Kevin McGrady

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Born1956 (age 6869)
Belfast, Northern Ireland
AllegianceProvisional IRA
RankVolunteer
UnitBelfast Brigade
Kevin McGrady
Born1956 (age 6869)
Belfast, Northern Ireland
AllegianceProvisional IRA
RankVolunteer
UnitBelfast Brigade
ConflictThe Troubles

Kevin McGrady (born 1956) is a former Provisional IRA member who became an informer in 1982[1] following his conversion to born again Christianity. As a result of evidence provided by McGrady, seven people were convicted at the supergrass trial presided over by Northern Ireland's Lord Chief Justice Robert Lowry.[2]

Kevin McGrady was born into a Roman Catholic family in Belfast in 1956, one of seven children. He grew up in the staunch nationalist Markets area of the city. He trained as a butcher after he left school,[3] and joined the IRA's Belfast Brigade in 1975 at the age of 19, due to his identification with the Republican cause and distrust of the majority Protestant community.[4] McGrady claimed to have participated in his first operation in July 1975, and had gone on the run in October of that same year. McGrady was held in custody from December 1975 to June 1976[5] for assaulting a police officer during an interrogation.[6] Following his release, McGrady moved to London where he spent 18 months, and then moved to Amsterdam, the Netherlands where he obtained work in a hotel. It was in Amsterdam in March 1978 that he underwent a religious conversion and became a born-again Christian.[7][8] He joined Youth with a Mission, an American-based Christian organisation, and became actively involved in their projects.

Supergrass

References

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