Who are the Guildford Four and what did they do?

Who are the Guildford Four and what did they do?

Based on a book written by a childhood friend, the one-man play will also reveal how Conlon spent more than £1m on crack cocaine and how he finally, almost entirely alone, beat his drug addiction. Conlon and three friends – Paul Hill, Paddy Armstrong and Carole Richardson – were convicted of the 1974 IRA Guildford pub bombings.

Where did Carole Richardson live in the Guildford Four?

Carole Richardson was 17 in the autumn of 1974. She was living in Kilburn, north London, moving from one squat to another since her stepfather threw her out of the house. She had never been involved in Irish Republicanism or in any other political movement: she had never even been to Northern Ireland.

Is there evidence that the Guildford Four are innocent?

They still protest their innocence, the IRA still disowns them and their lawyer is still fighting to free them. A joint inquiry by The Observer and Yorkshire Television has found disturbing evidence that they were the victims of an extraordinary miscarriage of justice. Brendan Dowd was driving that afternoon, as usual.

Who was involved in the Guildford pub bombings?

Conlon and three friends – Paul Hill, Paddy Armstrong and Carole Richardson – were convicted of the 1974 IRA Guildford pub bombings. After years of campaigning against a miscarriage of justice, the four were freed at the Old Bailey in 1989.

The Caterham Arms pub was bombed in August 1975 using the same modus operandi as was used at Guildford. Surrey Police arrested some 46 people including four young people who were subsequently charged with the Guildford and Woolwich offences. They became known as the Guildford Four.

Who is the chef at the Guildford Arms?

The Guildford Arms is a pub and kitchen in Greenwich London with a spectacular garden, run by chef director Guy Awford. Regular supper clubs hosted with best chefs and food experts from South East London, Depford, New Cross, Lewisham, Brockley.

Who was responsible for wrongful conviction of Guildford Four?

That evidence was never shown to the Guildford Four. In the aftermath of their release the government appointed a public judicial enquiry led by Sir John May, a retired former Lord Justice of Appeal, to enquire into the wrongful convictions of the Guildford Four and the convictions of the Maguire Seven.

What was the name of the pub bombed in Guildford?

Another explosion at a public house in Woolwich, London on November 7, 1974 caused two deaths and a number of injuries of varying severity. This was a thrown device and matched other bombings using the same method of delivery and configuration. The Caterham Arms pub was bombed in August 1975 using the same modus operandi as was used at Guildford.