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・ Sam McAlees
・ Sam McAllister
・ Sam McAughtry
・ Sam McBratney
・ Sam McBride
・ Sam McBride (ferry)
・ Sam McCall
・ Sam McCandless
・ Sam McCann
・ Sam McCarthy
・ Sam McCluskie
・ Sam McConnell
・ Sam McConnell (third baseman)
・ Sam McCorkle
・ Sam McCrory
Sam McCrory (loyalist)
・ Sam McCullum
・ Sam McDaniel
・ Sam McDonald
・ Sam McDonald County Park
・ Sam McDowell
・ Sam McElroy
・ Sam McFarlane
・ Sam McGee
・ Sam McGredy
・ Sam McGregor
・ Sam McGrew
・ Sam McGuffie
・ Sam McIntosh
・ Sam McKendry


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Sam McCrory (loyalist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Sam McCrory (loyalist)
Samuel "Skelly" McCrory (born 22 March 1965〔Full name and date of birth are taken from police mugshots as pictured in David Lister & Hugh Jordan, ''Mad Dog: The Rise and Fall of Johnny Adair and 'C' Company'', Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing, 2004〕) is a former member of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), an Ulster loyalist paramilitary organisation. In 2008 he came out as gay, and a gay activist.
In his youth McCrory formed a racist skinhead gang along with future UDA Brigadiers Johnny Adair and "Fat" Jackie Thompson. He was knee-capped by the UDA for assaulting a pensioner.
McCrory's first target was Francisco Notarantonio, who was set up by British Army agent Brian Nelson to divert the UDA from targeting Freddie Scappaticci. On 9 October 1987, Notarantonio, a 66-year-old who had been interned in 1971, was shot dead at his home in Ballymurphy.
In July 1992 McCrory, Thompson and two others set off to target Provisional Irish Republican Army leaders Brian Gillen and Martin Lynch. The UDA attackers were ambushed by the British Army on Finaghy Road North on the border between South and West Belfast and were fired upon. McCrory was arrested and received a long prison sentence. He would eventually become the UDA officer in command at the Maze Prison and, as such, attended a meeting with Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Mo Mowlam, during the peace process.
After his release, police accused him of involvement in a gun attack on a bar in August 2000 at the start of a loyalist feud with the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).
In November 2008, he appeared in an episode of ''Danny Dyer's Deadliest Men''. In the programme, Danny Dyer meets McCrory in the Scottish seaside town of Ayr, where McCrory is now living. The two visited McCrory's old stomping ground in Belfast.
In 2015 four men were arrested in Glasgow and charged with plotting to kill to McCrory and Johnny Adair.〔(Celtic player Anthony Stokes 'approached over guns' )〕 Charges against one of the accused were subsequently dropped on 1 July 2015.〔(Man walks free from 'Mad Dog' murder plot trial as charges dropped )〕 The three other defendants, Antoin Duffy, Martin Hughes and Paul Sands, were convicted of the plot on 20 July 2015.〔(Men guilty of Johnny Adair and Sam McCrory murder plot )〕
==References==




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