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Loyalist paramilitary leader Johnny 'Mad Dog' Adair was sent back to jail last night for breaching the conditions of his release. ... Close associate John White criticised the move last night.
The son of the Northern Ireland paramilitary leader Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair was jailed yesterday for selling heroin and crack cocaine in Bolton, Greater Manchester, where he and up to 50 others ...
Protestant guerrilla boss Johnny “Mad Dog” Adair was released from jail and whisked out of Northern Ireland, a Prison Service spokesman said. He had served the mandatory two-thirds of his 16 ...
Johnny 'Mad Dog' Adair (Image: PA) TWO of the men accused of plotting to murder Johnny “Mad Dog” Adair were seen together by undercover police in June 2013, jurors heard yesterday.
'Mad dog' Adair under surveillance. ... Mr White hit out at Northern Ireland Secretary John Reid's decision to declare the UDA ceasefire broken, claiming the IRA's cessation was in tatters.
Three men who plotted to murder former loyalist leader Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair in Scotland have been jailed. Anton Duffy, 39, Martin Hughes, 36, and Paul Sands, 32, were convicted in July of ...
As reported in the Manchester Evening News on Saturday, relatives and allies of Adair, including children, had moved to an hotel in a Greater Manchester town and applied to a local council for ...
Improbably, Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair's first words to his followers were in Latin: "Quis separabit," he yelled – the motto of the Ulster Defence Association – beaming as he was freed from jail.
The first of these demented canines was Dominic ‘Mad Dog’ McGlinchey, closely followed by Johnny ‘Mad Dog’ Adair. ... Most Read in John Laverty. 1.
Loyalist paramilitary chief Johnny "Mad Dog" Adair has been arrested. He was sent back to Maghaberry prison, County Antrim, after it was claimed he had breached conditions for his release from ...
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JOHNNY "MAD DOG" ADAIR, the loyalist leader, is to remain in prison, the Northern Ireland sentence review commission said yesterday. But Adair's supporters said the decision was "grossly unfair ...