The Rest Is Classified - 151. Britain’s Man Inside the IRA: From Spy to Executioner (Ep 3)
Episode Date: April 26, 2026What happens when an agent has to commit horrific crimes whilst undercover? What did the British government know about Stakeknife’s crimes? And did the IRA suspect Scappaticci of being a double agen...t? Listen as David and Gordon reach the height of Stakeknife’s power and explore the morality of a British agent committing murder undercover. ------------------- THE REST IS CLASSIFIED LIVE 2026 at The Rest Is Fest: Buy your tickets to see David and Gordon live on stage at London’s Southbank Centre on 4 September: https://www.southbankcentre.co.uk/whats-on/the-rest-is-classified-live/ ------------------- Sign-up for our free newsletter where producer Becki takes you behind the scenes of the show: https://mailchi.mp/goalhanger.com/tric-free-newsletter-sign-up ------------------- Join the Declassified Club to go deeper into the world of espionage with exclusive Q&As, interviews with top intelligence insiders, regular livestreams, ad-free listening, early access to episodes and live show tickets, and weekly deep dives into original spy stories. Members also get curated reading lists, special book discounts, prize draws, and access to our private chat community. Just go to therestisclassified.com or join on Apple Podcasts. ------------------- Get a 10% discount on business PCs, printers and accessories using the code TRIC10. Visit https://HP.com/CLASSIFIED for more information. T&C's apply. ------------------- Email: therestisclassified@goalhanger.com Instagram: @restisclassified Video Editor: Adam Thornton Social Producer: Emma Jackson Assistant Producer: Alfie Rowe Producer: Becki Hills Head of History: Dom Johnson Exec Producer: Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
For exclusive interviews, bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access to series,
first look at live show tickets, a weekly newsletter, and discounted books.
Join the declassified club at the rest is classified.com.
How do you protect an undercover agent inside a group like the IRA?
And how do you decide who lives and who dies?
Well, welcome to The Rest is Classified.
I'm David McCloskey.
And I'm Gordon Carrera.
And we are looking at Freddie Scapetici, the agent known as Steakknife, who has been recruited by British Army Intelligence run by a group called the Force Research Unit.
He's the number two in the IRA's internal security unit, the counterintelligence team that are interrogating suspected traders.
they decide who lives and who dies inside the IRA during the troubles.
But we left off last time, Gordon, I think with this massive question, which really I think
it's the heart of this series, this examination of Steakknife and his role in this intelligence
war during the troubles of how do you run a really, really valuable agent who's also
doing absolutely despicable things? And at this case, interrogating, torturing and
in some cases murdering citizens of the United Kingdom.
And so we have this kind of question, I think, at the heart of things.
And steak knife when we left off last time is being run by the army in the middle of the troubles.
This episode is brought to you by HP.
In intelligence work, it's rarely the obvious problem that causes failure.
It's the overlooked detail or the flaw nobody quite solved.
The kind of vulnerability intelligence services look for.
And running a business is the same, especially when you're building or growing a team.
It's the risks you can't see or don't understand.
HP designs technology, so devices, collaboration tools and security work together as a single system,
helping teams keep everything running smoothly at home in the office and out in the field.
The protection is built in, hardware-level security working quietly in the background,
helping reduce risk without creating more work.
With a team of business advisors, HP helps businesses of all sizes,
find technology that fits their needs and budget.
To see how HP helps businesses work securely and productively,
visit HP.com forward slash classified.
The rest is classified listeners also benefit from 10% off HP business technology
with code T-R-I-C-10.
There's more to life than finding the perfect car.
But finding the perfect car,
can help you get the most out of life.
Like the SUV that handles everything from drop off to off road,
and the car that hulls groceries and hockey teams,
or the van that's gone from just practical to practically family.
Whatever you want, wherever you're going,
start your search at autotrater.ca, Canada's car marketplace.
This episode is brought to you by Nespresso.
Hear that, that's your next obsession.
Every coffee, a new world.
Every sip, a new taste.
This is the new espresso.
One touch, endless possibilities.
Iced, flavored, long, short,
because some days call for that espresso kick.
And sometimes a smooth, silky latte just wins.
It's exceptional but effortless.
Like actually effortless.
Simply press, brew and explore.
Nispresso, what else?
Keep exploring at nespresso.com.
That's right.
I mean, it does involve huge,
both moral and practical complexities,
which we're going to dive into in this episode particularly.
First of all, I mean, we should establish what this internal security unit or the nutting squad,
which we should remind people who don't know that nut is the term for people's head
and they used to shoot people in the head.
So hence they got this term of nutting people and called the nutting squad.
That was their job.
Scapetici early 80s is number two in it.
It's worth just establishing just what it got.
got up to because here from the Konova report is the official verdict, members of the ISU,
the Internal Security Unit were responsible for torture, inhumane and degrading treatment and
murder, including of children, vulnerable adults, those with learning difficulties, and those
who were entirely innocent of the claims made against them. Confessions to being agents,
whether in audio recordings or in writing, were obtained through violence or deception,
and by making false promises to victims.
So you get a sense there and they talk about the activity,
including physical beatings with iron bars, hammers,
also shooting of some victims in their legs, elbows, knees or feet
when they're involved in lower level kind of crime or antisocial behaviour
as opposed to the execution you get if you're an informer for the British.
And of course, the complexity of this, as we established last time,
is that the British state knows these things are going on,
from their agent inside, Scappatici's Steakknife, and the steak knife is actually carrying out these acts.
And they sometimes know when someone is under suspicion.
So they know in advance when these things happen.
Because we saw last time, Scapitchi is in pretty regular contact with his handlers, isn't he?
He's meeting them and on the phone to them quite a lot.
All the time.
I mean, it's almost, it's near constant communication.
The handlers know exactly what's going on.
Yeah.
And I think what's also even more complicated is when you're going to,
into these situations where Scapiti is interrogating people, sometimes the people really are
informers for the British state, and sometimes they're not. Some of those alleged to be agents
working for the British state are actually being accused of that because of internal,
factional disputes within the IRA. I mean, what better thing to do than accuse someone else
of being an informer? Or you get a clash over criminal activity, which the IRA is also involved in.
And, you know, in some occasions, it's even said that you get someone accused of being an informer because one person is trying to eliminate someone else because of having an affair with that person's wife and because of extramarital relationship.
So you've got a kind of really complicated situation here about the people who are being interrogated by Scapetici for different things.
I think here there's really three things that are happening.
The first one is that there are murders that are committed by agents of the state.
So there are cases here where one agent murders another agent, right?
And also rolled up into this or that agents do things that sort of go beyond or directly contradict the orders given to them by their handlers.
There's also the murder of alleged agents, including some of the victims weren't agents at all.
but there's nothing done to stop them.
And then there are cases where actually the violence,
the murder could have been prevented.
So the British Army, the Frew, the Force Research Unit,
may have actually had forewarning.
They may have had intelligence that someone was going to be killed,
but they didn't act on that to prevent the murder
for fear of exposing Scappatici, Steakknife,
or another agent inside the IRA.
Yeah.
And I mean, you get to this really kind of complicated question.
If you're the British, the intelligence running him, you know, what if he is going to murder
someone who is one of your agents?
Is that okay?
Because you're trying to protect Scappaticchi, and if you don't let him do it, it might expose
him.
The truth is no low-level agent is going to be as valuable as Scapetici.
So do you sacrifice someone who is really one of your age?
agents in order to preserve Scapatici in place, because there's certainly a hierarchy.
I mean, they've got lots of informers, the British, from kind of low-level drivers up
through to people in, you know, senior positions in the IRA who are kind of strategic assets.
Do you let someone who is effectively innocent of being one of your informers, but who therefore
is an IRA person be killed?
Are you happy about that?
Is that okay?
So you kind of encourage that because in your view, they are an IRA member?
I mean, you just start thinking, don't you, David, about the kind of complexities of this.
And you have this additional issue that you mentioned, which is that steak knife isn't always under your control.
It's not like he'll always do what you want him to do or you're always able to tell him what to do.
I was trying to think of what a direct comparison might be in the US today.
And the closest I could get would be if the FBI, most likely be the FBI, were running a source who's at American citizens.
like a confidential informant, inside a drug cartel or inside an organized crime syndicate.
And as part of their job, they had to commit violent crime against other American citizens.
And in this case, the direct parallel would be if the FBI had forewarning of this, you know, in some cases,
where you have an American citizen who is going to kill other American.
citizens and the security service law enforcement actually knows in advance that this is going to
happen and decides in some cases not to intervene because of the value that the source is
providing or may provide in the future. Would that happen? You could make the case that it
kind of happened like in the Whitey Bulger case at the FBI where his handlers did know
in some cases, it seems that he was committing murder and allowed it to happen.
I think the difference is that in that case, those handlers were effectively corrupted by Whitey Bulger.
Wow.
And eventually the end, spoiler alert, there won't be a lot of accountability on the part of the British state for what happens with Steakknife.
Whereas in the Whitey Bulger case, he goes to prison and his handlers do as well.
So there are some key differences.
Yeah.
But, you know, it was interesting because I put the question to a couple FBI special agents of, you know, would there be an incident where, because you can get waivers for your confidential informants committed crimes.
Like, that's a, that's a thing you can get.
You can get that at the CIA.
If you're running an asset inside a terrorist organization and they're providing material support to that organization, like there are ways to get things wavered in extended conditions.
But it was interesting, like, you know, this direct question of would the FBI allow it a confidential informant to commit murder?
I couldn't, I honestly couldn't get a clear answer.
Now, small sample size, I think it'd be an absolutely extreme case.
And there is a process, which is different from the snake dive one.
But that's kind of the, that'd be the American frame for this today.
Yeah.
And I guess the context is worth saying.
I mean, we're in what people would see different.
ways of seeing it. Civil war, insurgency, counterterrorism operation going on within the country,
as opposed to just normal criminality, if you like, even if you want to call drugs and mafia,
normal criminality. But, you know, there is a different context there, which I think to some extent
explains it. But let's drill down a little bit more into kind of some of the cases.
Because I think you really only understand it when you get to some of the cases. And we'll get
to some specific name cases in a bit. But the Konova inquiry, which is the official
inquiry into State Knife does actually give some accounts of cases which are useful because even
though they're anonymised, they've been investigated by the authorities so we can be pretty confident
about them because there are other cases where it's a bit more murky what State Knife's role was.
But in one case, Internal Security Unit of the IRA starts an investigation after suspicions
raised that someone was an alleged agent for the RUC, the Police Special Branch.
State Knife is fully involved in the investigation and informs his through how.
handlers that the victim had been abducted and taken to the Republic of Ireland for interrogation.
He's Stake Knife would be involved in the interrogation and would have access to a firearm,
and highly likely the victim would be shot if found guilty.
The victim's ordeal during interrogation is set out in detail in the through records of Stake Knife's debriefings.
Stake Knife played a central role in securing an alleged confession from the victim
and was involved in his court-martial.
The handlers were aware that consideration was being given to the,
the murder of the victim. During the interrogation, special branch was supplied with information
to the victim's whereabouts and who was involved. The Fru was aware of the escalating threat
to the victim and the RUC Special Branch failed to pass it on information to the Irish police
so they could attempt to a rescue, apparently in the mistaken belief that the victim would not
be shot, he was. So that gives you a sense of the kind of narrative, but I think what's
useful about that is you get a sense that the Fru are being told about it. As it, as it
it's underway and the decisions are being made about whether to pass it or not. And just one more
point on that, which I think is interesting, is that what it means is that after the murder takes
place, the special branch of the RUC know who was involved in the abduction, interrogation,
and what they don't do is pass it on to their fellow police officers from the criminal
investigations department who are investigating the murder. So this is one of the problems of the case.
You have one bit of the RUC who are investigating a murder because it's a criminal act.
But another part, a special branch, who are not telling them that they actually know who was involved in the murder and who did it,
meaning the crime is going to go unsolved and unpunished.
Because obviously they are prioritizing, protecting the agent, rather than investigating the crime.
And to drill down a little bit into this, you know, we talked to the last episode about how the British Army
and essentially the security services that were operating in Northern Ireland
did have a wide variety of technical penetrations of the IRA as well.
And how in some cases there were efforts made to prevent these kind of killings
if they could get the intelligence from some form that wasn't steak knife, wasn't a human asset.
And it does make me wonder if in some of these cases,
And I'm not sure if it's true in this specific case, if part of the thought process, because I'm just trying to put myself at the mindset of, you know, stake knives handlers who are getting this information, seeing this in real time and trying to figure out what to do with it.
If there's a pretty grim calculation that gets made that says the only source we have for this is Freddie's gap of teaching.
Yeah.
And if you're sole sourced on this thing and then you go in and you prevent this from happening
or later on you arrest the people who are involved, maybe not in one case, but if the cumulative
effect of that over, not even a very long period of time, would be that you'll lose the agents.
And I'd have to think that there's just, there's no incentive on the part of the fru handlers.
you don't want to be the handler that loses steak knife.
That's a career killer all the way up the chain.
If the guy you have who's providing you with all this great intel on the IRA decides,
or you end up getting him killed because you're trying to save one person.
Right, but you're trying to save someone who's a member of the IRA.
You know, you're the fru handlers.
You're like, no way, no way.
Yeah, I think you've hit on the kind of moral conundrum,
which is at the heart of this.
and to some extent
you're right the Brits are thinking to themselves
well the people who are being killed in some cases
are IRA anyway
and also
I think there's probably a view which is
well if Scappatici
if Steakknife doesn't pull the trigger
someone else will so
these people are probably dead
anyway so the fact that our agent is
the one to pull the trigger or to be involved
in the murder doesn't change the fact
this person may die
and it preserves his position
and his credibility in the organization.
So those are the kind of very dark, let's not pretend that they're not dark, calculations
which are being made in this case.
Do we have any sense from anything that has come out as part of the Konova investigation
or otherwise, that there was any kind of process inside the fru for thinking through
these kind of questions, or is that just black box?
Well, I think it goes up to this TCG, the kind of group, which is the, the,
the kind of decision-making group about how to act on the through intelligence.
And I think they are the ones who are going to be trying to work that out.
And I think you're also right that, you know, they may be thinking like, is this single-sourced?
Well, the costs, the wants and the benefits.
You know, on every case, they're kind of thinking about balancing those things and trying
to work it out.
But, you know, all of it does mean that murders are taking place with the knowledge of the security forces
and those responsible are not being investigated.
And I do think, you know, you get to, I'm sure we'll come back to this at the end,
kind of complicated questions about culpability, because we should be clear,
it is the IRA's Army Council, which is giving the death sentence for these people.
They're making the decision.
But what they don't realize is that there's actually a group of British soldiers,
police and intelligence officers, who are kind of above them or outside them to some extent,
who are then deciding, well, are we going to do anything about that to sort of.
stop that death sentence being carried out. And they're going to have to make some decisions
about that. But I do think it does go back to this question about protecting the source. I think
that is the big question, you know, which they've got, because I think there are points of
which Scappatici is going to come under suspicion potentially for being, or at least there's
going to be suspicion about touts, about informers somewhere and in different places in the
organization. And he does have some close calls. You know, there's a story from Richard O. Ra's
book Steak Knives Dirty War that I think illustrates at kind of the granular human level,
the kind of game that Scapitchi is playing.
And O'Raw writes, in 1982 Markets resident Marion McCullen was working in the kitchens
of the five-star Culloden Hotel in Holywood, County Down.
Did I pronounce all of that correctly, Gordon?
By the way, I think we'll go with that.
We'll go with that.
It's close enough.
It should say it's how it looks like it should.
should be pronounced. I'll just say that. Yeah. All right, back to the story. At one morning,
at 545, she was walking through the car park to go to work when someone caught her eye.
Is that Freddy Scap? She asked herself at this time in the morning. She continued to stare.
It was Freddy, and he was engrossed in conversation with two men who had long hair.
She found it unusual that he would be having a meeting in a car park that early in the morning.
They look like branch men, she said of the two men who were conferring with him. I'm from the markets.
I know what special branch look like. Do they like? Do they like?
Look like they have long hair, Gordon?
Yeah, I know.
I found that interesting, isn't it?
That seems surprising to be.
I would expect them to be.
Kling up.
Yeah, maybe at this time they were trying to blend in.
Trying to grow in their long hair like an Irish Republican.
These two look like ordinary men, but they weren't.
One had an anorak and the other had a three-quarter length coat.
I just knew they were branch men.
After work, I told my partner, who was in the raw, that they were branchmen.
And he told me to wise up, but they were branchmen.
nobody will tell me different. So spotted and just nobody could quite believe it. And so she was dismissed.
Yeah, which goes back. It's interesting, isn't it, to this issue that the towns and the cities of Northern Ireland are, it's a small community. And therefore, the risks are quite large that people will spot each other. And, you know, there are other moments as well where people do seem to suspect Scapatici, and particularly the South Armagh branch of the IRA do seem to have suspicions about it. But the Belfar,
where he's primarily based, they stand by him.
And it's interesting, because this goes back to our earlier discussion.
One of the reasons they don't seem to suspect him is because of what he's willing to do.
Because one of the ways the IRA sought to test if someone was maybe an agent to tout was to get them to kill someone.
And of course, if you refuse it, it's suspicious.
And so this is the way of making sure you were loyal.
But it's based on an assumption.
And the assumption is that the British would not let.
one of their agents be involved in murder. I know. I mean, this is what's so interesting that the
IRA actually underestimate the ruthlessness of British, you know, military intelligence.
Richard O'Rour says this, you know, he says, the fatal flaw in this thinking was the erroneous,
if unspoken, belief that the security forces occupied the high moral ground and would never
allow one of their informers to willingly take a life, but at least one informer did.
So, you know, it's really interesting that, isn't it? I think, as an example,
of why Scappatici survives because of how far they let him go, how far the authorities
allow him to do things. So they are working quite carefully to manage those risks. But fundamentally,
it's because of what he's doing that they're prioritizing, keeping him going. And his fru-handlers
are protecting him by, you know, in some cases not using his intelligence to intervene and
to save lives. But I guess as we move through the 1980s, protecting
steak knife, deciding who lives and who dies is going to get even harder, and it'll eventually
force Scapatici's steak knife to disappear. Yeah. So, you know, in the mid-80s, Scapatici,
is working on building sites by day, which is interesting, and playing a bit of five-a-side football,
but mainly working for the IRA. But he's actually going to rise in importance, because around
1984, he's put an overall charge of the ISU, the security unit, as John Joe McGee step
back from that role. Interestingly enough, the number of killings goes up after he takes charge
in the latter part of the 80s, after there's been a dip. You know, the number of people overall
killed by the squad. Some people say 40 people. Some think it's more like 70. ISU also gets this
role vetting Belfast operations for security before they take place. So it has a kind of insight,
but also a veto. It's like acting like a counterintelligence team, isn't it? An intelligence
agency, like a security team going, is this operation too risky? And that becomes an additional
role that Scappatici takes on. So he's got more and more influence. And also, you get into
this controversial issue in the 80s about whether the UK was operating what Republicans
called a shoot-to-kill policy. And that would be where members of the British SAS, the special
forces would effectively get a tip-off and then ambush IRA members because they'd had intelligence
about where they would be and then kill them. And you then have an additional dynamic where the
military are sometimes pushing, it said, for operations to go ahead by the RA because they want to
be able to ambush them. And Scapetici is actually brought in to investigate some of these
ambushes and where IRA operations go wrong in his security functions. There's a particularly
important one, 8th of May, 1987 at Loughgall, which is an RUC base in County Armour, where
eight IRA men are ambushed and killed when they're planning an attack, the largest loss of life
for the IRA. And one of the interesting things about that, and that goes back to our earlier
discussion, is immediately that the IRA think it's towns, its informers, but actually
it's not always. I think that's one of the interesting things. Do we know what
that Scapatici's interior life is like at this time?
Do we have any insight?
Because he's running this high wire operation as now head of the ISU.
He's also, as you said, he's working at building sites during the day.
Yeah, which is weird, isn't that?
He's married.
He's got kids.
Just the psychological complexity of this for him,
feels like it would be crushing.
Yeah. I find it quite hard.
I mean, maybe unsurprisingly, I find it quite hard to get into his head or his interior
life of a man who's kind of capable of doing this.
And I think it's a good question because, of course, we think he's recruited about 78.
We're now into the kind of second half of the 80s.
And, you know, you hear this talk, which is most agents, after about 10 years,
start to get jumpy and start to burn out.
It's quite hard for someone to be run undercover for longer than a decade.
And he is hitting that point as we kind of reach 87, 88,
where the pressure and the toll of that you'd think is getting to it.
But actually, you know, there's not much sign a bit.
I think the intelligence war is kind of getting more complex.
And I think that's one of the aspects to this.
Because if you go back to something like, you know,
the investigation in Lofkaw, you've got actually the – it may well have been not
informers, but the fact that they, by this point, British intelligence has got very good technical
penetration of the IRA in terms of kind of bugs and bugging devices, you know, which MI5 and others
are putting in. And yet in the IRA, they always think it's informers. They're obsessed with
informers and taunts. And so the kind of pressure on the ISU to find the taunts and find the informers,
I also think is getting more intense and creating a kind of paranoia within the IRA. And of course,
Scapetici is at the center of that, which I agree. He's the chief tout at this point, right? I mean, he's
the chief tout hunter. You know, I mean, crazy. It reminds me a little bit of the recent admission by
the Iranians. This was a few years ago, that they had stood up a unit, a counterintelligence
function to root out Mossad operatives inside their own intelligence services. And then it came out
that the guy who was running it was himself an agent of the Mossad
and had brought other agents of the Mossad in to work with him.
So it's just this fox in the henhouse thing that's so...
I mean, the whole thing is the whole organization's turned inside out when that happens.
And I guess by the late 80s, the IRA is shifting to this strategy called the Long War.
So more emphasis on political activity.
Yeah, political activity, Republican political party, Sinn Féin, Britain also trying to get agents
inside Sinn Féin and close to them and trying to understand that as well. But at the same time,
the intelligence war with State Knife at its heart is coming, I think, the State Knife himself,
to a climax at the second half of the 1980s. And I think to understand why it becomes incredibly
intense and why eventually one case will finish him, we need to deep dive into the stories
of some of those individuals who found themselves involved in this dirty war and tangled up with
Scapatici. So let's take a break and when we come back, we'll look at that and how it really
brings an end to Stake Knife's work. This episode is brought to you by Sky from the writer
of Bridge of Spies and the BAFTA winning director of Peaky Blinders. Here comes the new Sky
original action thriller, prisoner.
Oh, with that, you know this is going to be full of twists and turns.
That's right, a prison transport officer and a professional killer,
a handcuffed together and forced to go on the run,
and they must make impossible moral choices in order to survive.
Now, in our world, we know that institutions are not always what they seem, don't we?
That's right, David, and in this series, it's built around the things we find most compelling.
Which are, of course, conspiracy, institutional corruption, and moral ambiguity.
That's us. These are the grey areas where the right call isn't always clear.
This is a fast-paced edge-of-your-seat story where you never quite know who to trust or what happens next.
That's right, so it's the next great thing to binge, and you can watch all episodes from the 30th of April on Sky.
Amazon Presents, Jeff versus Taco Truck Salsa.
whether it's Verde, Roja, or the orange one.
For Jeff, trying any salsa is like playing Russian roulette with a flamethrower.
Luckily, Jeff saved with Amazon and stocked up on antacids, ginger tea, and milk.
Habaniero? More like habanier, yes.
Save the everyday with Amazon.
The ride that steals the spotlight every time it hits the road?
That's the Volkswagen Tiguan.
Sleak exterior makes a first impression you can't ignore.
Step inside to find available full leather seats and wood accents.
Under the hood, the available 201 turbocharged horsepower engine gives it a fun to drive edge.
The refined Tiguan, you deserve more style.
Visit vw.ca to learn more.
SuvW, German engineered for all.
Well, welcome back.
We are going to dive into some of the individual stories.
about the people inside the IRA or adjacent to the IRA who sort of found themselves
wrapped up in this dirty war.
And I guess one very valuable agent of influence, Gordon was named Willie Carlin.
Yeah, that's right.
I think we're going to look at three agents, informers, and how they got tangled up with
Gapitici.
Each one tells you something interesting about who lives and who dies and why.
And the first one is this agent called Willie Carlin.
Really interesting character, died just a couple of years ago, actually.
Working class Catholic from Derry, who joins the British Army before the trouble starts.
When he's then planning on returning to Northern Ireland, he's recruited by MI5.
Now, this is important because it's initially an MI5 operation.
We talked some previous episodes, didn't we, that MI5 on the whole wasn't recruiting and running people there.
But this is a slightly different case because it's someone who's outside of Northern Ireland from Northern Ireland, but planning to go back, MI5 send him back in undercover and to go into the political world, which is something they're more interested in, of the Republican movement.
So he's in that world rather than the gunman.
And he becomes close to Martin McGuinness, who's a senior Republican.
And Carlin, though, and this is where it gets really kind of interesting, he has problems with his MI5 handler.
he knows this handler as Ben.
And this character, Ben, he finds really odd.
He always wants to meet at pubs and he's often drunk.
I mean, he sings rebel songs when he's drunk.
So that's kind of...
Not your typical, Am I Five guy, I suppose, in that sense.
No, I've not met many who are like that.
One time Carlin finds him drunk in his car outside Martin McGuinness's house.
Now, Carlin tells London that this guy is going to get him killed and he wants out.
So he goes to London and Carlin actually meets two senior MI5 officers.
One he later realizes is actually the future head of MI5, Stella Rimmington.
So that's one of the people he meets, which gives you a sense, you know, she's on the rise at this point, but gives you a sense how important he is.
He tells them he wants out, can't trust his handler, he gets paid off, he's out.
But then there's this kind of story about in the early 80s.
He witnesses something terrible.
In his neighbourhood, he's back.
He's at that point still involved in the Republican movement politically, but not.
not as an agent. A young mother, age 29, is doing a census for the British government,
paid five pounds a day. The IRA are boycotting the census. The woman takes a wrong turn
and ends up in a Republican neighborhood. They tell her to get out. Carlin also warns her,
it's dangerous, but she rings more doorbells. And the gunman comes out and shoots her in the head.
Now, Carlin, because she's just been at Carlin's house, at Willie Carlin's house,
runs over and he sees her body
and he will recall that she's still holding her census clipboard
as she's lying there dead.
And he gets so angry when the IRA claimed
that the Brits had staged the shooting
because he obviously knows the truth
that he calls his old number to try and get back to work as nature.
There's no answer.
So instead he contacts the military.
And it means this time he's going to be run
not by MI5 but by Fru by the Force Research Unit.
And it becomes a pretty valuable agent straight on
reporting again on the political aspect to the Republican movement when it's going through
the shift of what they call the armor like, the rifle, and the ballot box, which is a kind of
dual strategy from the Republican movement.
This is where the story gets perhaps even more wild and actually winds up crossing streams
with another story we've done because, believe it or not, Gordon, you've found a way to get
Oleg Gordievsky into a story about Steakknife and the I.
RA. And we did a six-part series on Gordievsky last year, which is fascinating in its own right.
But Gordievsky is the KGB resident in London in the early 1980s. He is spying for the Brits. He's
spying for MI6. And Gordievsky has revealed to MI6 that an MI5 officer has offered himself
up to the KGB in London. Now, that officer is a man called Michael Bettany, who's caught after
mole hunt, but Bettney had been based in Northern Ireland, where his experiences had pushed him
toward alcoholism and breakdown, which I guess have you been listening to the series so far,
you would understand after working so close to the troubles. And Michael Bettney is the handler
who Carlin, Willie Carlin, had known as Ben. It's wild, isn't it? And then we get,
we'll get Kevin Bacon here in a moment. So. Yeah, I know. I'm just wondering how we get
kind of bin Laden or Edward Snowden into this podcast as well, because you wouldn't think you'd
suddenly kind of cross over into the world of the KGB, but it does because Bettany is arrested
because of Gordievsky's intelligence, and then he goes to prison. But Betany in prison
is not very well isolated, and he tells another prisoner who is linked to the IRA.
Betany says he has run an agent called Willie, who is close to the top figures in Sinn Féin,
the Republican Party.
And he also says he's aware of another army agent who's important, but he doesn't know his name,
which may well be Scapetici.
And that means that word gets back to Northern Ireland, that there's an agent that MI5 have run
called Willie.
And so it's obvious, you know, pretty obvious who it is.
And so the Nutting Squad, Stankknife and all, are told to go and get Carlin.
Scapatici tells his handlers that Carlin's life is in danger
and what's so interesting is this time the agent is an important one
and clearly they decide in this case they're going to act
so they contact Willie Carlin and they tell him he has to get out
immediately that moment you know they want to save him
and get him out before the Nutting Squad take him
so he and his family are rushed to a small airport without even time to pack
and he's flown out of Northern Ireland on what he described as the Prime Minister's Private Jet,
a ministerial jet, and actually taken to meet Margaret Thatcher's considered so valuable.
That can't be right, right, that he's flowed out on a private jet.
I thought the PM flu commercial.
Well, I think in those days, they might have had a jet.
I think these days.
There's less money.
Budget cuts.
Austerity.
Yeah.
No Air Force won for us.
But I mean, I think it's so interesting, isn't it?
because it's an example that if they really want to, the authorities can save someone who's in front of who's coming up for investigation.
And that there's another case, Joe Fenton, who is going to be one of these tragic characters who gets caught up in this dirty war and who ends up paying a significant price.
Who is Joe Fenton?
This is interesting because in contrast to Carlin, who they decide to save, Fenton is someone they don't.
So by the 80s, Joe Fenton is in his 30s, he's married with four kids, he's been working for the IRA
and it will eventually become particularly useful because his job later becomes being an estate agent.
So looking after properties.
And that, of course, gives the IRA access to properties, which they can use for interrogations and to hide things.
He's got the keys for all of them.
But what they don't know is he'd been turned years earlier by the Brits.
Now, you know, this is where, of course, it's off to murky because there are reports.
he's pressured to do it by the RUC, as he's told he'll be prosecuted unless, you know,
this goes back to some earlier discussions, unless he agrees to become an informer.
And of course, he then becomes incredibly valuable for the RUC because they can then bug the
properties that he is allowing the IRA to use.
So he becomes a kind of pretty useful agent at that point.
But he also looks like at one point he wants to get out.
He applies for both him and his family to get visas to go to.
Australia because he just wants to kind of get out. You get the sense of a guy who's trapped,
but the visas are blocked by the authorities. Operations are getting compromised. Suspicion
at one point falls on him. In 1985, it looks like he diverts suspicion by pointing to two other
people as informers, and they are then killed by the ISU, which I think is interesting, but then by
the late 80s, 88, 89, the heat is back on him, and eventually he's brought in to be interrogated
in a house in West Belfast.
Now, he's held in a spare bedroom.
The person whose house it is could hear the kind of thumping and shouting from upstairs.
It's so interesting the kind of vivid memories people have of this, because that person
then recalls some of the people who are doing the interrogation upstairs coming down to
watch a boxing match between Mike Tyson and Frank Bruno, which was, I think, happening
maybe in Vegas that night.
And, you know, they get tea and toast and then go back up to.
upstairs for the interrogation. I mean, kind of weird scene, isn't it? I mean, it's details like that, which I think, I don't know, almost make it more chilling. But Scapetici tells his handlers that Fenton is going to be killed, but nothing is done in this case to prevent the killing, even though he has been an informer. So he's taken out the house and he's shot and his body is found soon after.
So I think obviously the cold logic here is that some of these assets are more useful to the British state and some are less useful. And so there's a kind of rank ordering. But why is Carlin a big fish and Fenton isn't in this case? Because I mean, Fenton's doing something that's really valuable to the fru and to the British army. So why do they let him die? I mean, I'm not sure I can answer that. I mean, I guess with Carlin, he's, you know,
He had been an MI5 and a fru agent, and his political intelligence had probably got to people
in a way that was more significant than the tactical kind of intelligence that someone like Fenton was,
I'm guessing at this, you know, that Fenton was supplying.
You wonder if that was the kind of the logic behind it.
And that maybe that Fenton is not worth risking Scappatici for by, you know, pulling him out.
whereas Carlin is.
Scapetici is directly involved in, you know, this interrogation and killing.
But the suspicions do, I think, start to grow about Scappatici at this point.
There's a particular senior IRA figure called Brendan Hughes,
who's kind of been in and out of jail at various points, you know, very senior.
And he's obsessed with the idea of penetration and thinks that they've got a high-level penetration
and that it might be Scappatici.
So I think, you know, you can sense that that's a big part.
I mean, it's, you know, we've got the bonus episodes for members with Patrick Radden
Keith who wrote this amazing book, Say Nothing, also for a good TV drama, which I think, you know,
focuses actually on Brendan Hughes and about some of these characters and some of the sense
of fear about informers that's going on.
There's also the case of Sandy Lynch, and this takes place in early 1990.
Sandy Lynch is 34 years old at the time, an IRA man who's involved in selecting targets.
for operations and he's detained for questioning by the ISU about whether or not he's an informer.
And this is, in a way, the last of our cases.
And it, for State Knife, will be the most significant because Sandy Lynch has taken to a house in West Belfast.
It's the same house that Joe Fenton has just been held in earlier.
He's pushed down onto a bed as he hears the words IRA security.
he's blindfolded, placed in a chair facing a wall.
He doesn't see who does it initially, but Scappatici then checks him.
This is, I find interesting, with a bug detector.
So they have some kind of bug detector they've got hold of,
which I guess is looking for radio frequencies being emitted.
And Lynch hears a voice, because he's blindfolded, but he hears a voice,
and he recognizes it as Scapatici saying the device is going haywire.
But the interrogation continues, which I kind of think, it's a little bit odd,
in that detail.
And Scapetici tells him
he's going to be hanging upside down
in a cow shed until he confesses.
Now, there are two teams doing the interrogation
and they take turns,
but Scapatici all this time is keeping his
handlers up to speed about events in the coming hours.
And here's what's interesting.
Lynch is going to be saved.
But the reason is, because he's effectively
being used as bait in a trap,
to lure in senior Republicans,
because the Republicans have decided that they want Lynch to do a press conference
in which he admits to having been forced to be an informer
and then making allegations linking the security forces with this policy of shoot to kill.
So they've decided they can kind of, rather than just kill Lynch,
they can use him for publicity.
And what that means is that senior Republicans are going to kind of,
from the political side of the movement, are going to come in to talk to him about that.
and Scappetich is ensuring Lynch is in the staph house.
And then Sinn Féin, so the political parties, director of publicity, Danny Morrison,
arrives to come and talk to him about this kind of press conference and confession.
And of course, the police have been watching.
And at that point, they move in.
And Danny Morrison, you know, he's written and talked about this.
He tries to escape.
He jumps a fence.
He goes into the next door house, but they find him in there.
And he actually gets sentenced to eight years for being involved in this.
although that's quashed that conviction later due to the role of Scapetitian events.
And Scapetichie himself has slipped out of a back door before the security forces have arrived.
But I mean, that's bound to raise suspicions, isn't it, within ISU?
Hold on, just to go back to this multi-layered trap that's being set here.
So this is a ploy by the fru, by the army, to lure senior Republicans into,
one spot so that they can be arrested.
Is that right?
The crucial thing is because the political wing of the Republican movement always says it is not
involved in the violence and separate.
But by going to a house where someone has been abducted and detained, you can prosecute
them for being involved in that abduction.
And that's the kind of key thing that the Brits realize they can use this case for
and kind of effectively use Sandy Lynch as a trap.
for the senior Republicans.
So that, I think, is why this ends up being slightly different, partly because the Republicans
aren't going to just kill him, but they're going to kind of make him public.
And of course, the IRA know after this raid has occurred, which obviously, I guess,
just the mere fact that the raid happens would raise your suspicions that there was someone
who had knowledge of the meeting or who was actually there who had tipped off the British
authorities. But of course, since Scapetici's steakknife has used that bug detector device
to scan for radio frequencies, he's used that on Lynch. It's got his fingerprints on it.
Right. Yeah. Lynch recognizes Scapetich's voice because Lynch, of course, doesn't know
Scappatici is also an informer. So Lynch is going around and going, I know Freddie Scappatici was
there. I recognize his voice. So from the standpoint of the IRA,
Scapitji should be hunted.
Should be wanted, yeah.
You know, and go to prison or be pursued for prison.
Yeah.
You know, in their minds, the police should now logically have enough at the very least
to arrest Scapitchi as well if they can get hold of him.
Now, he's actually fled to Ireland at this point, to the Republic.
And he spends 22 months in Ireland after this event in 1990,
pretending to be hiding and on the run.
But of course, you know, he's actually in contact with.
his handlers all the time. And they're trying to work out a cover story for how to deal with this
problem. Because, you know, his fingerprints are on the on the bug detector device. And they come
up with this with this story, which I find a bit implausible. But they're going to claim the
fingerprints are on the device as he's been doing some electrical work on the building as part of
his day job, you know, because he's a builder. And that they get a witness to back that up.
That seems kind of thin. A little thin to me.
It does. And, you know, interesting enough, they coach him. So the through officers coach him on how to answer questions from the police if and when he comes back. I mean, this is nuts, isn't it? You've got British military intelligence coaching the guy on how to avoid answering questions by the British police when he returns to Northern Ireland and inevitably gets arrested.
You have to think that some in the IRA, the senior officials in the IRA, maybe they don't have hard proof, but they've got to assume that Scappatici is bad, right?
And maybe it's one of these cases where you just can't quite, you know the truth.
It almost reminds me a little bit of some of the Cambridge Five where you kind of know, or maybe you know, or maybe you know.
but it's almost too unsettling to confront it.
And so you just turn a blind eye.
Yeah, I think that's,
I think that is exactly right,
a bit like some MI6 officers with a Philby,
just the,
it was too much to think,
to acknowledge that this guy might be bad.
So he,
you know,
he does come back.
He does get arrested and then he's released without charge.
And I agree.
I think,
you know,
people just don't want to confront the possibility.
And it's,
that he's bad,
that he's an.
And it is strange that he's not questioned more at this point by the IRA.
He's not really interrogated, it seems.
It's all, I think, odd this situation.
I think your point that it's denial is perhaps the only thing.
But Scappatici's been away for this period and there are suspicions about him.
So he's been marginalised.
And this is the problem for him because he wants to get back in the game.
And this is the early 90s, right?
Yeah.
Then we're into the early 90s, kind of 90 to 92, you know, around this period.
And he wants to get back into the game.
So he comes up with a story that maybe there's a spy on the Army Council and he should
be brought in to look for it.
That causes inevitably anger.
And so he stood down, the ISU were kind of reformed, stood down.
So now he's out of the action.
And of course, Scapatici does not like being out of the action.
You know, he doesn't like being marginalized.
I mean, go back to the kind of late 70s.
I think that's one of the reasons he might have even been recruited.
It's because he hated being marginalized.
And so now he's effectively out and he's going to spiral into a depression.
And that in turn is going to lead him to a very, very strange, bizarre and dangerous decision,
which is going to have long-lasting consequences and ultimately lead to his exposure and the name State Knife emerging into the open.
Oh, there's a cliffhanger, Gordon.
I think we should leave it there and we come back next time.
We will see how it all unravels for Freddie Scapatici in the finale of this four-part series on Steakknife.
But of course, if you don't want to wait for that finale, you don't have to.
You can go and join the Declassified Club at the Rest Is Classified.com.
Get early access to this series, to all of our series, as well as to some Fidopital bonus content.
We have two, I think, really exceptional interviews.
that are linked to this series, one, with the journalist Patrick Radin-Keefe.
We're going to be talking with him about kind of informants and the intelligence war during the
troubles. We've also got a great conversation with longtime BBC journalist Peter Taylor,
who covered this kind of intelligence conflict during the troubles for bedding years.
So you get access to all of that.
But otherwise, we will see you next time for the thrilling finale.
See you then.
Let's talk groceries, specifically your groceries.
With Instacart, you want your groceries just the way you like them, right?
Well, the Instacart app lets you do just that.
They have a new preference picker that lets you pick how ripe or unripe you want your bananas.
Shoppers can see your preferences up front, helping guide their choices.
Instacart, get groceries just how you like.
