
What is the episode about?
Stakeknife episode 2 focuses on the methodical and brutal actions carried out by Freddie Scappaticci, who lived an extreme double life at the heart of the conflict in Northern Ireland for decades. As the leader of the notorious 'Nutting Squad' in the IRA, Scappaticci was tasked with tracking down, interrogating, and eliminating individuals suspected of leaking information to the British authorities. The paradox was that he himself was the British Army's most valuable asset, known by the codename Stakeknife . Host Mark Horgan highlights in this episode how Scappaticci managed to maintain his cover story through extreme violence, and how his British handlers in the Intelligence Corps allowed this violence to continue to protect their source.
The case behind the episode
The case of Freddie Scappaticci is one of the darkest and most complex chapters in 'The Troubles'. From 1978 to 1994, over 40 people were killed by the IRA under accusations of being informants, often after being tortured by the unit Scappaticci controlled. Operation Kenova , a comprehensive police investigation led by Jon Boutcher, later established that British agents and police officers were aware of many of these planned murders but failed to intervene. The episode delves into the ethical and legal dilemmas of allowing an informant to commit serious violent crimes to obtain high-level intelligence. It reveals how the state's protection of Stakeknife led to a failure to protect the victims that the authorities were formally obligated to safeguard.
About the podcast
The podcast is produced by Second Captains and Little Wing for BBC Sounds . The team behind the series consists of the same award-winning producers who created 'Where Is George Gibney?'. Through extensive research, previously unknown recordings, and interviews with relatives and former intelligence personnel, the series paints a portrait of a man and a system that lost its moral compass in the war on terror. Mark Horgan serves as the investigative journalist who ties together the many threads from Belfast's past with today's legal aftermath.