaway car waiting to complete the escape. The
plan failed when the prisoners could not gain access to the
exercise yard and the rope ladder was spotted, so the IRA began
making new escape plans. The idea of using a helicopter in an
escape had been discussed before, an idea to break
Gerry Adams out of
Long
Kesh Internment Camp had been ruled out because of faster and
more sophisticated
British Army
helicopters being stationed at a nearby base. The IRA's GHQ staff
approved the plan to break out Twomey, O'Hagan and Mallon, and
arrangements were made to obtain a helicopter.
A man with an American
accent calling himself Mr. Leonard approached the manager of Irish
Helicopters at Dublin
Airport
, with a view to hiring a helicopter for an aerial
photographic shoot in County Laois
. After being shown the company's fleet of
helicopters, Leonard arranged to hire a five-seater
Alouette II for October
31.
The escape
Leonard arrived at Irish Helicopters on October 31 and was
introduced to the pilot of the helicopter, Captain Thompson Boyes.
Boyes was
instructed to fly to a field in Stradbally
, in order to pick up Leonard's photographic
equipment. After landing Boyes saw two armed, masked men
approaching the helicopter from nearby trees. Boyes was held at
gunpoint and told he would not be harmed if he followed
instructions. Leonard left with one gunman, while the other gunman
climbed aboard the helicopter armed with a pistol and an
Armalite rifle.
Boyes was instructed
to fly towards Dublin following the path of railway lines and the
Royal
Canal
, and was ordered not to register his flight path
with Air Traffic Control.
As the helicopter approached Dublin, Boyes was informed of the
escape plan and instructed to land in the exercise yard at Mountjoy
Prison.
In the prison's exercise yard, the prisoners were watching a
football match. Shortly after 3:35 pm the helicopter swung in to
land in the prison yard, with Kevin Mallon directing the pilot
using
semaphore. A
prison officer on duty initially took no
action as he believed the helicopter contained the
Minister for Defence Paddy Donegan. After prisoners surrounded the
eight prison officers in the yard, fights broke out as the officers
realised an escape attempt was in progress. As other prisoners
restrained the officers, Twomey, Mallon and O'Hagan boarded the
helicopter. As the helicopter took off, in the confusion one
officer shouted "Close the gates, close the fucking gates".
The
helicopter flew north and landed at a disused racecourse in the Baldoyle
area of
Dublin, where the escapees were met by members of the IRA's Dublin
Brigade. The escapees were transferred to a taxi that had
been hijacked earlier, and transported to
safe houses.
Reaction
The escape made headlines around the world and was an embarrassment
for Cosgrave's government, which was criticised for "incompetence
in security matters" by opposition party Fianna Fáil. An emergency
debate on security was held in
Dáil Éireann on November 1, where
leader of the opposition
Jack Lynch
stated:
It is poetic justice that a helicopter is now at the
heart of the Government's embarrassment and in the centre of their
dilemma.
Indeed, it was hard to blame the prison officer who
observed that he thought it was the Minister for Defence paying an
informal visit to Mountjoy Prison yesterday because, of course, we
all know the Minister for Defence is wont to use helicopters, as
somebody observed already, as other Ministers are wont to use State
cars.
The IRA released a statement on the escape, which read, "Three
republican prisoners were rescued by a special unit from Mountjoy
Prison on Wednesday. The operation was a complete success and the
men are now safe, despite a massive hunt by Free State
forces".Shortly after the escape Twomey gave an exclusive interview
to German magazine
Der Spiegel,
where he claimed people throughout Europe were describing it as
"the escape of the century".
Irish
rebel band the
Wolfe Tones wrote a
song celebrating the escape called "
The Helicopter Song", which was
immediately banned by the government yet still topped the
Irish popular music charts after selling
twelve thousand copies in a single week.
Aftermath
The escape
resulted in all IRA prisoners being held at Mountjoy Prison and
Curragh Camp being transferred to the
maximum security Portlaoise Prison
. In order to prevent any further escapes the
perimeter of the prison was guarded by members of the
Irish Army, and wires were erected over the
prison yard to prevent any future helicopter escape. Cosgrave
stated there would be "no hiding place" for the escapees, and a
manhunt involving twenty thousand members of the Irish Defence
Forces and Garda Síochána ensued.
Mallon was recaptured at a Gaelic Athletic Association
dance in a hotel near Portlaoise
on December 10, 1973, and imprisoned in Portlaoise
Prison. He escaped from there in a mass breakout on August
18, 1974, when nineteen prisoners escaped after overpowering guards
and using
gelignite to blast through the
gates.
He
was recaptured in Foxrock
in January
1975 and returned to Portlaoise Prison. O'Hagan was
recaptured in Dublin in early 1975, and also imprisoned in
Portlaoise Prison. After the end of his original twelve-month
sentence, he was immediately arrested and sentenced to a further
two years imprisonment for escaping.
Twomey evaded
recapture until December 2, 1977, when he was spotted sitting in a
car in Sandycove
by members of the Garda's Special Branch who were investigating an arms
shipment after a tip-off from police in Belgium. Twomey
drove away after spotting the officers, before being recaptured in
the centre of Dublin after a high-speed car chase. He was also
imprisoned in Portlaoise Prison until his release in 1982.
See also
References
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, p. 114.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 120–121.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 122–123.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, p. 124–125.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 126–127.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 128–129.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 130–131.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, p. 132.
- From Fetters to Freedom, pp. 61–62.
- From Fetters to Freedom, p. 63.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 134–135.
- Break-out! Famous Prison Escapes, pp. 136–137.