Most recent
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Jan 20 2005: A republican from Derry yesterday became the first person to be jailed for contempt of the Bloody Sunday inquiry.
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Nov 24 2004: Closing speech outlines tribunal's task.
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Nov 24 2004: The Bloody Sunday inquiry.
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Nov 23 2004: After more than 400 days of evidence from more than 900 witnesses, it was still unclear which soldiers shot 27 civilians during a civil rights march on Bloody Sunday, the Saville inquiry was told yesterday.
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Nov 22 2004: The identities of the soldiers who killed 14 civilians on Bloody Sunday are still unclear, the senior legal adviser to the Saville inquiry said today as he began his summing up in the biggest investigation in British legal history.
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Nov 22 2004: As Lord Saville hears the summing up, Derek Brown and Mark Oliver look at the public inquiry into the events of January 30 1972
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Nov 22 2004: The key events from the inquiry
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Nov 22 2004: Britain's longest and most expensive legal inquiry reaches the summing up stage.
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Jun 10 2004:
10.45am: Controversial contempt of court proceedings against a Daily Telegraph reporter who refused to name his source to the Bloody Sunday inquiry have been dropped, it emerged today. By Patrick Barrett.
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Apr 2 2004: Lawyers see Bristol hearing as best model.
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Mar 29 2004: Court ruling on lawyers' confidential files could add millions to bill and delay investigation.
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Feb 23 2004:
Alex Thomson: Well - no more jibes in the newsroom about sharing a Maghaberry Prison cell with Martin McGuinness.
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Feb 14 2004: Inquiry chief will not take reporters to court over refusal to name sources.
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Feb 4 2004: Paul Foot: In August 1973, the Derry coroner, retired Major Hubert O'Neill, completed the inquest into the 13 unarmed people killed by the British army on Bloody Sunday.
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Jan 27 2004:
Two journalists who face a possible trial and prison sentence for refusing to reveal confidential sources to the Bloody Sunday inquiry said yesterday that they would rather go to jail than hand over names.
1-15 of 200 for Bloody Sunday
