Kincora: Britain’s Shame – Mountbatten, MI5, the Belfast Boys’ Home Sex Abuse Scandal and the British Cover-Up

18.99

Chris Moore

Revelatory insights into the cover-up of systematic abuse of vulnerable boys in care of the state featuring exclusive access to witnesses, secret documents and whistle-blowers

Paperback

May 2025

ISBN: 9781785375545 Categories: , , , ,

Description

For over four decades the story of the extraordinary evil that occurred at the Kincora Boys’ Home in East Belfast in the 1970s and the shocking attempts by MI5 to cover it up have haunted our political and social terrain for decades. Award-winning former BBC journalist Chris Moore has been working on the story since it first emerged in 1980, and has uncovered a horrific catalogue of failed opportunities to put an end to the sadistic activities of the men who were running the home, in particular those of prominent Orangeman and MI5 source William McGrath.

What has emerged over the course of Moore’s investigation, in which he has gained exclusive access to witnesses, secret documents and whistleblowers within the British intelligence services, is that not only were the boys in Kincora systematically sexually abused, but that some were forced into a countrywide paedophile ring, whose members included Lord Louis Mountbatten. Moore also exposes MI5’s attempts to cover up what actually happened and that the organisation knew as early as the 1970s that the boys in Kincora were being abused.

Kincora is a shocking exposé of how the British state failed to protect some of its most vulnerable members.

Contents
1. In the Beginning
2. A House of Horrors
3. The Police Investigation
4. Dead End Trail
5. A Sense of Impending Doom
6. Political Turmoil
7. Trafficking
8. MI5 Blockages
9. Covering Up Kincora
10. MI5 and the Establishment
11. Facing Up To Reality
12. Face to Face with McGrath
13. A Lack of Accountability
14. By Royal Assent
15. Ghosts of the Past
16. ‘Male Order’

About the Author
Chris Moore is an award-winning journalist and the author of six books. He became a local reporter in Northern Ireland in 1968 before joining BBC Northern Ireland in 1979. In 1982 he cut his investigative teeth on Kincora, a scandal whose full dimensions remain to be revealed and which still permeates his work.