
Spanish police issue update in John George murder case as they reveal main suspect ‘left in a hurry'
Officers announced they have completed their investigation into his murder.
Civil Guard officers have also appeared to rule out further arrests after revealing the evidence they have points to the two suspects being with the 37-year-old victim around the last time he spoke with his dad.
Suspected killer Jonny Smyth was extradited to Spain earlier this month after being arrested at an Airbnb in Braga in northern Portugal on March 25.
The first man arrested, a Czech national named locally as Michal Maly, is on bail but still being investigated as an alleged accomplice.
Detectives had been tight-lipped about their probe, confirming only the two arrests and the discovery of the father-of-two's body in Rojales near Torrevieja on Spain's Costa Blanca on January 7.
Today they released new video of property searches they conducted as part of their investigation and footage from the spot in an orchard where the victim's body was found as they made their first detailed comments about the case.
They also said the main suspect left Spain 'in a hurry' with his girlfriend, abandoning his pets, 'to evade capture' after Billy George reported his son missing.
A spokesman for the Civil Guard in Alicante said: 'The Civil Guard has completed its investigation into the disappearance of a young Irish man in December last year following the arrest in Braga in Portugal in April and the subsequent extradition of the alleged material author of that man's homicide.
'The victim's body was found around two weeks after his father reported him missing and thought was in Benidorm visiting friends.
'Investigators found the body in Rojales near Torrevieja after an intense search of the area sparked by the fact they suspected the man's disappearance was involuntary and believed the crime linked to it could have been committed there.
'Before the discovery officers had already managed to identify the two suspects. One of them was arrested the same day the body was found.'
Inside luxury apartment where NI suspect hid out before arrest over the murder of John George
Saying the police investigation began on December 21 when Mr George reported his son missing after flying to Spain to look for him, the force spokesman added: 'Officers began a reconstruction of what could have happened from the moment the victim vanished after reaching Spain on December 6.
'They located people who had been in contact with him from that day and spoke to witnesses.
'The evidence they gathered pointed to the man found dead being with the two people who became the principal suspects around the time he last contacted his father.
'The first arrest occurred a couple of hours after the body was found, that of a Czech national aged 32 based in Torrevieja who is suspected of being an accomplice and is currently on bail.
'The Civil Guard continued after that with its work of locating the other suspect, the man believed to be the killer, who according to information gathered by investigators allegedly fled Spain after the homicide and following the reporting of his disappearance to police.
'He left the country in a hurry with his girlfriend, even abandoning his two pet dogs at his home in Orihuela on the Costa Blanca as he sought to evade capture.
'The Civil Guard requested the issue of a European Arrest Warrant for him and the cooperation of other police forces through Interpol and he was located in Portugal on March 25 and extradited to Spain on April 3.'
Although Spanish police did not formally name Smyth in a lengthy statement officers have described him as someone with 'previous in his country of origin.'
It was not immediately clear if they were referring to him having a criminal record with convictions, or as being someone known to police because of previous arrests.
He has been remanded in custody pending an ongoing investigation led by a judge in Torrevieja.
The Civil Guard said: 'The autopsy has revealed death occurred the night of December 14 from gunshot wounds, the same day the victim spoke with his father for the last time and a week before the dad reported him missing."
The video footage the police force released showed police removing tin foil wrapped-packages from an air conditioning vent during a property search.
It was not immediately clear which of the two suspects' properties were being searched in the footage.
The defence lawyer of the man described as an alleged accomplice, the first individual arrested, has attributed the decision to detain his client to his 'recent friendship' with Smyth.

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


Daily Mirror
6 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Maddie McCann suspect's 'chilling encounter that could've saved young Brit'
Hazel Behan was 20 years old when a man wearing a balaclava and wielding a blade broke into her apartment in Praia da Luz and violently raped her three times The woman who claims to have survived a gruelling sex attack at the hands of the main suspect in Madeleine McCann's disappearance has spoken in detail about the violent attack. Irish national Hazel Behan, then 20, was in Praia da Luz in Portugal for a working holiday back in 2004, but rather than an idyllic vacation, she suffered a brutal and prolonged assault at the hands of the sexual deviant. Hazel was sleeping alone when Brueckner is said to have broken in to her apartment and raped her. Speaking to 60 Minutes, Hazel explained: " I laid in bed and I fell asleep, [when] I was woken by somebody calling my name." Oblivious as to how the stranger knew her name, she awoke to see a balaclava-clad man standing over her, blade in hand. "I thought I was going to die," Hazel said. "He stood above me with the knife so I just thought he was going to just chop my head off. That sounds so dramatic but that's exactly what was going through my head." The man, thought to be Brueckner, then dragged the young woman across the room and raped her three times - one on the breakfast bar and twice in her bedroom. He also beat her with a black leather whip he had apparently brought with him, and even filmed the horror ordeal, Hazel said. The attacker then fled and never returned, but the trauma of that night still haunts Hazel 21 years later. "Whether he killed me physically or not, spiritually, I was gone. I was done that day. I didn't exist anymore," she said. Hazel reported the assault to local police who she accused of being dismissive of what had happened to her. Her bedsheets were covered in blood and her fingernails, but she said police failed to collect the evidence. Hazel said they continued to follow her for the next few weeks to analyse her behaviour. She believes they were checking if she was sexually promiscuous or not. The Irish woman first became entangled in the Madeleine McCann case when UK police shared a picture of prime suspect Christian Brueckner. Hazel - who has waived her right to anonymity - claimed she knew on first sight that Brueckner was the same violent rapist who attacked her in 2004, three years before Madeleine's disappearance. She took the allegations to a German court, where she provided painstaking detail about the attack, but the convicted paedophile was acquitted. The reason for his acquittal was a lack of evidence, but Hazel is sure it's the same man - and believes the reason he was let loose was because of the failures of Portuguese police to collect the DNA evidence that could have him banged to rights. Hazel is also sure that Brueckner is responsible for Madeleine's disappearance. She said: "I believe he's the person who took her. I believe he's the person who carried out crimes on me. If they had investigated my crime, I believe that Madeleine would still be at home with her parents." Madeleine McCann went missing during a family holiday in the resort of Praia da Luz on the Algarve in Portugal on May 3 2007. Fast forward 18 years and there has been no positive sighting and no one has been charged with her abduction, but her parents have never given up hope. Following the latest search for Madeleine this week which saw German and Portuguese police descended on several properties in an area of southern Portugal close to Praia da Luz several detectives have had their say on the latest developments in the case. Former British Police detective Mark Williams-Thomas, who has worked on some of the world's most high profile missing persons cases, has given his take on the new searches for Madeleine McCann. He started the six-minute rant on X by saying: "So no surprise the search in Portugal has come to nothing. I said it would, the information they were working on was very, very sketchy, nothing concrete at all. That area had been searched previously; it was really a pointless exercise." He added: "I do find it very interesting when over the last couple of days I've read articles in newspapers and you've got certain individuals out there saying this is really strong information, this is the best, yeah this is likely to be the breakthrough. I was very clear from the beginning, I said it's not going to happen, it's not going to be a breakthrough."


Scottish Sun
9 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Brit man dies while go-karting with his two children at largest outdoors track on Spanish holiday island
Paramedics tried to revive him for more than an hour after reaching the area but were unable to save him GO-KART HORROR Brit man dies while go-karting with his two children at largest outdoors track on Spanish holiday island Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A BRITISH man has died while go-karting in Spain at the largest outdoors track on a Spanish holiday island. The 62-year-old is said to have tragically gone into cardiac arrest while he was with his two children at a track near the town of Ciutadella in tourist hotspot Menorca. 4 A Brit man has died while go-karting in Spain Credit: Solarpix 4 The 62-year-old is said to have gone into cardiac arrest Credit: Solarpix 4 Ciutadella Menorca marina Port sunset town hall and cathedral in Balearic islands Credit: Getty Paramedics tried to revive him for more than an hour after reaching the area but were unable to save him. The Brit man's wife had stayed at a villa where he and his family were staying in Cala En Porter, the south of the island. The alarm was raised around 3pm this afternoon. The tragedy occurred at an outdoors go-kart track named Castillo Menorca - the largest track on the holiday island. It's on the main Menorca NE1 road between Ciutadella and Ferreries. It was not immediately clear if the Brit lived on the island or was holidaying there. Police have yet to make any comment and a post-mortem is expected to take place tomorrow. A few weeks ago, two holidaymakers were left injured after plunging their golf buggy down a 23-foot ravine at a Marbella golf club. One of the two men had to be airlifted to hospital after falling down the ravine with the buggy. The other holidaymaker managed to leap from the buggy as it veered over when they went through a protective barrier alongside a path between the 17th and 18th tees. The miracle escape occurred as the two men prepared to finish a round of golf with other pals before a birthday party. Officials confirmed both men, aged 29 and 46, were Irish and previously said an investigation into the accident was still ongoing.


Scottish Sun
a day ago
- Scottish Sun
Ross Monaghan: From Glasgow street thug to running with global cartel bosses
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) EIGHT years ago Ross Monaghan was lucky to escape after an attempt on his life in broad daylight. But last weekend, the Lyons senior gang member was shot dead along with Eddie Lyons Jnr in a brutal hit in Fuengirola, Costa del Sol. 6 Ross Monaghan was shot dead along with Eddie Lyons Jnr in the Costa del Sol Credit: Alan MacGregor Ewing - The Sun Glasgow 6 The pair were shot in a horror gangland bloodbath at Monaghan's Irish bar in Fuengirola 6 A masked gunman shot Lyons Jnr dead outside the pub before turning his attention to Monaghan Credit: Les Gallagher - The Sun Glasgow Monaghan had a £250,000 price tag on his head over a feud with the Spanish drugs cartel linked to the south of England, it's been claimed. Sources say threats had been made in the months leading up to Saturday's double execution, but it wasn't the first time that someone had tried to kill Monaghan. In January 2017, it was just like any other day in the Glasgow area of Penilee as parents took their children to school. But little did they know there was a gunman lying in wait with a kids buggy which had a firearm in it. The gunman honed in on target Monaghan and fired two shots, one hitting him in the shoulder, the other missing. Monaghan was wearing a bulletproof vest at the time and quickly fled to Spain following the attack. Mark Richardson and Martyn Fitzsimmons were both tried then cleared of the gangland hit on Monaghan at the time. Monaghan had previously been cleared of killing Kevin 'Gerbil' Carroll after a judge ruled there was insufficient evidence to convict him. The Gerbil was a feared Daniels clan enforcer known for extreme violence to anyone who got in his way or crossed him. Carroll's earliest brush with the law came in 2004 when he was charged with attempted murder. The FULL story of Scotland's biggest gangster Jamie 'The Iceman' Stevenson Coming This Sunday He was accused of shooting John Madden, a pal of Eddie Lyons Snr, with an AK-47 but the case later collapsed. Carroll, who was from Milton, then made the headlines in 2006 when he was hit in the stomach in a drive by shooting. Four years later, Carroll and associate Ross Sherlock were hit at 10pm one evening as they stood talking to others at the roadside in Bishopbriggs next to their BMW X5 - a favourite set of wheels for criminals at the time. Nobody has been charged with that crime which left Carroll fighting for his life in Glasgow Royal Infirmary under the guard of armed police. The Gerbil was then shot dead in the Asda car park in Robroyston in January 2010 in an attack that took just 25 seconds. A car pulled up just before 1.30pm, two gunmen got out and fired 13 shots into the back of The Gerbil's Audi A3 as stunned shoppers looked on. Monaghan was arrested in July that year and put on trial for the gangland hit but he denied all charges against him and lodged a special defence of incrimination against eight people. The trial collapsed due to insufficient evidence. 6 The Gerbil was shot dead in the Asda car park in Robroyston in January 2010 Credit: Universal News and Sport (Europe) 6 Monaghan was arrested in July that year and put on trial for the gangland hit but he denied all charges Credit: PA:Press Association Eddie Lyons Jnr, Stephen Lyons and Ross Monaghan all grew up in Milton. In 2000, the Lyons family had infiltrated a publicly funded community centre in the area. They took control of the Chirnsyde Community Initiative which received over £1.4million in taxpayer funding and turned out to be a front for organised crime and laid the groundwork for a bloody feud with the rival Daniel Crime Clan. Eddie's father ended up in the dock after he admitted racking up more than a quarter of a million pounds in mortgage frauds by giving lenders fake income details. In April 2016, Eddie Jnr and Monaghan later appeared before the same court but were cleared of a vicious street attack on three men outside a bar in East Dunbartonshire which took place in April 2016. But the trial collapsed when two of the alleged victims said they had no memory of what happened to them. After the attempt on his life outside the school in Penilee, Monaghan fled to Spain and he struck up a relationship with the Irish Kinahan crime cartel. Monaghan is said to have been instrumental in building an alliance between the Lyons family and the world's most wanted gang when he boldly approached godfather Daniel Kinahan several years ago. He formed a relationship with the global mob boss that has prevailed ever since, giving the Lyons extra power and control over Scotland's illegal drug trade. Former top cop Graeme Pearson said: 'Monaghan started out as a young man trying to make his way in his business and would have to be trusted to do that. 'He was part of a group which became known for extreme violence. Monaghan going on trial for murder and being acquitted through lack of evidence proved his bottle to the gang. 'Then he was shot at and survived. He earned his stripes in that world. "And it all becomes part of a growing criminal CV. But people like Monaghan make enemies everywhere.' Pearson says he tried to warn of the threat posed by super cartels 20 years ago. He said: 'The South Americans realised their relationship with America was breaking down. Their drugs and money were being seized and they started looking for another business plan. 'Europe was ready and waiting for cocaine. The nation states had lowered their borders, so moving between them became very easy. 'The only problem was getting the product in. It started with West Africa, then Spain and then the Dutch ports. 'Gangs from all over Europe, which had previously been involved with other types of drugs, sex trafficking and theft, all became interested. 'Glasgow gangs were involved in shoplifting jewellery and gold and had contacts in other countries who were willing to buy and sell. Unfortunately, I couldn't get the authorities to pay much attention.' 6 Monaghan boldly approached godfather Daniel Kinahan several years ago Credit: The Sun Monaghan's links with the Kinahan cartel Irish Sun crime editor Stephen Breen, who wrote the book Kinahan Assassins along with colleague John Hand, knows all about the Irish crime cartel. He revealed that Ross Monaghan came up while the pair were doing research for their book. Stephen said: 'Ross Monaghan had cropped up in terms of someone who had connections to Thomas 'Bomber' Kavanagh. 'He's now serving time for drug trafficking but it shows you the Kinahan reach, the tentacles are spread far and wide. 'We were doing research for the book and his name came up in terms of having meetings around 2016-2017 with the Kinahan organisation. 'The Kinahan organisation had a branch in the UK, and the CEO of that branch was Thomas 'Bomber' Kavanagh. 'He was meeting individuals from Glasgow, from Liverpool, from Birmingham, from London and it was all about the wholesale trafficking of drugs into the UK. He added: 'You always have organised crime groups calling on their associates, calling on their resources and their contacts across Europe for help if a gangland war takes place. 'It's very possible that this could happen on this occasion although the Kinahans have been fairly decimated by the investigations of the Irish authorities and targeting those who were prepared to take up the gun on their behalf.' Last Saturday, Monaghan was watching the Champions League final with Eddie Lyons Jnr in his own bar in Fuengirola when the pair were shot in a horror gangland bloodbath. A masked gunman blasted Lyons Jnr dead outside the pub before turning his attention to Monaghan, who was shot several times as he tried to scramble for cover. Terrified customers and staff hid under tables and chairs and it's believed Monaghan may have had a £250,000 price tag in his head over a feud with a Spanish drugs cartel linked to the south of England. Spanish cops were able to ID executed Monaghan and Eddie Jnr as they 'knew them well'. Scottish Tory leader Russell Findlay remembers watching Monaghan in court as he tried to dupe jurors into believing he was a 'smart, besuited and respectable young man'. The ex-crime reporter said: 'This was a complete fiction. He was a dangerous drug-dealing, gangland thug. 'It's usually the case in this world that foot soldiers end up in prison or dead. 'You would think the penny might drop that those ordering and directing the drugs and violence are often left counting the money. 'The Spanish authorities and Scottish counterparts should be asking themselves how on earth a drug-dealing thug and known member of a major international drugs gang appeared to have the ownership of a prominent business which quite literally had his name above the door? 'A guy like that should never have had the ability to put his name on assets for which the only source of their funding has been drugs."