
Major development in double murder of UK gangsters in holiday hotspot
Police in Spain have confirmed a man has been arrested in the UK on suspicion of the Costa del Sol shootings of gangsters Ross Monaghan and Eddie Lyons Jnr.
The BBC has reported the suspect was taken into custody in Liverpool by Merseyside Police under an international arrest warrant issued by the Spanish authorities. Spanish cops have yet to make a formal statement.
But a well-placed Spanish police source said today when asked about the arrest: 'The specialist UDYCO Costa del Sol police group which is leading the investigation has identified this man.
'As they couldn't find him in the places where they thought he could have been in Malaga, they asked a court in Fuengirola which has opened a judicial probe into the shootings to issue an international arrest warrant for this man.
'Police in the UK have arrested the man in Liverpool under this international warrant.'
No details have yet emerged about the suspect's age or nationality.
He is now facing extradition to Spain so he can be questioned about the May 31 murders.
The suspect's return to Spain would be delayed if he decides to oppose extradition.Spanish officials said days after the murders they had 'no doubt' they would catch the gunman who shot dead Monaghan and Lyons Jnr.
Javier Salas was the first Spanish government representative to confirm the victims were Scottish after the horror shooting at Monaghan's Irish pub Monaghans Fuengirola.
And he spoke again three days later to say he was convinced police would find and arrest the culprit.
Graphic CCTV footage first published by Spanish TV showed one of the two men murdered being cornered inside the premises and shot in the chest and stomach from close range.
The killer, dressed in black, was filmed shooting Glaswegian Ross Monaghan, 43, dead after targeting his pal Lyons Jnr outside the pub seconds earlier as terrified tourists and locals ran for cover.
Spanish police sources confirmed they believed the killer was blond following claims detectives haven't commented on that he could also be Scottish.
He fled on foot but was driven from the scene by an accomplice in a car waiting nearby which headed along the old N340 dual carriageway east towards the resort of Benalmadena.
Officers from the elite Spanish National Police Costa del Sol-based Anti-Drug and Organised Crime Unit UDYCO have headed the ongoing probe, although they are reporting to a Fuengirola-based investigating judge coordinating the operation.
Career criminal Monaghan, who fled Scotland for Spain after a failed attempt on his life outside a Glasgow primary school in 2017, was tried but acquitted over the murder of notorious Glasgow hood Kevin 'Gerbil' Carroll at an Asda car park in 2010.
In August 2017 he and Eddie Lyons Jr, both members of the Lyons Glasgow crime family, were cleared of being involved in a brutal street attack on three men outside the Campsie bar in Bishopbriggs, East Dunbartonshire.
The shooting in Spain came amid a violent gang war that has ripped through Scotland since March said to have started over a fallout over drugs.
The gun murders followed the fatal shooting nearly seven weeks ago of a 32-year-old British man in nearby Calahonda a 15-minute drive from the Irish bar towards Marbella.
He was shot dead around 8pm on April 21 in a professional hit as he headed back to his car after finishing a football match with friends.
The killers fled in a getaway car that was later torched. Police are investigating the brutal assassination as a drug-related gang shooting but have yet to make any arrests.
The victim has not been named but was known to come from Liverpool.
Reports at the time described the incident as the fourth shooting so far that month on the Costa del Sol, where rival gangs have increasingly used extreme violence to settle scores and a number of international mafias are known to have a base.
Four days before the Calahonda shooting a 34-year-old man was rushed to the Costa del Sol Hospital in Marbella after being shot outside a nightclub in the famous Costa del Sol resort.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Scottish footballer sends opponent to HOSPITAL after on-field confrontation turns violent
The victim required stitches and for his tooth to be re-inserted after the brief confrontation Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A SCOTTISH football match turned violent as one player sent another to hospital after a brief confrontation. The offending player has appeared in court and pleaded guilty to the charge. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 A Scottish footballer was sent to Queen Elizabeth University Hospital after a confrontation on the pitch Credit: Alamy 2 The offender appeared at Dumbarton Sheriff Court and pleaded guilty to the offence Credit: Alamy Stephen McGachy, of Arrochar, was playing in an over-40s match at the Mountblow football pitches in Clydebank. Just after the hour mark, McGachy was fouled by an opponent and became embroiled in an argument over the severity of the tackle. The player pushed McGachy, who then knocked the other man to the ground. He split his lip and was taken to the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital, where he needed 10 stitches and his incisor tooth had to be re-inserted. McGachy appeared at Dumbarton Sheriff Court and pleaded guilty to the February 19, 2023 assault to severe injury and permanent disfigurement. He had originally appeared on petition for a more serious version of the charge. Sheriff Kevin Duffy accepted that McGachy was a first offender and he pleaded guilty at the earliest stage, and that the crime was under provocation. He fined McGachy £400, plus a victim surcharge of £20, as well as having to pay £200 in compensation to the other player. Sheriff Duffy said: "Clearly this offence is out of character." McGachy's lawyer Judith Reid added: "This matter has hung over him for some considerable period of time. Shocking moment blood-soaked thug throws Buckfast bottle as brawl erupts during Celtic fans' trophy day party "The statement from the match official makes clear that the complainer pushed the accused. "Both teams were up in umbrage about the tackle. "A man who had difficulties in his childhood has done everything to move on and lead a trouble-free life. He has not been in any trouble since. "He fully appreciates the complainer had suffered an injury and might merit compensation, despite the provocation. "I think the injuries are more unfortunate as a result of the physical altercation that started as a result of the complainer." Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page


Daily Mirror
3 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Jay Slater's mates tracked down after witness appeal - where they all are now
Police have tried to track down several people needed for providing witness testimony at Jay Slater's inquest - but several of them failed to turn up to proceedings Tragic Jay Slater 's mates have been tracked down after they seemed to disappear into the wind when the late teen's inquest was opened in May after an urgent witness appeal was launched by police. Missing Jay, 19, was found dead last year following a month-long search in the mountains of Tenerife, having disappeared following a night out on the Spanish territory with several friends on June 17. Lucy Law, Brandon Hargreaves, Brandon Hodgson and two men with whom he stayed at a rented AirBnB the night before he went missing, spoke to local and British media about the teen. But they failed to appear at an inquest into his death launched in late May, which was paused following a desperate plea from Jay's mum to find them. Some of those mates have now been tracked down, with the Daily Mail reporting their last known locations as the inquest prepares to resume. Several of them have been traced to sunkissed overseas destinations not unlike the territory where he went missing last year. Lucy Law Lucy Law was one of two friends who came on holiday with Jay from his native Lancashire last year, and the 18-year-old helped get early search efforts off the ground, assisting the teen's family when they arrived to help. She posted a heartfelt tribute to her late friend when his body was found, writing: "Always the happiest and most smiley person in the room, you was one of a kind Jay and you'll be missed more than you know. "I'm sure you'll 'have your dancing shoes polished and ready' waiting for us all. We all love you buddy. Fly high.' and attended his funeral, but failed to appear at the inquest." She also attended Jay's funeral. She has reportedly returned to Tenerife for a holiday, her stepfather has said. He added that she was also on holiday when she was called to give witness testimony at the inquest earlier this year, with her family unaware it was going on at the time. Bradley Hargreaves Another friend from Lancashire who travelled to Tenerife with Jay, Bradley Hargreaves also regularly spoke with the press after search efforts were launched. When Jay went missing on June 17, Bradley, also known as Bradley Geoghegan, was sent his location, identifying him as being in the small village of Masca. He also posted a tribute when his body was found, saying: "Nothing be the same without you. Rest easy brother. Love you always." He did not appear as a witness at the inquest, having informed the coroner's office he would be abroad on a holiday book last October. He is believed to be in Greece. Brandon Hodgson Brandon Hodgson was the third Lancashire friend to jet to Tenerife alongside Jay, and was one of the last people with whom Jay spoke before going missing. Investigator Mark Williams-Thomas said Brandon, now 20, had received a text from the teen saying: "I've started walking." Brandon added: "He was laughing at first, then he sent me his location. On the phone he said to me 'I've been walking for half an hour', I told him to go back and he said, 'I've already been walking for half an hour, I'm not going back, I don't want to go back, I just want to go home." Brandon is now "liasing with police" after Lancashire Police officers attended his address in the run up to the hearing with a witness summons without answer. Like Jay's other mates, it has been discovered that he is currently on holiday, also abroad but in an undisclosed location. Ayub Qassim Ayub Qassim, a fellow Brit but not a friend from home, had invited Jay back to his rented AirBnB in the Tenerife mountain village of Masca the night before he went missing. The 31-year-old, a convicted drug dealer also known as "Johnny Vegas" had let him stay overnight, and claimed he told Jay he would drive him home after the teen told him "this woman told me I can get a bus every 10 minutes". Mr Qassim told Mark Williams-Thomas: "I told him that he's mad, there's no bus that's coming here every 10 minutes, chill out for a bit and I'll drop you off later on "He said, 'No, no I've got to go to Los Cristianos, I need to scram, I need to chip out'. There's nothing more that I could do. "I saw him walk off maybe down the steps. I maybe shut the door and said if you need me..." The Metropolitan Police had tried to serve him a witness summons at his last known address in Barking, East London, but neighbours informed the service that he was no longer at the address and living abroad. Steven Roccas Steven "Rocky" Roccas was staying with Mr Qassim at the Masca AirBnB, but little more is known about the man beyond this. He kept his head down while Mr Qassim spoke about his last contact with Jay, and his identity was revealed for the first time at the teen's inquest. Met Police officers had tried to serve him a witness summons at his address in London, but found he was no longer residing there before later tracking him to a business via an email address he had provided Spanish police. But the business was shuttered - having reportedly been closed for three years - and Mr Roccas has not been found.


Daily Record
7 hours ago
- Daily Record
Isla Bryson demands to be moved back to female jail after slamming court ruling
Despite the sex offender admitting that life in male jails has meant being able to forge romantic relationships with male prisoners, Bryson says a challenge of the legal ruling could see a move from the male estate. Isla Bryson has slammed a court ruling on biological sex and demanded to be moved back to a female prison. The convicted double rapist, born Adam Graham, began to identify as a woman called Isla while awaiting trial for rape. The case caused political waves after the rapist was sent to female jail Cornton Vale before then FM Nicola Sturgeon announced a switch to all-male HMP Edinburgh and later HMP Glenochil. In April, the Supreme Court ruled a woman is defined by biological sex under equalities law and the Scottish Government is facing calls to move all biological men out of women's jails. The decision came after feminist group For Women Scotland (FWS) challenged the Scottish Government's 2018 ruling that transgender women could be included as female in laws requiring 50/50 representation on public boards. Bryson backs plans by Victoria McCloud, the UK's only judge to ever publicly say they are transgender, to challenge the government at the European Court of Human Rights over the ruling and plans her own appeal there. Despite the sex offender admitting last week that life in male jails has meant being able to forge romantic relationships with male prisoners, Bryson says a challenge of the legal ruling could see a move from the male estate. Speaking to the Sunday Mail in a phone call from jail, Bryson said: 'No matter what you think or how you look at it, trans women will always be women. "Even if you don't agree with it, then that's your opinion. We are not going to go away. Sooner or later judges will have to put trans women back in women's prisons because if they don't, trans women have the right to take it to the European court and they will. 'If they win and the courts say women have to go to women's prisons, I will probably get moved to a women's prison.' After the outcry over Bryson, trans prisoners faced a move to male jails but prison chiefs opted to let them stay if they had not shown violence to women. However, Alba MSP Ash Regan said: 'The perversity of a double rapist demanding access to women's prisons sums up why we must end this dangerous experiment of gender ideology eroding sex-based rights – male entitlement masquerading as rights must never be at the expense of women's safety, dignity and consent. 'Eight weeks after the Supreme Court ruling, ministers dither while lobbyists stoke the mis-information they helped create. 'Now even Isla Bryson/Adam Graham – the double rapist who shocked the nation – joins a small but vocal chorus in demanding the law be overturned to allow him access to a woman's jail. 'If this is not the wake-up call needed for John Swinney's government, then a third first minister may be sacrificed on the altar of gender ideology.' Scottish Tory shadow minister for victims Sharon Dowey said: 'These abhorrent comments from a double rapist will anger Scots. Not only is this call deeply insulting to his victims, it also highlights how the SNP's gender self-ID policy has become so embedded in Scotland's justice system.' FWS's Susan Smith said: 'For all the activists and politicians who've been trying to undermine the Supreme Court ruling and claim this about walking groups and toilets, this intervention from a notorious double rapist highlights it is vulnerable women whose safety would be threatened by any challenge or change to the law.' The Scottish Prison Service said it had received the Supreme Court ruling and is 'considering any potential impact it may have'. The Scottish Government said it 'has been clear that we accept the Supreme Court judgement'.