
Who are Lyons crime family as two key hoods shot dead by gunman in Spanish bar
Ross Monaghan, 43, and Eddie Lyons Jnr, 46, were among the most high profile underworld figures before they were shot dead at Monaghan's bar in the Costa Del Sol.
The Lyons clan is one of Scotland's most notorious organised crime gangs.
The Glasgow based outfit have been involved in a bloody feud with the Daniels clan dating back more than 20 years.
It is claimed the feud between the two crime families first began over control of drugs turf. In 2001 a large stash of Daniels' cocaine was stolen from a house in the Milton area of Glasgow and sold on to the Lyons.
The rivalry between the two crime family networks has seen shootings, stabbings, hit and runs, firebomb attacks, police corruption and drug trafficking busts.
Two of the gang's major players Ross Monaghan, 43, and Eddie Lyons Jnr, 46, were shot dead at a bar in Spain on Saturday. The high profile underworld figures were executed by a gunman at Monaghan's Bar in the Costa Del Sol.
The Record understands the shootings are linked to Scotland's ongoing gangland war which broke out earlier this year.
The underworld feud first erupted after Edinburgh kingpin Mark Richardson's cronies stole a £500,000 stash of cocaine from a Dubai-based "Mr Big" known as Ross McGill, using fake cash.
The Lyons gang were thought to be supporting Dubai-based McGill who waged a war on Mark Richardson - and associates the Daniels family.
The notorious Lyons crime clan are set to seek bloody revenge after the double hit on two of their key figures.
Here we take a look at members of the infamous Lyons clan.
Steven Lyons
The family is headed up by Steven Lyons, the son of former boss Eddie Lyons Snr. Steven fled Scotland nearly 20 years ago after a crucial incident sparked a war forever.
In November 2006 a Daniel's associate Kevin Carroll allegedly used a 4x4 and a tow rope to topple the headstone of Eddie Snr's son, Garry, who was only eight when he died of leukaemia in 1991.
The desecration of his grave marked a new low.
In December 2006 two men in long black coats, wearing masks and holding handguns walked into the forecourt of Applerow Motors in Lambhill and started shooting.
David Lyons, brother of the head of the clan, Eddie Snr, took cover while the attack claimed the life of nephew 21-year-old Michael.
Steven Lyons and family associate Robert "Piggy" Pickett were both injured. Piggy hadn't long come out of prison on the attempted murder of the Rennie brothers in the Paisley drug wars.
Pickett was so badly hurt he lost a kidney. Steven was left nursing wounds but survived the assassination attempt and fled Scotland for good almost immediately.
Shooters Raymond Anderson and James McDonald were caught and sentenced to a Scottish record term of 35 years each, later reduced on appeal to 30.
He is now living a plush life in Dubai after initially settling in a Spanish bolthole when he fled abroad.
Eddie Lyons Snr
The former head of the clan enjoyed immunity and support in the early days. In 1992 Eddie Snr, already well known to police, was given disused Chirnsyde School in Milton for a 'community project'.Three years later, while he was actually developing his crime empire in the gang hut, he was given public funding.
The 67-year-old was cleared of attempted murder in 2001 and was not charged three years later when police seized £63,000 in alleged drug money from his home.
His brother John was shot in a gangland attack in 2003.
In 2005 Bridget McConnell, head of culture and leisure at Glasgow council and wife of Scottish First Minister Jack, recommended renewing the funding, which was agreed. And it continued for more than a year while the range war continued.
Years later Eddie ended up in the dock after he admitted racking up more than £250,000 in mortgage frauds by giving lenders fake income details.
Glasgow Sheriff Court heard he bought property in East Kilbride and Cumbernauld by self-certifying on mortgage applications.
At the time he was sentenced to community pay back. Glasgow sheriff Robert Anthony told him: "As far as I'm concerned, you are a first offender and a man of mature years who has never caused any trouble to society."
David Lyons
Ten days after his nephew was shot dead at his garage, David Lyons received a 'ransom note' delivered to his home.
It said: "The boys owe me £25,000 and I want what's owed to me. It's for drugs. They all know what it's about. The money doesn't matter to me as it's got to be paid to the piper. I don't want the police, the boys, not even your wife, knowing about it. If you keep them out of this then all your lives can go back to normal as we are all losing money through this. If you have any tricks for my pickup man then all the deals are off. Remember to keep your mouth shut. No cameras, no surveillance, as the pickup man doesn't know nothing so he's no use to you. Drop off, 4pm Saturday. I'll draw you a map and X will mark the spot."
Years later the garage owner lost his licence to carry out MOT tests after the police claimed he was "involved in serious and organised crime, including trafficking and supply of class A drugs".
Officers had urged vehicle inspection agency VOSA to strip him of the licence as part of a strategy to target the business interests of suspected criminals.
He threatened to put £40,000 of his own money on the line take Strathclyde Police to court and prove he's innocent of his family's crimes.
He died in 2022 aged 63 after falling outside his home in Cumbernauld.
He passed away at Monklands General Hospital in Airdrie.
A hospital insider claims that around 60 people visited the grandfather's bedside, including his son Paul Lyons, who was escorted from prison where he is serving time for a road rage killing.
Paul Lyons
The son of David Lyons, Paul was jailed in 2010 for the road rage killing of van driver Mark Fleeman, 32.
He hit speeds of 100mph after a night out as he chased down his victim on the M74. Father-of-two Mr Fleeman died at the scene after Lyons rammed his van, causing it to leave the road and overturn.
Lee Allsup, Mr Fleeman's 17-year-old passenger, also suffered life-changing brain and leg injuries.
In January 2023 he was let out of prison to attend his dad David Lyons funeral. He was flanked by three prison guards so he could attend the service - where he played an active role. As well as placing a rose in his dad's coffin the killer also gave a speech as part of the eulogy.
Later that year he was attacked in prison by murderer Peter Allen. Lyons stuck to a "gangland code" and refused to pin the blame on Allen, who is serving a life sentence for stabbing a man 142 times and leaving a knife lodged in his eye socket.
Debbie Lyons
Sister to Eddie Lyons Snr, was found dead at her home in the Milton area of the city in 2020.
She was described as a "lost soul" having struggled with drugs for 30 years.
Police were called to her flat but she had already passed away.
Eddie Lyons Jr
Some 18 years ago, Eddie Lyons Jnr survived a previous attempt on his life when he was ambushed by Kevin Carroll in Bellshill, Lanarkshire. It followed the fatal shooting at Applerow Motors.
Eddie and his pal Ross Monaghan later appeared in court but were cleared of a vicious street attack on three men outside a bar in East Dunbartonshire which took place in April 2016. The trial collapsed, however, when two of the alleged victims said they had no memory of what had happened to them.
The pair remained close friends and had were understood to have just watched the Champions League final in Monaghan's Bar on Saturday night before they were shot dead at close range.
Ross Monaghan
Lyons enforcer Monaghan first hit headlines when he was arrested as a suspect for the infamous Asda car park shooting in Robroyston. Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll, 29, had at the time been responsible for a series of so-called "alien abductions" across central Scotland.
The kidnappings were described in such a way as the victims, who were tortured and robbed, told police they couldn't remember anything about their ordeal.
Carroll attended a lunchtime business meeting in the supermarket car park on 13 January 2010. He was sat in the back of a black Audi A3 when a speeding Volkswagen Golf screeched to a halt in front of the vehicle. Carroll's two associates fled leaving him trapped in the back of the three-door car.
Two masked men emerged from the Golf and opened fire, shattering the rear passenger windows. Carroll was shot 13 times in the head and chest in an attack that lasted 25 seconds.
Monaghan was arrested in August 2010, just 10 days before his partner gave birth to their daughter.
He spent six months on remand only to be acquitted of the murder in May 2012 after a judge ruled that there was insufficient evidence to convict him. Monaghan said at the time: "It's been a nightmare. I'm glad to get this over. I've always said it was nothing to do with me."
Less than five years later Monaghan was shot in the shoulder outside a Glasgow primary school after dropping his child off. When the gunman opened fire, he was pushing a child's buggy on Muirdykes Road near St George's Primary, Penilee.
Two associates of the Daniel clan were both cleared of the attack at a trial but were later convicted for other organised crime offences. Following the school shooting, Monaghan is believed to have moved to Spain.
He was the owner of Monaghan's bar in the Costa del Sol, where he was slain.
The shooting is the most significant gangland development since 2010 when Daniel enforcer Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll was shot dead in an Asda car park.
Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll, was assassinated in the car park of the Asda store in Glasgow's Robroyston in 2010 - a killing linked to the warring families. Gerbil built up a reputation as one of Scotland's most feared gangsters, said to be responsible for a number of so-called 'alien abduction' attacks.
These abductions involved he and his crew targeting rival drug dealers while pretending to be police officers. They stormed homes and businesses while claiming to be cops, before beating their rivals and stealing their guns, cash and drugs.
But Gerbil met a violent end himself, when the 29-year-old was shot 13 times in 25 seconds and found slumped in the back seat of a black Audi A3, having been locked inside the vehicle. Ross Monaghan and William "Buff" Paterson were charged over the murder, with Paterson convicted and Monaghan walking free.
Lyons footsoldier Andrew "Piggy" Pickett went on to exact revenge over the Applerow Motors attack, being one of the six-strong gang which left Daniels-clan leader Bonzo scarred for life in the Port Dundas ambush attack in May 2017.
Steven "Bonzo" Daniel - the nephew of former Daniels leader Jamie Daniel - was ambushed by the group following a Rangers match at Ibrox. He was left horrendously disfigured.
The High Court in Glasgow heard Pickett and key Lyons member Andrew "Dumbo" Gallacher carried out the attack.
Join the Daily Record WhatsApp community!
Get the latest news sent straight to your messages by joining our WhatsApp community today.
You'll receive daily updates on breaking news as well as the top headlines across Scotland.
No one will be able to see who is signed up and no one can send messages except the Daily Record team.
All you have to do is click here if you're on mobile, select 'Join Community' and you're in!
If you're on a desktop, simply scan the QR code above with your phone and click 'Join Community'.
We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like.
To leave our community click on the name at the top of your screen and choose 'exit group'.
If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.
They pulled off the ambush, which took place close to the M8, with the help of four others - Brian Ferguson, John Hardie, Andrew Sinclair and Peter Bain. All six were found guilty of conspiracy to murder, with the court hearing targets were tailed using tracking devices, while the gang used high-power stolen getaway cars and encrypted mobile phones.
Gallacher, who died in prison while serving his jail term for the offence, was a close pal of Ross Monaghan and William Paterson. The attack on Bonzo came just months after Monaghan had been shot. He was targeted by a gunman who had his gun stashed in a buggy, after Monaghan dropped off a child at St George's Primary School, in Glasgow's Penilee.
A new wave
The identity of Dubai-based gangster 'Mr Big' who is waging gang wars across Scotland was revealed as ex-Rangers ultras capo Ross McGill.
The former Union Bears chief, 31, was unmasked as the hood orchestrating a series of firebomb and gun attacks across Edinburgh and Glasgow. During his time at the group, McGill made a series of public appearances including posing with former manager Steven Gerrard and handing club captain James Tavernier a player of the year award.
He fled the country months after stepping down from the Ibrox supporters' group in 2022. McGill, of East Kilbride, failed to appear in court on petition in November of that year and a warrant was issued for his arrest.
An underworld source told the Record McGill fled to Spain before setting up home in the United Arab Emirates. He resurfaced this year as an aspiring crime kingpin, ordering a series of brutal attacks against the Daniels and close associate, Edinburgh mob boss Mark Richardson.
A turf war broke out this March after Richardson's cronies allegedly bought £500,000 of cocaine from McGill with fake cash. McGill's enforcers, a faceless and frightening group going by the name of Tamo Junto (TMJ), have carried out a series of firebombings and other vicious attacks on homes, businesses and cars associated with Richardson.
McGill then turned his attention to the Daniel family. It is understood he recruited members of the Lyons family to help orchestrate attacks on the Daniels and feed him information.
Hashtags

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

Leader Live
10 minutes ago
- Leader Live
Polling opens in Holyrood by-election that Swinney says is ‘two horse race'
Polling stations are now open in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse seat following a high profile campaign dominated by the rise in support for Reform. The by-election is taking place following the death of the SNP MSP Christina McKelvie, who had been receiving treatment for breast cancer. Today is polling day in the Hamilton, Larkhall and Stonehouse by-election. @KatyLoudonSNP has shown she would be an outstanding MSP. This is now a two-horse race between @theSNP and Farage.#VoteSNP to stop Farage and for a better Scotland. Vote Katy Loudon. — John Swinney (@JohnSwinney) June 5, 2025 She had held the seat since 2011, winning it comfortably in the 2021 Scottish election with a majority of 4,582 over Labour. But SNP leader and Scottish First Minister John Swinney has said it is now Reform UK that are the main threat to his party there – claiming the contest is a 'two horse race' between the two parties. Mr Swinney, who has made several campaign visits to the area, has spent much of his time attacking Nigel Farage and his party. Reform have also come under attack from Labour, with a furious row prompted by an online ad which alleged Scottish leader Anas Sarwar would 'prioritise' the Pakistani community. Labour have branded that 'racist', but as the war of words between the parties escalated, Mr Farage used a rare visit to Scotland earlier this week to accuse Mr Sarwar of 'sectarian politics'. It's polling day! Great opportunity to show the momentum we have, vote @CllrRossLambie and @reformparty_uk Vote Reform. Get Reform — Reform UK Scotland (@ReformUKScot) June 5, 2025 Mr Sarwar still insists his party's candidate Davy Russell can win the seat, despite him coming in for criticism over his failure to take part in a TV debate. Speaking on Wednesday, the Scottish Labour leader branded Mr Farage a 'pathetic, poisonous little man'. Hitting out at his rivals Mr Sarwar said: 'Reform have chosen a campaign of dirt and smear, the SNP have lacked all ambition, the best they can offer is 'vote SNP to stop Farage'.' Stop SNP waste. Stop SNP incompetence. Stop SNP failures. Elect the local champion that can beat them. Vote Scottish Labour. — Anas Sarwar (@AnasSarwar) June 4, 2025 Mr Swinney however was adamant that people needed to vote for SNP candidate Katy Loudon if they wanted to 'stop Farage'. The First Minister insisted: 'People face a simple choice in this by-election. 'They can either vote for the SNP – elect an SNP MSP – or they will end up with a Reform MSP. That's the simple choice.' The election comes as polls show a surge in support for Mr Farage's party in Scotland. While Reform have not yet won an election north of the border, one poll last month suggested they could come in second to the SNP in the May 2026 Holyrood elections. Polls are open in the constituency till 10pm, with the result expected to be known in the early hours of Friday morning.


Telegraph
14 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Spain launches another tax raid on British holidaymakers
Are you a holiday let owner affected by the Spanish government's new tax? Get in touch money@ Spain's socialist government is planning a tax raid on British holiday let-owners in the country. The ruling Spanish Socialist Workers' Party wants to charge 21pc VAT on stays of less than 30 days – more than double the rate paid by hotels. It comes as Madrid lawmakers take aim at foreign property investors as part of efforts to tackle high housing costs. Draft legislation put before the Spanish parliament would raise taxes on owners of short-term tourist rentals from the current rate of zero. The levy rate paid by hotels is just 10pc. Unveiling the new bill last month, housing minister Isabel Rodriguez said: 'Homes are for living in [...] the measures seek to guarantee the right to rental housing for families.' The proposed change is part of the same legal push to impose a 100pc purchase tax on the sale of Spanish property to non-European Union buyers and also includes higher taxes for second homes and vacant properties. Alex Radford, partner at Spain-based law firm English Solicitor & Abogado, said: 'The VAT has got more chance of being implemented than the 100pc tax on a property bought by a non-European.' He said that if approved, the bill would likely increase the cost of holidays and lead to fewer available holiday lets in Spain. 'We would envisage that the rental [market] is going to be slightly more expensive. If owners have to add 21pc VAT to the cost of a rental, then we would expect rentals to decrease and people will look at other countries.' 'It's still early days and we don't know what will get approved and what will not,' Mr Radford added. 'Britons are the number one enemy' Millions of Britons who visit and live in Spain face losing out because of the new laws, which will undergo scrutiny and potentially amendment before being voted on in the second half of this year. There were more than 260,000 British expats living in Spain at the last official count in 2020, while it received 1.6 million tourists from the UK – more than any other country – during the busy April period last year, according to the Spanish statistics agency. Robert Amsterdam, partner Amsterdam & Associates, a law firm that has campaigned against higher Spanish taxes, said: 'The Spanish government is diverting the attention of the Spanish people away from the government's behaviour and they're coming up with the British as enemy number one.' Most estimates place the number of British people who own property in Spain between 800,000 and one million. A figure for the number of British holiday let-owners in the country was not available. British non-residents bought 3,480 homes in Spain in the first half of 2024, making up 38pc of a total of 9,166 properties sold to non-resident non-EU buyers, according to the latest available figures from the General Council of Spanish Notaries and Spanish Property Insight. Growing anti-tourist sentiment in Spain has already seen cities like Malaga and Madrid capping new licences for holiday lets, while Barcelona will ban them completely by 2028. Spanish media reported in January that Barcelona's plans would cost €1.9bn (£1.6bn) and lose the city around 40,000 jobs, based on a report by consultancy PWC. The country's minority coalition government has defended a crackdown on foreign property investors and holiday let-owners as necessary to make more housing available for Spanish people. There is a deficit of 450,000 homes across Spain, according to a Bank of Spain report published this week. In popular tourist destinations like the Canary and Balearic Islands half the housing stock is either holiday lets for tourists or homes owned by foreigners, it said. Javier Peñate, a legal adviser to a holiday homeowners association in the Canary Islands, told Reuters: 'The sole objective is to put an end to these activities and leave [tourism] in the hands of hoteliers.' Short-term rentals in the province already pay 7pc VAT, as do hotels.


Daily Mail
15 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Chelsea STRIP £89m star Mykhailo Mudryk of their No 10 shirt and hand it to Cole Palmer - and don't even mention him in statement - in fresh update on Ukranian's doping scandal
Chelsea have taken their No 10 shirt off Mykhailo Mudryk amid his suspension from football following his failed drugs test. Mudryk, who joined Chelsea for £89m from Shakhtar Donetsk in January 2023, has not played for the Blues since November after testing positive for the banned substance meldonium. He has now been stripped of his shirt number, with Cole Palmer taking on the famous jersey. Chelsea confirmed the switch in a statement that did not even mention Mudryk on Thursday morning. The statement read: 'Chelsea can confirm Cole Palmer will move to the No.10 shirt ahead of our 2025/26 campaign, starting from the FIFA Club World Cup. 'Palmer, who has worn the No.20 shirt since signing from Manchester City in September 2023, will make the switch ahead of our participation in the US-based tournament and could wear 10 for the first time when the Blues face Los Angeles FC in Atlanta on June 16. 'Supporters are reminded that the full list of squad numbers for the 2025/26 season will be finalised once the summer transfer window has shut. 'They remain subject to change until that point.'