logo
Gangland hitmen shot Scottish targets in chest and stomach outside Spanish bar

Gangland hitmen shot Scottish targets in chest and stomach outside Spanish bar

Daily Record2 days ago

Gangland hitmen shot Scottish targets in chest and stomach outside Spanish bar
Gangland hitmen reportedly shot Scottish targets in the chest and stomach in public execution outside Spanish bar.
Two men were gunned down near the entrance of Monaghans bar in Fuengirola in front of horrified ex pats and holidaymakers last night around 11.30pm.

Spain's national police force have confirmed both men were Scottish despite earlier reports the two victims were Irish.

A masked gunman is reported to have got out of a car that screeched to a halt outside the bar before fleeing the scene in the same vehicle drive by an accomplice.
The brutal slaying took place as punters were enjoying a drink after watching the Champions League final on the big screens at the bar.

Authorities in Spain say the first victim was shot in the chest and the second in the chest and abdomen. The government's sub-delegate in Malaga Javier Salas has now also confirmed the victim's were both Scottish.
Harrowing images from the scene show a man lying lifeless on his back in shorts and a T-shirt by a drinks and meal blackboard on an outside terrace at the Irish bar.
In other disturbing images police and paramedics can be seen surrounding the body of one of the victims, thought to be the same man, after he was covered under a blanket as shocked locals and holidaymakers looked on.

There are no reports yet of any arrests, although police set up roadblocks in the area after the shooting to try to catch those responsible.
Monaghan's bar sits looking onto the beach at the popular Costa Del Sol holiday resort.

Earlier the Record told how the bar is owned by Lyons crime clan hood Ross Monaghan.
Monaghan, who fled Scotland in 2017, to head for the Costa Del Sol is listed as the proprietor of the bar in an online business directory.
The gangland figure touched town in Malaga in January 2017 after he was shot twice in a gun attack outside a primary school in Glasgow. Monaghan was reportedly shot twice by a gunman lurking outside St George's Primary, Penilee.

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.
The Record understands the horror gun killings are linked to the ongoing gang wars in Scotland.

The killings come amidst a violent gang war that has been raging in Scotland since March.
The feud first erupted following a fallout between rival gangsters after a £500k stash of cocaine was reportedly swiped from under the nose of Dubai-based Mr Big, Ross McGill.
The drugs were reportedly taken by caged Edinburgh kingpin Mark Richardson's foot soldiers sparking a series of violent attacks on homes and businesses.

Mr Big, who was later revealed as former Union Bears capo McGill waged war on Richardson and his associates, including the Daniels crime clan in Glasgow.
Mr Big's enforcers, a faceless and frightening group going by the name of Tamo Junto (TMJ), have carried out a series of fire bombings and other vicious attacks on homes, businesses and cars associated with Richardson.
We reported earlier this week that a well-placed source said the Dubai-based Mr Big behind attacks on Daniel targets, Ross McGill, had agreed to end hostilities after being leaned on by cartel bosses in Dubai.
However gangland enforces Tamo Junto (TMJ) quickly quashed any talk of peace as they vowed to continue to carry out the turf war.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Police caught 91 under-18s with bladed weapons in 2024, figures show
Police caught 91 under-18s with bladed weapons in 2024, figures show

Western Telegraph

time37 minutes ago

  • Western Telegraph

Police caught 91 under-18s with bladed weapons in 2024, figures show

The new statistics, which come in the wake of the deaths of teenagers Amen Teklay and Kayden Moy, prompted concerns of a 'youth violence epidemic'. The two teenagers both died after allegedly being stabbed in separate incidents this year. Now analysis of Police Scotland stop and search data by the justice and home affairs magazine 1919 showed that in 2024 teenagers accounted for almost a third of positive knife searches across all age groups. The 91 cases of a someone under the age of 18 being caught with a bladed or pointed weapon equate to about one such case every four days. The data revealed a 10-year-old was caught with a knife in the east of Edinburgh in July 2024. Meanwhile, 12-year-olds were caught with bladed weapons in the capital, Glasgow, Ayrshire and Lanarkshire, the magazine reported. In addition, more than a dozen children aged 13 – including two girls – were also found to have such items when searched. David Threadgold, chairman of the Scottish Police Federation said: 'Each one of the truly shocking statistics is a justifiable and evidenced-based reaction by the police to an increasingly concerning societal trend we now see emerging among younger members of our communities in Scotland.' He added: 'Each of these statistics is a real situation which created significant risk for my colleagues, as well as potentially life-changing consequences for the perpetrator, and sadly – as we have seen so tragically across Scotland recently – the victims of knife crime, their families and friends.' Mr Threadgold said that the 'solution to this problem cannot rest alone with the police', arguing for 'much greater and more effective preventative strategies' to be put in place across Scotland. Labour's Pauline McNeill said the figures were are 'yet another sign that there is a youth violence epidemic emerging in Scotland' (Fraser Bremner/Scottish Daily Mail/PA) Scottish Labour justice spokesperson Pauline McNeill said: 'These shocking figures are yet another sign that there is a youth violence epidemic emerging in Scotland.' She added: 'Each one of these 91 cases is very serious for our communities and potentially for those actually carrying the weapon. 'The only way to tackle this effectively is to have early intervention schemes that get to the root cause, and without this we will fail our communities.' Calling for 'urgent action', she insisted the Scottish Government had 'created a perfect storm by cutting youth work services, letting police officer numbers fall, and mismanaging CAMHS (Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services) and education'. First Minister John Swinney has already urged youngsters not to carry knives (Andrew Milligan/PA) First Minister John Swinney has already warned youngsters against carrying knives, insisting this is 'dangerous' and 'damaging'. But Scottish Tory community safety spokesperson Sharon Dowey insisted it was 'high time nationalist ministers woke up to the gravity of this situation'. The Conservative MSP said: 'These alarming figures lay bare just how drastically knife crime has spiralled out of control.' She said there needs to be 'meaningful punishments for those who use a knife' along with 'expanded stop-and-search powers for police to act as a deterrent'. However, she claimed: 'The SNP's soft-touch attitude towards justice represents an abject dereliction of duty by John Swinney's government.' A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'Stop and search powers should be used where lawful, necessary and proportionate. Their use in individual cases is an operational matter for Police Scotland. 'Police do use stop and search, and it is one tool to tackle violence alongside a range of other measures such as prevention and education.' Assistant Chief Constable Mark Sutherland of Police Scotland meanwhile said: 'Victims of crime and people right across the country expect us to use all powers at our disposal to keep them safe. 'Stop and search is just one of those powers and one in every three searches leads to the recovery of illicit or harmful items, safeguarding our communities.' Mr Sutherland stressed that 'intelligence-led stop and search is a valuable and effective policing tactic in detecting and preventing crime when it is used lawfully, proportionately and in line with the code of practice, which was introduced in 2017'. This code has a 'dedicated section for children', he added, which provides officers with guidance to be used when when making a decision to stop and search a child. He said: 'We recognise that stopping and searching people is a significant intrusion into their personal liberty and privacy and we remain committed to ensuring that people are treated with fairness, integrity and respect. 'It is also a tactic that enables the service to keep people safe and assist in ensuring the wellbeing of our wider communities.'

Cops catch 10-year-old with knife in Edinburgh as "truly shocking" stats show primary kids carry blades
Cops catch 10-year-old with knife in Edinburgh as "truly shocking" stats show primary kids carry blades

Daily Record

timean hour ago

  • Daily Record

Cops catch 10-year-old with knife in Edinburgh as "truly shocking" stats show primary kids carry blades

Police are catching a child with a knife every four days — including primary pupils — as new stats expose the scale of youth violence in Scotland. A 10-year-old child was caught carrying a knife in Edinburgh as "truly shocking" new figures reveal dozens of children - including primary school pupils - have been found with blades across Scotland this year. Police Scotland seized knives from at least 91 under-18s in 2024 using stop-and-search powers, meaning a child is being caught with a weapon every four days. ‌ The alarming statistics come just weeks after the death of schoolboy Kayden Moy, the third teenager to lose his life to youth violence in the past year. ‌ Multiple incidents involving children as young as 12 being caught with knives occurred in Edinburgh, Ayrshire, Glasgow and Lanarkshire, according to an analysis by justice magazine 1919. More than a dozen 13-year-olds - including two girls - were also subjected to positive blade searches. Teens now account for almost a third of positive knife searches across all age groups. The disturbing incidents prompted warnings of a 'youth violence epidemic' which has been repeatedly highlighted by the Record's Our Kids... Our Future campaign, launched two years ago after we reported a worrying series of attacks on teens across the country. The Scottish Government is now under intensified pressure onto act after several high-profile cases. ‌ Labour justice spokesperson Pauline McNeill said: 'These shocking figures are yet another sign that there is a youth violence epidemic emerging in Scotland. "The SNP has created a perfect storm by cutting youth work services, letting police numbers fall, and mismanaging mental health and education. "Every one of these 91 cases is very serious for our communities and potentially for those actually carrying the weapon. ‌ "The only way to tackle this effectively is to have early intervention schemes that get to the root cause." 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. The Scottish Conservatives blamed 'soft-touch' sentencing for under-25s, claiming it has emboldened young offenders. ‌ Sharon Dowey MSP said: 'Knife crime has spiralled out of control. There must be meaningful punishments for those who use a knife and expanded stop-and-search powers for police to act as a deterrent. "The SNP's soft-touch attitude towards justice represents an abject dereliction of duty by John Swinney's government." ‌ Scottish Police Federation chair, David Threadgold, added: "This is a concerning societal trend we now see emerging among younger members of our communities in Scotland," he said. 'Each of these statistics is a real situation which created significant risk for my colleagues, as well as potentially life changing consequences for the perpetrator, and sadly, the victims of knife crime, their families and friends. 'The solution to this problem cannot rest alone with the police; much greater and more effective preventative strategies have to be in place." ‌ First Minister John Swinney recently said the Government's strategy would focus on three steps – educating young people on the dangers of knives, police searches of people who they think may be carrying a knife and punishment of those caught with weapons. A Scottish Government spokesperson said: 'Stop and search powers should be used where lawful, necessary and proportionate. Their use in individual cases is an operational matter for Police Scotland. 'Police do use stop and search, and it is one tool to tackle violence alongside a range of other measures such as prevention and education.'

Fears murdered kingpin's alliance with Irish crime gang may lead to deadly revenge on Scots streets
Fears murdered kingpin's alliance with Irish crime gang may lead to deadly revenge on Scots streets

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Fears murdered kingpin's alliance with Irish crime gang may lead to deadly revenge on Scots streets

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) AN ALLIANCE with the Irish Kinahan crime cartel struck up by murdered kingpin Ross Monaghan could lead to deadly revenge on the streets of Scotland, it is feared. Monaghan is said to have been instrumental in building an alliance between the Lyons family and the world's most wanted mob when he boldly approached godfather Daniel Kinahan several years ago. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 Eddie Lyons Jnr (left) and Ross Monaghan (right) were shot to death in a bar in Spain Credit: The Scottish Sun 4 Steven Lyons could reach out to their allies in the feared Kinahan crime gang Credit: The Scottish Sun 4 Ross Monaghan is said to have been instrumental in building an alliance between the Lyons family and the Kinahan cartel Credit: The Scottish Sun 4 Daniel Kinahan 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. The claims emerged after Monaghan, 43, and Eddie Lyons Jnr, 46, were slaughtered in a Spanish bloodbath amid the worst explosion of underworld violence in decades. And sources say bosses including Steven Lyons could reach out to the Kinahans for help as they plot revenge over a slaughter that's shocked even the most hardened mobsters. An insider said: 'Ross Monaghan was a powerful and influential figure within the Lyons gang and often made the big decisions. 'He was at least on a par with Steven Lyons who is seen as the gang's top dog. 'Monaghan was the one who made a bold move when he introduced himself to Daniel Kinahan a few years ago and offered to work with him. 'Kinahan obviously would have looked into his background and liked what he saw. 'So Monaghan can take credit for sealing the deal that gave the Lyons the backing of one of the biggest criminal networks on the planet. 'It could be that his links to the Kinahans gave him a false sense of security and now he's paid the ultimate price.' Fresh details about the Lyons' links to the Kinahan cartel emerged after Monaghan and Lyons Jnr were brutally taken out in a gangland ambush at their Spanish bolthole. Man walked through Carlow shopping centre firing into air before being confronted by cops as crowds ran from scene Last night it was claimed two hit men from Liverpool carried out the brutal slaying - sparking fury among high-ranking members of the Lyons crime clan. Steven Lyons is said to be furious over the shooting of his brother Eddie and close pal Monaghan and ready to use his Kinahan connections to hit back hard. An insider said: 'There is going to be revenge over this. 'Eddie Jnr was well liked and was keeping a low profile while he got over the death of a family member. 'Steven is mourning his brother but he's also furious that he was just wiped out in the way he was. 'He was close to Ross as well, it's a double blow that's going to change the dynamic of the power struggle to control the supply of drugs in Glasgow and Edinburgh. 'It would be no surprise if the Kinahans are brought in to help hit back at whoever was responsible for this. 'The word is that two Scousers were brought in to carry out the contract to put some distance between those who ordered the executions.' "Steven is mourning his brother but he's also furious that he was just wiped out in the way he was." Just two weeks ago, sources say, Lyons Jnr had been back in Glasgow having a drink with pals. He told them he was going back to Spain to sort some business out but would be back in Glasgow soon. He regularly made the three-hour flight back and forwards and was a regular in the bars in Fuengirola. He was also regularly spotted in up-market Marbella which is just a short drive along Spain's Costa Del Sol. Fugitive mob boss Daniel Kinahan, 47, his dad Christy, 67, and brother Christy Jnr, 43, are all wanted by American and Irish forces over their leading role in international crime rackets. A £4million bounty was put on their heads by the US in 2022. The Kinahans, from Dublin, have a string of links to Scots crime figures, including the Lyons mob. Steven, son of former gang chief Eddie Lyons Snr, has never been convicted of a serious crime despite his crew's bitter feud with the rival Daniel clan. He went to Spain in 2006 after being shot and seriously injured at his uncle's garage in Lambhill, Glasgow, in an attack that saw his cousin Michael, 21, killed. Dubai-based hood driving Scots gang warned to 'avoid Spain' EXCL BY CHRIS TAYLOR THE Dubai-based hood driving a gang war in Scotland was warned to keep out of Spain days before two Lyons gang mobsters were assassinated, sources claim. Ross 'Miami' McGill, 31, was said to have been issued the threat after rejecting truce talks with heavies acting for Glasgow's notorious Daniel clan. It's claimed a senior hood linked to caged Edinburgh mob boss Mark Richardson and Steven 'Bonzo' Daniel issued the 'keep out' warning after approaching McGill in a Dubai nightclub. The insider told how rivals had been keeping tabs on close associates of Ross Monaghan, 43, and Eddie Lyons Jnr, 46, before their execution in Fuengirola on Saturday. Read more on this story It's believed he splits his time between Spain and Dubai. The double murder comes amid a stunning escalation in violence after months of firebombings, shootings and assaults on associates of the notorious Daniel clan - sworn enemies of the Lyons for decades. The campaign of violence began in Edinburgh where associates connected to caged Edinburgh kingpin Mark Richardson, 38, came under attack by mobsters acting for Dubai-based hood Ross McGill, 31. Underworld sources say the feud was sparked when Richardson cronies ripped off McGill in a £500,000 cocaine deal using fake notes. But focus shifted to the age-old rivalry between Glasgow's warring gangs when Steven 'Bonzo' Daniel, 45, and other crime clan family members had their homes and businesses torched in a wave of violence. Until recently the attacks seemed to be coming from one direction with sources claiming Daniel heavies had tried and failed to convince McGill to enter truce talks. We also told of claims mobsters based in Spain were involved in helping organise attacks by recruiting footsoldiers and identifying targets in the ongoing turf war. Warning of a retaliation from Richardson and the Daniel chiefs had been brewing and sources say Monaghan - aware of the threat - had been in training as a cage fighter to keep himself in tip-top condition. In the months before he became the latest victim in Scotland's gang wars, he told pals he wanted to make certain he was ready for anything. Our source said: 'Ross liked to look after himself, he was a bit of a fitness freak. 'He's had a few bouts behind closed doors and was doing well. He was very handy with his fists and feet. 'But he knew he had to make sure he would be able to handle anything as he'd upset a lot of dangerous people. 'Everyone knew he was wary of anybody he didn't know - and he tried to make sure he had tight security. 'The Lyons mob have lost one of their top boys as well as a family member so they'll be out for revenge.' The Lyons and Daniel mobs have been locked in a violent power battle since a cocaine theft in 2001. 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. The shooting in Spain comes amid a violent gang war that has ripped through Scotland since March said to have started over a fallout over drugs.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store