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Two more charged over feud murder Two men remanded over feud murder
(1 day later)
Two more men have been charged with the murder of Ulster Defence Association member Tommy English, the police have said. Two more men have appeared in court in connection with the murder of UDA man Tommy English in 2000.
The forty-year-old was shot dead in front of his wife at their home in Newtownabbey during a loyalist feud in October 2000. David Miller, 37, and Ronald Bowe, 32, both of Mount Vernon Road, Belfast, are accused of murdering Mr English.
The two men, aged 37 and 32, will appear at Laganside Magistrates Court on Thursday. Mr Miller faces a further two counts of membership of the UVF. Both were remanded in custody until next week by Belfast Magistrates Court.
A total of 11 people have now been charged with the murder. So far 11 men have been charged in connection with the killing during a loyalist feud.
The 37-year-old has also been charged with membership of a prescribed organisation. Nine men face murder charges and two have admitted aiding and abetting murder.
Tommy English was murdered seven hours after another man, Bertie Rice, 63, who worked for the Progressive Unionist Party, was killed in north Belfast. Mr English, 40, was gunned down in front of his wife at their home on the Ballyduff estate, Newtownabbey in October 2000.
The case is being brought by the PSNI's Historical Enquiries Team. Charges were brought following a reinvestigation by the Historical Enquiries Team - a police unit set up to examine unsolved murders.
A detective sergeant told Belfast Magistrates Court he could connect both men to the charges.
The officer confirmed Mr Bowe attended Antrim Police Station on Wednesday by prior arrangement and had been questioned during the original inquiry in 2000.