4.7 • 797 Ratings
🗓️ 12 November 2024
⏱️ 3 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In Northern Ireland from 1978 to 1994, the IRA killed over 40 alleged informers; people accused of passing information to the police and the British Army. But the man who often found, tortured, and sometimes killed these men and women was himself an informer, a secret British Army Agent with the codename Stakeknife.
Using secret recordings, reporter Mark Horgan traces the astonishing double life of Freddie Scappaticci. Why was he protected? How did he walk the tightrope between the IRA and British Army intelligence for so long and when murders, often of entirely innocent people, were sometimes allowed to take place despite state security force surveillance, who gets to play God?
This series is about far more than just one man; it’s about the state structures that protected him. From the production team behind the international award-winning ‘Where Is George Gibney?’, Stakeknife tells the story of one of the most-contested and darkest episodes of the Troubles. When neither side wants the story of Stakeknife to come out, how does society try to reconcile the truth about what happened?
Credits
Reporter: Mark Horgan Produced and written by: Mark Horgan and Ciarán Cassidy Co-Producer: Paddy Fee Editing and Sound Design: Ciarán Cassidy Composer: Michael Fleming Sound mixing: Ger McDonnell Theme tune by Lankum Artwork by Conor Merriman Assistant Commissioners for BBC: Lorraine Okuefuna and Sarah Green. Commissioning Editor for BBC: Dylan Haskins
Stakeknife is a Second Captains & Little Wing production for BBC Sounds.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | BBC Sounds |
0:02.2 | Music, radio, podcasts |
0:04.4 | The following trailer |
0:06.4 | contains some very strong language. |
0:12.9 | She said to me |
0:13.9 | I want you to go back in time |
0:16.0 | and find out what happened to my son, your brother. |
0:18.5 | I says, mum, I wouldn't even know where to start. |
0:24.6 | Music happened to my son, your brother. I said, Mom, I wouldn't even know where to start. And I'm with the IRA. The IRA shot him. He was an informer and he probably deserved it. |
0:31.6 | Probably would have shot him myself. |
0:34.6 | Miss Lies, he's not. He never was an informer. |
0:38.3 | He couldn't, he wouldn't informant anyone. |
0:41.3 | In Northern Ireland, from the late 70s to the early 90s, the IRA killed over 40 alleged |
0:47.3 | informers. |
0:48.3 | My brother was no informer. |
0:50.3 | Men and women accused of passing information to the police and the British Army. |
0:55.1 | He knew nothing about the provisional IRA for the same fellow. |
0:58.0 | Wouldn't have walked the same side of the street as the provisional IRA. |
1:01.5 | But the man who often found, tortured and sometimes killed these people on behalf of the IRA |
1:05.9 | was himself an informer, a secret British army agent with the code name, Steakknife. |
1:13.1 | So he says, just remember one name, Freddy Scaabitici. Just keep that in your head. |
1:17.4 | You don't know who Fred Scappuccice is? |
... |
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