logo
EXCLUSIVE Pictured: Campaigning journalist Veronica Guerin's killer strolls in summer sunshine as he enjoys his first steps of freedom on day release from prison after 26 years

EXCLUSIVE Pictured: Campaigning journalist Veronica Guerin's killer strolls in summer sunshine as he enjoys his first steps of freedom on day release from prison after 26 years

Daily Mail​07-07-2025
Strolling in the Summer sunshine on a street in Crumlin, south Dublin, this is the man who murdered campaigning journalist Veronica Guerin, enjoying his first steps of freedom on day release after 26 years.
Gangland enforcer and getaway driver Brian Meehan was part of a two-man hit team who struck to silence the fearless reporter on June 26, 1996, in a shooting which would shock the entire nation and usher in a new era of law enforcement.
Her life was portrayed in the eponymous 2003 Hollywood movie starring Cate Blanchett, Colin Farrell and Ciaran Hinds.
Known for her fearless coverage of Ireland's drug underworld, Veronica Guerin, 37, was shot dead in broad daylight while stopped at a traffic light on the Naas Road in Dublin.
Her murder, chilling in its audacity, would not only spark national outrage but ultimately lead to the downfall of some of Ireland's most powerful criminal empires -including the conviction of Meehan, who was the getaway driver.
Guerin, a mother of one, was a reporter for the Sunday Independent and had carved out a reputation as one of Ireland's most courageous journalists.
While many in the media avoided naming or even hinting at the identities of Dublin's criminal figures, Guerin went further. She didn't just allude - she investigated, reported, and exposed.
Using her disarming charm and sharp intellect, she infiltrated the world of drug barons and gangland bosses, attending court hearings, knocking on doors in inner-city housing estates, and confronting major players face-to-face.
Her work put her in grave danger. In 1995, she was shot in the leg after answering her front door. Her home was routinely watched. Her phone rang with anonymous threats. But she refused to back down.
One of the men her work repeatedly targeted was John Gilligan, a ruthless drug trafficker who had risen through the ranks to become one of Ireland's most feared gangland figures. Guerin was on the brink of publishing an exposé linking Gilligan directly to his vast drug enterprise when she was murdered.
Gilligan was subsequently charged with Veronica's murder but acquitted.
Meehan, now greying and in his late 50s, with a beard, was given a life sentence on his conviction in 1999. He was the getaway driver of the Kawasaki motorbike, and a second man, the late Patrick 'Dutchy' Holland, pulled the trigger.
Holland was never charged with Ms Guerin's murder due to lack of evidence, but gardaí named him in a subsequent drugs court case as the man who pulled the trigger.
Holland denied it up until his death in an English prison at 70 years of age in 2009.
Earlier this year, Meehan was moved to an 'independent living unit' on the grounds of Shelton Abbey Prison in Co Wicklow, and enjoys day releases, ahead of a potential full release from jail.
As our exclusive photograph shows, he has also been allowed out of the open prison to attend training courses as well as for social meetings, and visited the home of his elderly parents last week.
Meehan who was seen with grey hair, in his late 50s, sporting a beard, was given a life sentence on his conviction in 1999
The move into an independent living unit is seen as another step closer to freedom for Meehan, who has enjoyed playing golf since entering Shelton Abbey in 2021. In 2017, Meehan lost a final appeal to overturn his conviction.
Meehan's case is believed to be coming before the Irish Parole Board soon, and Ms Guerin's brother Jimmy was asked if he wanted to make a statement, but declined.
Mr Guerin, who is an independent councillor on Fingal County Council, told the Sunday Independent in May that he 'didn't want to get into that process'.
'We went through this two years ago,' he said. 'The Parole Board considered Brian Meehan's release and it was declined.
'He still has to go before the Parole Board again. I have never submitted a statement to them before and I won't. It is a matter for them whether he is deemed eligible for release under licence, as a convicted murderer.'
He said the family's situation would be no different from other relatives bereaved by murderers.
'His possible release is something I have no control over.
'In a way, it would be no more difficult than when John Gilligan was released [on drug trafficking charges in 2013].
'My sister will be dead 30 years next year. Every time there is a serious crime, her name is brought up, so there are constant reminders.'
The public reaction to Guerin's killing was instant and furious. More than 1,000 people attended her funeral. The Irish government, facing immense pressure, enacted emergency legislation to strengthen the powers of the Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB), a newly formed agency designed to strip criminals of their ill-gotten wealth.
Homes, cars, racehorses, and foreign bank accounts linked to Gilligan and his associates were frozen or seized. The State finally turned its full force against organised crime.
In the months that followed, the Gardaí (Irish police) launched Operation Oak, a massive investigation into Guerin's murder and the activities of the Gilligan gang. A breakthrough came when Gardaí found the abandoned motorbike used in the assassination. Forensic evidence linked the bike to Meehan.
Meehan, a small-time criminal turned trusted hitman, was a key enforcer in Gilligan's gang. He was known for his aggression and loyalty—qualities that, in the brutal calculus of gangland life, made him an ideal candidate for such a hit.
He had previously worked as a car thief and getaway driver and had been involved in countless acts of intimidation and violence on behalf of the gang.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Family horror as suicide clinic ‘sends them WhatsApp saying their mum, 58, is dead and her ashes are in the post'
Family horror as suicide clinic ‘sends them WhatsApp saying their mum, 58, is dead and her ashes are in the post'

The Sun

timea minute ago

  • The Sun

Family horror as suicide clinic ‘sends them WhatsApp saying their mum, 58, is dead and her ashes are in the post'

AN IRISH family was left devastated after allegedly receiving a text from a Swiss assisted dying clinic that their mum was dead and her ashes would be sent by post. Maureen Slough, a 58-year-old from Cavan, travelled to the Pegasos clinic on July 8 to seek an assisted death - without her family's knowledge - according to the Irish Independent. 2 Maureen reportedly told her family that she and a friend were going to Lithuania. "I was actually talking to her that morning and she was full of life," Maureen's partner Mick Lynch told the newspaper, speaking about the morning of her death. "She said after having her breakfast... she was going out to sit in the sun. Maybe she was heading off to that place. I still thought she was coming home." Her daughter, Megan Royal, then received a heartbreaking WhatsApp message, which allegedly said her mum had died listening to gospel music sung by Elvis Presley. The family is shocked that the clinic would accept an application for assisted dying from Maureen, who they say had long struggled with mental illness. She had also attempted suicide a year prior, after the deaths of her two sisters. Adding to their dismay, the family claims the clinic never informed them of her plans. Friends are reportedly horrified by the clinic's method of returning the ashes via parcel post. Her friend, Stephanie Daly, told the newspaper: "You get letters in the post, not people." Desperate for answers, the family found out Maureen had paid a reported £13,000 to the Pegasos Swiss Association to assist her death. Car bursts into flames in busy Glasgow street sparking rush hour chaos The Pegasos group is a non-profit voluntary assisted dying organisation. According to its website, the clinic believes it's "the human right of every rational adult of sound mind, regardless of state of health, to choose the manner and timing of their death". The group allegedly said it received a letter from Megan, stating she was aware of and accepted her mum's decision to die. The clinic also claims it verified the letter's authenticity through an email response from Megan, using an email address her mum provided. But Megan insists she never wrote the letter or verified any contact from the clinic, the report said. The family claims Maureen may have forged the letter and created a fake email address to verify it. Her brother Philip, a UK solicitor, claims Maureen provided the clinic with "letters of complaint to medical authorities in Éire in respect of bogus medical conditions" - which Pegasos then used as supporting documents for her application. Megan reportedly argues her mum's decision to go to the clinic was made in a state of grief, as a result of her sisters' deaths. She also cites her mum's difficult upbringing as a child. It is understood that in the past few weeks, the family has received handwritten goodbye letters from Maureen. The Pegasos group maintains that it carried out an extensive assessment of Maureen's mental health - including an independent psychiatric evaluation. They added that Maureen told the clinic she was in unbearable and unrelievable chronic pain and that they received supporting medical documentation from her pain-management consultant. Regarding the letter, the clinic claims Megan confirmed its authenticity via email and apologised for not being able to accompany her mum to Switzerland. The clinic claims the letter expressed that while Megan was unhappy with her mum's decision, she accepted it. Maureen's brother wants the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office, along with Swiss authorities, to conduct an investigation. "I am working on the assumption that my sister created this email and the clinic's procedures were woefully inadequate in verification," he wrote. "The Pegasos clinic has faced numerous criticisms in the UK for their practices with British nationals, and the circumstances in which my sister took her life are highly questionable." When approached for comment by the Daily Mail, the Pegasos Swiss Association said it could not "share, confirm, nor deny the identities of our patients in public". It added: "When talking about voluntary assisted death in Switzerland, it is important to understand that all organisations are legally bound to do careful prior assessment. "Pegasos has always respected the applicable Swiss law without exception and continues to do so." Maureen's family's story is not unique. Other families have also slammed Pegasos, claiming they had no knowledge that their loved ones would undergo assisted deaths. In 2023, Pegasos reportedly vowed to contact a person's relatives beforehand after 47-year-old teacher Alistair Hamilton - who had no diagnosed illness - died, leaving his family shocked. However, in 2025, the organisation appeared to break this promise. Anne Canning, a 51-year-old British mum, who was battling depression after the sudden death of her son 19 months prior, ended her life at the clinic, ITV first reported. Her family were allegedly not informed of her decision - only finding out after they received goodbye letters she had written shortly before her death.

Report: Kohberger could have crept into Idaho house weeks before murders
Report: Kohberger could have crept into Idaho house weeks before murders

Daily Mail​

timea minute ago

  • Daily Mail​

Report: Kohberger could have crept into Idaho house weeks before murders

Bryan Kohberger had may have broken into the victims' home to scope out the layout and where each of the students slept in the lead-up to the slayings. The 30-year-old criminology PhD student had also likely stalked other potential victims around the college town of Moscow , Idaho , before he settled on the chosen target of his murderous rampage on November 12, 2022. These chilling theories were revealed by Latah County Prosecutor Bill Thompson in a new interview with CBS '48 Hours' podcast, days after Kohberger was sentenced to a lifetime behind bars for the murders of Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin . Thompson said Kohberger showed knowledge of the layout of the home at 1122 King Road and who slept in which room on the night of the murders - meaning it is possible it was not his first time inside. 'The layout of the house is unique - it's a little bit confusing,' the prosecutor said. 'Admittedly, if he was parked up behind the house on that bank, which we believe is where he parked, he would be able to see into the house at night and he would be able to see whose rooms were where. 'Whether he was actually in the house at some point before November 13, we don't know for sure. We can't exclude that. In the early hours of November 13, 2022, Kohberger broke into the three-story home in the heart of the college town and stabbed the four victims to death. He entered through the sliding door in the kitchen on the second floor and went straight up to Mogen's room on the third floor. Finding 21-year-old best friends Mogen and Goncalves in Mogen's bed, he stabbed both multiple times. On his way back downstairs or on leaving the house, he encountered 20-year-old Kernodle who had just received a DoorDash order. He attacked and killed her, before fatally stabbing her boyfriend Chapin, 20, who was sleeping in her bed in her room on the second floor. Kohberger then left through the same door he had entered, passing surviving roommate Dylan Mortensen who had opened her bedroom door after hearing concerning noises in the home. In total, Kohberger was inside the home and murdered all four victims in less than 15 minutes. While Thompson said police could not confirm or deny Kohberger had been inside the home prior to that night, there is evidence to prove he 'was certainly stalking that neighborhood' in the run-up to the murders. The prosecutor revealed the slain victims might not have been the killer's only targets. 'Certainly there may have been other potential victims that he was looking at,' Thompson said. Who those potential victims were and what led Kohberger to ultimately pick his chosen targets, only he knows. After more than two years of investigating, no connection has ever been found between the killer and the victims. In a press conference after Kohberger's sentencing on July 23, police said 1122 King Road had been targeted but that it is unclear if Kohberger was specifically targeting one or more of the victims inside. Cell phone data, previously revealed in court documents, shows Kohberger was surveilling the student area in the lead-up to the murders. From July 2022 through to November 13, 2022, his phone placed him in the vicinity of the King Road home at least 23 times, mostly at night. Newly-released Moscow Police records reveal the victims had seen a man lurking in the trees outside their home and noticed a string of bizarre incidents in the weeks before the murders. Around one month earlier, Goncalves had told multiple people including surviving roommates Mortensen and Bethany Funke and her ex-boyfriend Jack DuCoeur she had seen a man watching her in the trees around the home when she took her pet dog Murphy outside. Friends also recalled multiple occasions when, during parties at the home, Goncalves' dog Murphy would run barking into the tree line and wouldn't return when he was called. This was out of character for the dog, they said. On November 4, 2022 - just nine days before the murders - the roommates had come home to find the door to their three-story house open. Funke said that they had grabbed golf clubs and gone room to room, thinking there was an intruder, police records show. Goncalves had also mentioned someone following her around two or three weeks before her murder. Around that same time, a female student living on Queen Road - close to the King Road home - said a man tried to break into her home but the door was locked. Thompson told '48 Hours' that Kohberger was surveilling or stalking the area to get a sense of the neighborhood and the likes of the students' living patterns. But investigators had not been able to verify if those strange occurrences of a man lurking in the trees were connected to Kohberger. 'The cell phone experts were not able to correlate Mr. Kohberger's phone being in the area at the time of those occurrences,' Thompson said. 'But they were able to show that he was in that area of some 20 plus times other times at night, between like 10 and early morning hours, 10 in the evening when there would be no legitimate reason for him to be over here to shop here being Moscow, being in Moscow to shop which was his routine practice. 'So we certainly believe that those trips were – involved Mr. Kohberger looking and surveilling or stalking, whatever the case may be.' Kohberger has offered no answers to these lingering questions. At his sentencing in Ada County Courthouse in Boise, Idaho, on July 23, he refused to reveal any details about the murders or his motive. Kohberger stared blankly at the families, friends and loved ones of his victims as they delivered heartbreaking victim impact statements inside the courtroom - with no flicker of remorse or emotion. When it was his opportunity to speak, he said just three words: 'I respectfully decline.' Thompson told '48 Hours' he 'saw nothing' in Kohberger's eyes when he was confronted by the families he had torn apart. 'I saw nothing in Bryan Kohberger while the impact statements were going on. It's as though his eyes were empty,' he said.

Austin Robert Drummond arrested in quadruple killing in Tennessee
Austin Robert Drummond arrested in quadruple killing in Tennessee

BBC News

timea minute ago

  • BBC News

Austin Robert Drummond arrested in quadruple killing in Tennessee

A man suspected in the targeted killing of four family members and leaving their baby abandoned in front of a stranger's home has been arrested in rural weeklong manhunt for Austin Robert Drummond ended after local authorities instituted an early morning shelter-in-place for residents near Jackson after he was sighted there. Residents were warned to lock doors and windows as police searched for accuse Drummond, 28, of killing the baby's parents, grandmother and teenaged uncle before abandoning the infant in front of stranger's arrest "marks an important step in restoring safety to our community," Jackson Police Chief Thom Corley said. The abandoned baby, left in a car seat, was found in front of a stranger's home in Tigrett, Tennessee on July 29 prompting a search for the parents. Soon after, the four family members were found dead about 40 miles (64km) away in Tiptonville. It prompted a statewide manhunt for Bureau of Investigation (TBI) Director David Rausch said the killings were believed to be targeted and that Drummond had a relationship with the family. Authorities have not elaborated on the relationship, nor on any potential motive. The baby is safe and being cared for, authorities have said. A photo of Drummond's capture shared by the TBI shows him in a black hoodie in a wooded area in Jackson, about 70 miles south of Tiptonville, where the family was found dead. The victims have been identified as: James M. Wilson, 21, and Adrianna Williams, 20, the baby's parents; Cortney Rose, 38, the infant's grandmother; and Braydon Williams, 15, the baby's other people have been arrested and charged with assisting Drummond after the quadruple his arrest, police released footage appearing to show Drummond carrying a gun and wearing camouflage clothing while trying to enter a building.A $32,500 reward for information that would lead to his arrest was offered on Monday as authorities scrambled to end the is facing charges including four counts of first degree murder, one count of aggravated kidnapping, four counts of felon in possession of a firearm, and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a dangerous was previously convicted of robbing a convenience store in 2013 with a gun. He was released in September 2024 after serving13 years in prison, according to Tennessee prison 2020, a district attorney warned the state's parole board against releasing Drummond, citing threats to jurors and multiple disciplinary actions while in prison."This type of behavior clearly demonstrates that Drummond has no desire for rehabilitation and is not capable of living among society," Jody Pickens wrote.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store