‘If yous continue to target the British Armed Forces including the PSNI the consequences will be swift and deadly’
A Belfast man convicted of sending a menacing message directed at the family of a Bloody Sunday victim has been jailed for six months.
Dean Portis, 42, faced prosecution over a social media posting seen by the three brothers of William McKinney, one of those shot dead by the British Army in Derry.
He was also banned from intimidating or harassing them as part of a two-year restraining order.
Welcoming his sentence, the victims vowed never to tolerate online threats from any “sinister far-right sectarian thugs”.
Portis, of Olive Street in the city, denied two counts of improper use of a public communications network to send a message of a menacing character.
But in April he was found guilty of both offences following a contest at Belfast Magistrates’ Court.
Prosecutors said Portis targeted the brothers on September 18 and October 22 last year during the high profile Soldier F trial.
The former member of the Parachute Regiment was accused but ultimately found not guilty of murdering 26-year-old William McKinney on Bloody Sunday.
Mr McKinney was among 13 people shot dead when troops opened fire on civil rights demonstrators in Derry’s Bogside on January 30, 1972.
Police were alerted to a Facebook posting allegedly attributed to Portis, who also uses the name Dean Martin, early on in Soldier F’s trial last year.
Above a newspaper report and photograph of Mr McKinney’s three brothers, Joe, Mickey and John, attending the hearing in Belfast a message stated: “If yous continue to target the British Armed Forces including the PSNI the consequences will be swift and deadly.”
The posting added: “Yous have been warned.”
Portis insisted the message was not directed at or about the brothers, instead claiming his intention was only about creating a platform for debate.
But in witness statements the three complainants described being left in a state of fear they were being watched and potentially under threat.
John McKinney expressed concerns that the postings could have been made by a dangerous and violent individual.
“I am worried for myself and my family’s safety since seeing this,” he stated.
“I have fear that I am being watched and followed. I take this threat seriously and fear that something could happen.”
Sentencing Portis today, Deputy District Judge John Rea imposed three months custody for the offences.
He also activated a previous suspended term and ordered the defendant to serve a further three months behind bars.
Under the terms of the two-year restraining order, Portis is also forbidden from pestering the brothers or journalist Hugh Jordan.
Solicitor Ciaran Shiels of Madden & Finucane law firm, who represented the McKinney family, welcomed the outcome.
Mr Shiels added: “During the Soldier F trial we said that we simply would not tolerate victims, especially the families of those murdered and the wounded on Bloody Sunday, being threatened by the sinister far-right sectarian thugs who brazenly misused the internet and social media in order to spread hate and to attempt to instill fear.”
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