Pubdate: Mon, 08 Jan 2001
Source: Irish Times, The (Ireland)
Copyright: 2001 The Irish Times
Contact:  11-15 D'Olier St, Dublin 2, Ireland
Fax: + 353 1 671 9407
Website: http://www.ireland.com/
Authors: Paul Tanney and Jim Cusack

TWO MEN STABBED  TO DEATH IN BELFAST

Two men have died in separate violent incidents in Belfast. The first to 
die was Mr George Legge, a loyalist paramilitary whose decapitated body was 
discovered in a field on the eastern outskirts of the city at midday on 
Saturday. He was last seen at 9.45 p.m. on Friday and detectives were 
yesterday attempting to establish his movements after that.

Mr Legge (37) had been a member of the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) in 
east Belfast since his teens. RUC detectives described him as a former 
assassin who had become heavily involved in the drug trade.

In 1992 he was questioned about the murder of a former east Belfast UDA 
leader, Mr Edward McCreery. McCreery was involved in organised crime.

According to local sources yesterday, Mr Legge is thought to have recently 
had a dispute with other UDA figures in east Belfast. It is said that he 
might have been attempting to set up a drug organisation in competition 
with other east Belfast dealers.

Police sources said an exceptional degree of violence was used in his 
murder. He suffered repeated stab wounds to the head and body before his 
killers severed his head with a knife. It was not clear if he was shot.

He is the second member of the UDA to be killed in a drug-related murder in 
the past three weeks. On December 18th, Mr James Rockett from north Belfast 
was beaten and shot to death, again by rival drug dealers in the same 
organisation.

In a separate incident, a young man was found stabbed to death in west 
Belfast's Lenadoon area just after 3 a.m. yesterday.

Mr Martin Crozier (20), from the nearby Poleglass estate, is thought to 
have been walking through the area to stay with his brother when he was set 
upon by a gang of youths.

It is believed locally that he was getting the better of his attackers when 
a knife was produced and he was stabbed. As he slumped to the ground, his 
assailants ran off.

An RUC spokesman said detectives were keen to discover Mr Crozier's 
movements in the Lenadoon area after he was dropped off by a taxi, and said 
it was possible that the perpetrators left the area with bloodstained clothing.

Mr Crozier's death brings to seven the number of people stabbed to death in 
the North in unplanned attacks since Christmas Eve. In each of the previous 
six cases, at least one person has appeared in court charged with murder.

As well as the deaths of six men and one woman, a number of other people 
have been seriously injured in stabbing incidents.

The latest was a 42-year-old man who was found lying at a road junction in 
north Belfast at 12.30 a.m. yesterday. Two men were arrested in connection 
with the incident and a knife was recovered at the scene.
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