Sam Rosenfeld
Sam Rosenfeld is an English businessman who spied for the British Army's Joint Support Group, the successor to the Force Research Unit in Northern Ireland in the early 1990s.[1][2]
According to journalist Richard Norton-Taylor, "Rosenfeld was approached in 1991 by the Joint Services Group, a cover name used by army intelligence in Northern Ireland." Under the alias Tommy Doheny, he set up a construction company at the army's request, which allowed him to cross the border frequently from his home in in Enniskillen, County Fermanagh, in order to pass on information about republican activities.[3]
In June 1992, he was detained by the RUC, and was told by a Special Branch officer, "we know who you work for." He was eventually released after phoning his army contact, Lt-Col George Williams.[3]
After fleeing to Britain, he was arrested by the Metropolitan Police on an RUC warrant on 8 March 1993. Rosenfeld claimed that he was questioned by the RUC exclusively about his army activities.[3]
He subsequently pleaded guilty to stealing a car before Omagh Magistrates Court, although the company which owned the car later said it regarded the issue as a civil matter of a breach of lease conditions. He was sentenced to 12 months but was allowed to cross the border to the Republic.[3]
Notes
- ↑ Henry McDonald, Army spy faces jail after appeal to Queen over 'murders', Observer, 7 December 2003.
- ↑ Harry McGee, Former spy's claims reveal British espionage in Ireland; Allegations of one-time agent Samuel Rosenfeld show British military spies operated routinely in the Republic, Sunday Tribune, 1 June 2003.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Richard Norton-Taylor, FORMER ARMY AGENT 'FRAMED' BY RUC FIGHTS FOR JUSTICE; Richard Norton -Taylor on a spy who fell foul of the intelligence rivalry between police and military in Northern Ireland, The Guardian, 28 August 1996.