Sean Bourke

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Sean Aloyisious Bourke (1934–1982) from Limerick, became internationally famous when he aided in the prison escape of the British spy George Blake in October 1966. Blake had been convicted in 1961 of spying for the Soviet Union. After the escape, Blake eventually made his way to Moscow; Bourke did too, but eventually returned to Ireland.

Bourke's co-conspirators were Michael Randle and Pat Pottle.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7]

Only Pottle and Randle were criminally charged for abetting the escape and they were eventually found not guilty by a jury, based on their claims that they helped Blake escape because his 42-year sentence was "inhuman".[8] Bourke was never charged since Ireland refused to extradite him to the United Kingdom.[9]

Life[]

Bourke was born in Limerick into a large family. Actor Richard Harris was his second cousin and poet Desmond O'Grady was his first cousin. As a boy of 12, Bourke was sentenced to three years in Daingean reformatory in October 1947 for stealing bananas from a lorry.[10] Subsequently, he trained as a bricklayer, but was frequently in trouble with the law, owing in part to his alcoholism.

Having moved to Britain, in 1961 he was convicted of sending an explosive device through the post to a Detective Constable Michael Sheldon, against whom he bore a grudge. The bomb exploded, but caused no injury.[11] He was sentenced to seven years in prison.[12] While in Wormwood Scrubs prison in London, he founded and edited the prison magazine, New Horizon.[11] In this role he met George Blake, who wrote contributions for the magazine. Bourke also met anti-nuclear campaigners Randle and Pottle in the prison.[13]

George Blake escape[]

After his release, Bourke set about organising Blake's escape from Wormwood Scrubs. The escape was masterminded by Bourke, who originally approached Michael Randle only for financial help. Randle, however, became more involved and suggested they bring Pat Pottle in on the plan as well, as he had suggested springing Blake to Randle in 1962 when they were both still in prison.

Bourke had smuggled a walkie-talkie to Blake to communicate with him whilst in jail. It was decided that Blake would break a window at the end of the corridor where his cell was located. Then between 6 and 7 pm, whilst most of the other inmates and guards were at the weekly film showing, Blake could climb through the window, slide down a porch and get to the perimeter wall; at that point, Bourke would throw a rope ladder made of knitting needles over the wall so that Blake could climb over and they would then drive off to the safe house. The escape was successful, although Blake fell from the wall and broke his wrist.[11]

Randle and Pottle later wrote that they got Blake out of the area, first to Dover, hidden in a van, and then to a checkpoint in East Germany. From there, Blake was able to get to the Soviet Union.[14][15]

Shortly afterwards, Bourke joined Blake in Moscow, where he lived for a year and a half on an allowance provided by the Soviets.[11] However, he disliked Russia and so he was allowed to return to Ireland. The Soviets refused to allow Bourke to take the manuscript of his book, The Springing of George Blake, out of the country; he later re-wrote the text.[16]

Two interviews of Bourke were made, and appear in a video clip: one from a 1968 interview with a British documentary and a later RTÉ interview by Mike Murphy.[17] The British documentary includes a recording which Bourke made of a two-way radio conversation he had with Blake inside the prison, on 18 October 1966, four days before the escape.

The United Kingdom tried to have Bourke extradited to face criminal charges, but the Irish Supreme Court rejected this request in 1973, ruling that Bourke's aid of Blake's escape fell within the political offence exception to Ireland's extradition laws.[18][19] An attempt to get him extradited on the separate charge of threatening the life of Detective Sheldon (in an abusive letter he had sent to the policeman) also failed. Hence, no charges were laid against Bourke for his role in the escape of George Blake. Randle and Pottle were prosecuted in 1991 but the jury found them not guilty, accepting their claim that their acts had been a moral response to the excessively long ("inhuman") sentence that Blake had received.[20]

Later life[]

After returning to Ireland, Bourke published his book,The Springing of George Blake, an account of the escape.[21] He also wrote a number of articles, including a harrowing account of his time in Daingean reformatory, published in Old Limerick Journal in 1982.[10]

He spent the royalties from his book, helping the poor and disadvantaged of Limerick, as well as money he had been given by the Soviet Union and by his supporters. He gave financial support to local politician Jim Kemmy of the Democratic Socialist Party.[22]

By 1981, he had left Limerick and was living in a caravan in the Percy French Estate in Kilkee and claimed to be writing a book on his life in Moscow and his conversations with George Blake, with the working title, The Scrubbers. He eventually received some funds from the estate of his uncle "Feathery" Bourke but claimed that the lawyers had gotten more than he did.[23]

Death[]

Bourke was almost penniless in his last years of living in the caravan, suffering increasingly from alcohol-related health problems. He collapsed and died while walking down the road. The coroner gave his cause of death as "acute pneumenory odema, Coronary thrombosis". Two local doctors disagreed with this assessment.[24]

A local newspaper report added the following specifics to the circumstances of Bourke's death:[25]

"Only a few hundred yards from Kilkee, he was seen to stagger, clutch his chest and fall dying onto the grass margin. In the vital hours between word of his death reaching Limerick and relatives, the manuscript that Sean Bourke had been working on somehow disappeared. ... [in] the caravan, there was no sign of any papers".

Years later, after defecting to the West, former KGB officer Oleg Kalugin claimed in his book The First Directorate: My 32 Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West[26] that Bourke's death was the eventual result of a poisoning ordered by Aleksandr Sakharovsky.[27][28]

In culture[]

Sean Bourke appears as a character in Simon Gray's play Cell Mates, which tells the story of Blake's escape from Wormwood Scrubs and Bourke's subsequent visit to Moscow. In the original production Bourke was played by Rik Mayall. In the BBC Radio play "After the Break" by Ian Curteis his relationship with George Blake after the escape from Wormwood Scrubs is examined. In it, the epilogue says that he was found dead under a cherry tree beside the Liffey.

References[]

  1. ^ Kevin O'Connor, Blake and Bourke and The End of Empires, ISBN 0-9535697-3-X, 2003
  2. ^ Illtyd Harrington, Forget the train robbers, this was the great escape, Camden New Journal, 29 May 2003 – while this article provides some useful details, several dates have been transcribed incorrectly
  3. ^ Patrick Pottle, Daily Telegraph, 4 October 2000
  4. ^ Richard Norton-Taylor, Pat Pottle, The Guardian, 3 October 2000
  5. ^ Nick Cohen, A jailbreak out of an Ealing comedy, New Statesman, 9 October 2000
  6. ^ Michael Randle and Pat Pottle, The Blake Escape: How We Freed George Blake – and Why, ISBN 0-245-54781-9, 1989
  7. ^ Kieran Fagan, Escape of the century – or farce?, Irish Times, 5 May 2003
  8. ^ "Pat Pottle Anti-war campaigner who helped spring Soviet spy George Blake from jail". The Guardian. 3 October 2000. Retrieved 28 December 2020. insisted that their action was morally justified, and, ignoring a clear direction from the judge to convict, the jury unanimously acquitted them.)
  9. ^ Root, Neil (11 October 2011). Twentieth-Century Spies. ISBN 9780857653314.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b Michael Byrne, Daingean Reformatory Archived 10 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Offaly Historical and Archaeological Society, 9 January 2007
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Michael Mok, "The Irish 'Who' in a British Whodunnit", Life, 24 Jan 1969, pp.59–60
  12. ^ Rosamund M. Thomas, Espionage and Secrecy: The Official Secrets Acts 1911–1989 of the United Kingdom, Taylor & Francis, 1991 p.221.
  13. ^ Simon Gray, Cell Mates, 1995.
  14. ^ "'No regrets' says man who aided double agent George Blake to escape". The Guardian. 22 October 2016. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  15. ^ "George Blake obituary". The Guardian. 26 December 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  16. ^ Berkeley, Roy (14 November 1994). A Spy's London. Pen and Sword. ISBN 1473827205.
  17. ^ "Sean Bourke Interview (part 2)". Youtube. 11 January 2009. Retrieved 28 December 2020. Sean Bourke interview 1968 (Part 2) Describes how he engineered escape of George Blake from Wormwood Scrubs Prison to Moscow in 1966
  18. ^ Cantrell, Charles L. (Spring 1977). "The Political Offense Exemption in International Extradition: A Comparison of the United States, Great Britain and the Republic of Ireland". Marquette Law Review. 60 (3). Retrieved 11 June 2013.
  19. ^ Extradition (Irish Republic), Hansard, 30 July 1982
  20. ^ "Escape from Wormwood Scrubs: The True Story Of 'Spy' George Blake by Giovanni Di Stefano". OPC Global News. 27 December 2000. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  21. ^ Sean Bourke, The Springing of George Blake, ISBN 0-304-93590-5, 1970
  22. ^ Raymond Smith, Garret, the enigma: Dr. Garret Fitzgerald, Aherlow, 1985, p.58.
  23. ^ "Sean Bourke (1934 - 1982)". Clare Heritage. 1 March 1990. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  24. ^ "Sean Bourke 1934 - 1982". Clare Heritage. 1 March 1990. Retrieved 29 December 2020. coroners report suggested he died from a heart attack, coronary thrombosis, but the two doctors at the scene disagreed
  25. ^ "Limerick man behind spy jailbreak". Clare Champion. 26 January 2012. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  26. ^ "Top spy George Blake's escape aided by Limerick man Sean Bourke". Irish News. 28 December 2020. Retrieved 29 December 2020.
  27. ^ Oleg Kalugin, The First Directorate, St. Martin's Press, 1994, p.139-40.
  28. ^ Kalugin, Oleg (2009). Spymaster: My Thirty-two Years in Intelligence and Espionage Against the West (PDF). Basic Books. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-465-01445-3. Retrieved 26 December 2020.

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