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Annie McCarrick ‘killed in jealous rage over new love'

Annie McCarrick ‘killed in jealous rage over new love'

Irish Independent17 hours ago

Gardaí investigate if murder was linked to romance
Gardaí are investigating if Annie McCarrick was murdered after a man became 'obsessed' with her and flew into a rage over whether she was embarking on a potential new romance.
A house in Clondalkin, Dublin, was still being searched yesterday for any possible human remains after a Meath-based businessman, aged in his 60s, was released from custody on Friday, having been questioned during a 24-hour period on suspicion of the American woman's murder 32 years ago.

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Drivers breaking red lights in Cork town prompts calls for road safety campaign
Drivers breaking red lights in Cork town prompts calls for road safety campaign

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Drivers breaking red lights in Cork town prompts calls for road safety campaign

Pedestrians in Co Cork's biggest town are having their lives put at risk by drivers who are repeatedly jumping red lights, especially during morning rush-hour. The situation in Carrigaline and similar incidents in other towns has prompted Cork County Council to write to the Road Safety Authority (RSA) asking it to mount a targeted campaign on driver/pedestrian safety, particularly at pedestrian crossings. The issue was raised at a meeting in County Hall by Carrigaline-based Fianna Fáil councillor Patrick Donovan, who said it has become a frequent occurrence that drivers are breaking red lights and that pedestrians are also taking chances. In August 2023, André Ladeiro, aged eight, was knocked down and killed while crossing with the green light in his favour, at a pedestrian crossing in Carrigaline. A 62-year-old Macroom man was subsequently sentenced to three years with the third year suspended after pleading guilty to dangerous driving. 'I regularly speak to local gardaí about cars breaking red lights and I thank them for the patrols they have set up locally in Carrigaline, but realistically there is only so much they can do and it comes back to driver behaviour,' Mr Donovan said. He said the RSA has a proven track record in the delivery of effective and thought-provoking campaigns and he would like to see what they could do to raise awareness on this issue. Mr Donovan added that pedestrian crossings are not uniform and he would like to see all of them with raised crossing tables incorporated. 'You simply won't pick up speed if you see a raised table. "Raised tables have the effect of slowing cars down, which in turn makes drivers more aware of their surrounding,' he added. Fine Gael councillor Una McCarthy, who also represents the Carrigaline area, said a child was recently injured there trying to cross the road. 'I have spoken to local gardaí and they say the worst is the morning rush-hour with drivers breaking amber and red lights. "Education saves lives and a campaign is needed,' she said. Fianna Fáil councillor Ann Marie Ahern said every municipal district area is experiencing such problems, including her region of East Cork. Fianna Fáil councillor Michael Looney added that electric cars also pose a danger to pedestrians and they cannot hear them coming. Independent councillor Mary Linehan-Foley said residents in nearly every housing estate in the East Cork region are looking for speed ramps to slow down cars. 'We need more education in our schools to target young people before they get behind the wheel. "We need to do anything we can to prevent the carnage on our roads,' she said. North Cork-based Fianna Fail councillor Frank O'Flynn described rogue motorists and pedestrians breaking lights at pedestrian crossings as 'amber gamblers". He suggested, which was agreed by all councillors, that they also write to the minister for transport, Darragh O'Brien, urging him to mount TV commercials and billboard campaigns to highlight the dangers.

Thug who had hand blown off in ‘pipe-bomb' incident was violent gang member
Thug who had hand blown off in ‘pipe-bomb' incident was violent gang member

Sunday World

time6 hours ago

  • Sunday World

Thug who had hand blown off in ‘pipe-bomb' incident was violent gang member

Violent thug who had hand blown off in 'pipe-bomb' incident was member of gang that terrorised a mother and her three-year-old daughter This is the 35-year-old thug whose hand was blown off in an incident involving a suspected pipe-bomb in the early hours of Wednesday morning. A gruesome image of the horrific injuries sustained by career criminal Dean Fagan have circulated on WhatsApp and show how his hand was completely obliterated prior to his arrival at Beaumont Hospital in Dublin. In a statement, Gardaí confirmed they had 'attended the scene following report of an incident of criminal damage at a residential location in Coolock that occurred in the early hours of Wednesday.' The statement continued: 'A man, aged in his 30s, subsequently received treatment for serious injuries at Beaumont Hospital Dublin.' Gardaí are investigating whether the incident of criminal damage is linked to a low-level feud in which Fagan has become embroiled. Fagan, with an address on Kildare Road in Crumlin, is known to Gardaí as a prolific criminal, having clocked up more than 80 convictions over the past two decades. One of his most serious convictions dates back to 2017, when he was jailed for five years after he admitted being a member of a gang who terrorised a woman and her three-year-old daughter during a burglary in Co. Meath. During the ordeal which lasted over an hour, a knife was held to the woman's throat for several minutes, while a gun was later pointed at her head. Fagan pleaded guilty to charges of aggravated burglary in May 2014 at Irishtown, Rathfeigh, Co. Meath. He later admitted his involvement when fingerprints found on a piece of paper linked him to the crime. In 2016, Fagan received a six-year-sentence after a court heard how during a separate robbery, he was armed with a garden shears when he and an accomplice tied up a woman and destroyed her home looking for cash. Dean Fagan told the other man 'don't f*cking kill her' after this man hit the victim with a hammer while demanding cash. They had already taken €1,500 they had found in the sitting room of the house. They also told the woman they were in the Real IRA and that they had been responsible for burning her car out a month previously. The woman managed to escape through a back door and locked the intruders inside. Fagan was involved in another high-profile incident in which two sisters, Amy and Nicole Rice, were tied up and assaulted in Co. Kildare in 2015. Fagan later went on Dublin radio station 98FM and admitted to tying the girls up and to hitting them. Dean Fagan News in 90 Seconds - 15th June 2025 The sisters had come forward a month earlier to tell the story of how they were brutally attacked by two men they met on Facebook in a 20-hour ordeal in Newbridge. Fagan, who had almost 60 convictions for offences including possession of a firearm and criminal damage at that stage, called the station to claim that the incident did not happen as it was portrayed. Fagan told the radio station that he was fighting with a man who was known to the girls and this was why trouble had broken out. At the time, sources said that Fagan and his associate owed a debt to this other man. Despite admitting to hitting and tying up the girls, Fagan tried to claim they made up the story to get paid money from newspapers for their story. However, the girls did not receive any payment for their story. He went on to say that he attacked the girls because they wouldn't calm down. 'I had no choice but to do that [hit them a few slaps] it's a horrible thing to say. ' 'At this time, I was wanted. I had warrants for a separate thing,' he said. 'I am not saying I'm an angel in anyone's eyes. I've got convictions for some serious sh*t, but I didn't do this,' he added. 'When you go to jail, and people think you have done sh*t like this you get boiling water and p*ss thrown at you. And when you are on the wings people throw shapes at you. 'I couldn't throw them out and call the cops because I had warrants out for my arrest.' A month before his radio appearance, Fagan was convicted in his absence over an incident where he ploughed into a Garda patrol van and car after crashing into three other vehicles in traffic during a road rampage in west Dublin in August the previous year. The previous March he was convicted of possession of a stolen shotgun, ammunition, and other items. While in custody in Cloverhill Prison in October 2014, Fagan was the 'victim' of a hostage taking situation in his cell which led to a lockdown of the prison. Convicted murderer Ciaran Moran tied Fagan up and threatened to slit his throat. Moran had knocked Fagan unconscious before tying him up and cutting his head with a homemade bladed weapon or shiv. The hostage situation ended after 90 minutes when Moran walked out of the prison cell. At Moran's subsequent trial, at the conclusion of which the convicted killer received a three-year sentence, Garda Kevin Mullahy agreed that gardaí harboured some suspicions about the incident after counsel said there may have been some sort of collusion between the victim and Moran and that the incident was possibly connected with a claim against the State. Fagan remained in the care of doctors at Beaumont hospital yesterday where its understood he underwent surgery for his injuries to his hand. Gardai are continuing their investigations into the incident that cost him his hand early Wednesday. Anyone with information relating to the incident is asked to contact Coolock Garda Station on 01 6664200.

How glam lawyer turned lawless ‘Lady Mafia' scammer swindled $10m from pals and clients – and blew it all in Las Vegas
How glam lawyer turned lawless ‘Lady Mafia' scammer swindled $10m from pals and clients – and blew it all in Las Vegas

The Irish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

How glam lawyer turned lawless ‘Lady Mafia' scammer swindled $10m from pals and clients – and blew it all in Las Vegas

SARA King – AKA Lady Mafia – had the designer clothes, pink champagne and a husband descended from royalty – but her addiction to excitement turned this glam American lawyer into a lawless criminal. Dressed in head-to-toe 8 Sara King – AKA Lady Mafia – had the designer clothes, pink champagne and a husband descended from royalty Credit: Instagram 8 Her addiction to excitement turned this glam American lawyer into a lawless criminal Credit: United States District Court, central District of California Southern Division 8 Her ex-husband, Kamran Pahlav, was the grandson of Iranian Princess Ashraf Credit: Linkedin Her hair extensions were pulled back into a sleek bun and she was ready to do business. But she wasn't there to defend a client. It was the summer of 2023 and the 41-year-old attorney was facing charges of financial fraud and money laundering. It was part of a criminal career that saw her swindle an estimated $10million from friends and business associates to fund a lavish lifestyle that included designer clothes, jewellery, a suite at the In a case that both baffled and gripped America, King was dubbed 'the Anna Delvey of the OC', 'the Slot Whisperer' and – her favourite nickname – 'Lady Mafia.' After pleading guilty to her crimes, she was sentenced on May 5 this year by an Orange County federal judge to 21 months in prison, and ordered to pay more than $8million in restitution. Her shocking story has been laid bare in podcast The Binge Crimes: Lady Mafia, in which investigative journalist Michele McPhee spends hours with the glamorous scammer trying to unpick her tall tales. 'Her charisma pulls people in. She's obviously very attractive – she's not just pretty, she's glamorous – so I'm sure that helped her navigate her way around the shady underbelly," Michele tells Fabulous. 'I think she spent most of the money on clothes. She's one of those people who has to be head-to-toe in designer labels,' says Michele, who believes that King doesn't quite comprehend the damage she has done, and points out that she changes her story many times during the podcast. 'It's very unusual that somebody would participate in anything like this podcast before they've faced a judge [for sentencing]. But I think she was motivated by wanting people to think she's innocent and that it was all a big mistake.' King grew up in Newport Beach, Orange County, home to sprawling mansions, golf courses and Ferraris. Anna Delvey dons neon prison suit on video call from ICE custody Money wasn't tight, and her parents enjoyed a happy marriage and were successful insurance brokers. She wanted what they had – and more. Before embarking on a life of dodgy deals, King built a successful career in law, fuelled by her burning ambition to be a badass businesswoman instead of a trophy wife. 'I wanted to be the 'It' girl. I wanted to have a seat at the boys' table, without sleeping around,' she said in the podcast. 'I can sell anything. I can sell fire to the devil.' With a million-dollar home in Newport Beach, and an ambitious husband, Gerar Jamal – a consultant in the environmental industry, who she married in 2014 – King soon had everything she'd dreamed of. But she didn't stop there. I wanted to have a seat at the boys' table. I can sell anything – I can sell fire to the devil Sara King Describing her high-flying job at a law firm as 'a lot of work and not a lot of money,' by 2017 King was looking for new opportunities to fund her pink-champagne lifestyle. She and Gerar began to invest in different ventures, including money lending, where they would rake in high interest for funding short-term loans. King – who hung out in Orange County's hottest spots, where she met men who'd offer her more chances to invest in their dodgy deals – said: 'I was looking for a way out of law. It was so miserable and I needed to make money.' She soon earned a reputation as a 'fixer' who could help rich people get anything they wanted, from prostitutes to puppies. In May 2018, after her marriage had broken down, a mutual friend introduced her to Kamran Pahlavi, the handsome grandson of Iranian Princess Ashraf, who apparently invested in real estate. After a two-hour dinner in 'I was just taken aback by the pizzazz of it all,' said King. 'I felt a connection, and to this day I wish I never did. 'He told me, 'I have no money, all my watches are fake, I have nothing to my name, so if that's what you're interested in, please walk.' He came clean about everything, saying, 'I have a lot of baggage, I have three ex-wives, I have kids. But I want to make something of myself'.' Fixer for the rich Besotted, King suggested they start a business together – but the pressure to make more money led her to take more risks. 'I think they genuinely had love for each other,' says Michele. 'She was the female Bernie Madoff [the US fraudster who was jailed for operating a dodgy 'pyramid' investment scheme] and he was the real housewife of Orange County, who got to sit around and not do much.' In January 2022, business was booming for her company, King Family Lending. She established herself as someone who could supply short-term loans to celebrities and professional athletes – as long as they were happy to pay the 30% interest. Hobnobbing with NFL stars, including Tom Brady, bragging about her high-profile connections and shopping for designer clothes were all in a day's work for her. 8 King lived a lavish lifestyle with fast cars and a wardrobe full of designer labels Credit: United States District Court, central District of California Southern Division 8 She regularly went on shopping sprees at high-end boutiques Credit: Instagram 8 Sara posing with NFL stars Aaron Rodgers, Tom Brady, Patrick Mahomes, and Josh Allen at The Match golf event She also reportedly harboured ambitions of going into politics. She and Kamran married in February 2022 – but behind the facade, King was doing less lending and more spending. She was using her investors' money – which was intended to fund high-interest loans – to splash out on her own lavish lifestyle and gambling habit. And the collateral she claimed she had collected to guarantee them didn't exist. By November 2022, Kamran had called time on their relationship – later claiming it was due to all her lies – and moved to Morocco. By the end of the year, they were divorced, after Kamran cited 'irreconcilable differences'. Meanwhile, King moved into a $6,000-a-night suite at the Wynn in Vegas, which she'd been gifted because she was such a 'good customer' – complete with marble counters, a private infinity pool and a butler. 8 Crime podcast host Michele McPhee Credit: Catherien SaintLouis @sony music 8 Phony socialite Anna Delvey on trial for fraud in New York City Credit: John Marshall Mantel/ZUMA Wire/Alamy Live News In the casinos, where she was once known as The Slot Whisperer for her winning streaks, King's luck was starting to run out. At one point, she was gambling away $20,000 a day. 'I always had that kind of money, so 20 grand a day is no big deal,' she said. 'It got scarier when I was dropping $50,000 to $100,000 a day.' On November 11, 2022, it all fell apart. King was lying in the bath of her suite when hotel staff burst into her room and ordered her to leave. Gambling $20k a day A He also set about shutting her gambling down by making sure she was barred from casinos. 'As she got kicked out of each one, I'd call her and say, 'How was your escort today?' because I wanted her to know I was on to her,' Ronald told Michele in the podcast. 'Sometimes she was mad, because she was embarrassed. I told her, 'I'm going to cut off everything you like to do. Your days of gambling are over and we'll make sure no casino allows you to ever wager a dollar'.' On February 11, 2023, he filed a lawsuit against King on behalf of the man named 'Laurent R', just one of the investors in King Family Lending who'd lost millions, and the federal prosecutor drew up a criminal complaint of wire (financial) fraud and money laundering charges. Ronald also tipped off the media, and King hit the headlines for being a scammer. That's when she realised she'd reached the end of the road. In March 2023, she checked herself into rehab – then checked out again, heading to her LA apartment, where eviction notices were waiting for her. Betrayal, lies and theft Her parents took her home to Orange County, then her mum drove her to the FBI headquarters in Los Angeles. There was no warrant for her arrest, so she claims she wrote to the Attorney General to get a meeting about her case. In June 2023, King appeared in federal court and pleaded guilty to charges of wire fraud and money laundering, admitting she'd caused five investors to lose more than $8million. Three of them – all former close friends – were watching from the gallery, including trauma surgeon Amal Obaid-Schmid, who'd lost her family's life savings of $400,000. While King agreed to pay restitution of at least $8,785,045, the real total of her scamming has been estimated to be nearer to $10million, with more possible victims who, as yet, haven't come forward. Before King's sentencing, which was postponed twice, she was lying low in a small apartment with her parents back in Orange County and joking that she was taking Prozac to get through it all. Kamran is still in Morocco, a non-extradition country, and hasn't faced any charges. 'She betrayed me. Lied to me. Stole from me. Embarrassed me. Humiliated me. That's not bad for a reason to break up,' he has said. He added: 'When I realised what she had done, I left and never looked back. To tell you the truth, it kills me to do this, but she is sick and she needs to be stopped before she scams the wrong person and she gets in real trouble.' He also claimed that King had sent him threatening messages following their split, including one that warned: 'Just wait and see, your time is coming.' 'Obviously, he's going to want to separate himself from all this,' says Michele. Anna Delvey comparisons While awaiting her sentencing, King tried to find employment. 'Everybody recognised her, so she couldn't work,' reveals Michele, who says she forged a genuine friendship with King over the course of making the podcast. 'She got a job at Nordstrom [the department store], but got fired once they realised who she was, so ended up working as a home helper for the elderly, which was a huge step down. 'People have compared her to Anna Delvey, but Sara herself points out she's not a total fraud because she had money, she was an attorney and she's savvy,' says Michele. 'I have respect for her work ethic. She wa­­s definitely a hustler and that's what's so mesmerising. She could have easily lived that Real Housewives life and gone to Pilates at the country club all day long, but she wanted to work. 'She's a smart woman, but she had such a facade, and she told so many little white lies.' Live News The Binge Crimes: Lady Mafia is out now on all podcast providers

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