Tracknum: ..32.19990908183353.00fd99f0 Pubdate: 8 Sep 1999 Source: Belfast Telegraph (UK) Copyright: 1999 Belfast Telegraph Newspapers Ltd. Contact: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/ Author: Enda McClafferty UNCLE OF QUINNS 'GAVE DRUGS TO TODDLER' AN UNCLE of the murdered Quinn brothers was accused of supplying drugs to the three-year-old daughter of the man charged with the killings, a court has heard. The startling accusation was made by a barrister representing Thomas Robert Garfield Gilmour (24) who yesterday went on trial for the murder of Jason (8), Mark (10) and Richard (12) Quinn. The children died when their home in Carnany Park, Ballymoney was petrol bombed on July 12, 1998. Defence counsel Arthur Harvey QC stated on two occasions that their uncle Colum "Colly" Quinn had given drugs to children in the estate. The children, he said, included Gilmour's three-year-old daughter. He made the accusation while cross examining friends of Mr Quinn both of whom strenously denied the claims. However, one of them, William Charles Cage, admitted that he and Mr Quinn had been involved in "wrecking and robbing homes" in the estate. But he stressed: "That was all in the past."The witness also told how just weeks before the petrol bomb attack Gilmour had warned Colly Quinn that "he would be got". The threat was made during a row outside Mr Quinn's Carnany home, which had been burned out in blast bomb attack a few weeks earlier. Mr Cage, who at the time was the boyfriend of the Quinn brothers' aunt Collette, told the court he had moved out of the house where the murders took place, shortly before the attack. His friend Robert Howard also gave evidence about threats made against the Quinn brothers' uncle. He described how the accused had warned them that "anybody that took drugs was going out". Under cross examination by Mr Harvey, the witness admitted that Mr Quinn had also threatened the accused. Earlier, the court heard neighbours describe how they tried in vain to rescue the three Quinn children. One of them, David Heatherington recalled how he had spoken to one of the boys through an upstairs window. "Richard Quinn was at the window. He said he was getting hot, he was frightened and his feet were burning," Mr Heatherington said. "He told me he could not get out, because he was scared of cutting himself on the window."Although she was in court the boys mother Chrissie did not take the stand. Instead her statement was read out decribing how she too had tried to save her children. "I was awoken by the boys crying 'mummy, smoke.' I went to their room but could not find them. I then went to the window and screamed for help. "Someone shouted to me to jump and the next thing I remember was sitting in the ambulance."The heartbroken mother also told how a number of residents in the estate had received a bullet in the post a few days before the attack. And because she did not receive a bullet, the young Catholic mother felt that "she was finally being accepted in the estate". Outlining the case against Gilmour, Crown Prosecutor Gordon Kerr QC said there is evidence of a "grievance" between the accused and the Quinn brothers' uncle Colum. He added that Gilmour had played a full part in the murders, along with two other men. "He drove two men to the house on the night of the incident, he knew the purpose was to attack the Quinns and that there was a a petrol bomb involved," the prosecuting barrister said. "The circumstances in which the attack was carried out, including the timing and the obvious occupancy of the house was done in the conetmplation the the occupants would be killed."The non-jury trial, which is being heard before Lord Justice William McCollum, is expected to last two weeks.