A former Sinn Féin MP who quit after posing with a Kingsmill-branded loaf on his head on the anniversary of the Kingsmill massacre will not be prosecuted.
Northern Ireland's Public Prosecution Service said there was insufficient evidence to provide a reasonable prospect of convicting Barry McElduff, 52, over his controversial social media post.
The PPS also said it will also not be taking action against Sinn Féin Assembly member and former Stormont finance minister Mairtin Ó Muilleoir, 58, who shared Mr McElduff's video on Twitter.
Again, the PPS said there was insufficient evidence.
It is understood the PPS was unable to establish that either man deliberately intended to cause offence - a requirement if a prosecution was to have been successful.
Mr McElduff resigned as West Tyrone MP in January after families of some of the 10 Protestant workmen shot dead by republican paramilitaries in 1976 expressed outrage at the video.
The Sinn Féin veteran has always maintained he had not meant the video as a reference to the sectarian murders of 10 Protestant workmen near the south Armagh village of Kingsmill.
He said he was unaware he had posted it on the 42nd anniversary of the attack.
However, Mr McElduff, who had already been suspended by Sinn Féin for three months when he announced his resignation, acknowledged the post had caused unintentional hurt to the Kingsmill families.
He said staying in the job would have impeded efforts to forge reconciliation in Northern Ireland.
Mr McElduff was interviewed by detectives in April and questioned over alleged improper use of a public electronic communications network under the Communications Act 2003, and two alleged public order offences under the Public Order (NI) Order 1989.
Mr Ó Muilleoir, who was questioned by police over an alleged breach of the Communications Act 2003, insisted he had not meant an offence by retweeting what at the time he thought was a "wholly apolitical" post.
Kingsmill is a well-known brand of bread in Northern Ireland.
It shares a name with the village that witnessed one of the most notorious incidents of the Troubles, when gunmen stopped a van carrying textile workers on their way home, identified the Protestant occupants, lined them up at the side of the road and shot them.
Only one of the 11 men shot survived the attack.
In the video Mr McElduff, who had been known for his lighthearted social media contributions, is at one point filmed walking around a shop with a Kingsmill loaf on his head asking where the store kept the bread.
Sinn Féin easily held on to the West Tyrone seat in May's by-election, with solicitor Orfhlaith Begley succeeding Mr McElduff.