
Kinahan Cartel chief Sean McGovern extradited from UAE on Irish military jet
Sean McGovern and David Byrne who died in the Regency attack
Kinahan cartel gangster Sean McGovern is on his way back to Ireland on a military plane from Dubai after dramatic developments occurred in the Gulf State in the last number of days.
'There has been major developments in this case in the Middle East, - Mr McGovern is on his way home ' a source has revealed.
The Irish Air Corps flight needs to take at least two stops on the way to Dublin.
Gardaí believe that Drimnagh man McGovern is Daniel Kinahan's right-hand man, and the US Treasury Department has claimed he "sells multi-kilogramme quantities of cocaine" on behalf of the cartel.
He has been held in a prison in Dubai since his arrest last October and he had previously launched a series of legal challenges to the extradition process.
He is also wanted on organised crime charges in this jurisdiction.
His original detention came after protracted consultation between An Garda Síochána, Interpol and police and justice authorities in Dubai and Ireland.
A European Arrest Warrant (EAW) was issued in April 2022 by the High Court for McGovern to face criminal charges here.
UAE authorities did not act on the warrant, but a formal request from the Department of Justice to the UAE equivalent were later issued.
McGovern's original arrest was seen by gardaí as a test case for the planned arrest and eventual extradition of cartel leader Kinahan on criminal charges.
Sources say McGovern's arrest has been a "major breakthrough" in garda efforts to take down the senior leadership of the cartel.
Since 2022, garda efforts have been concentrated on McGovern's extradition because, unlike the Kinahan leadership, he is facing criminal charges.
Sean McGovern, pictured with his partner Anita Freeman
Gardai want to charge him with the murder of Noel 'Duck Egg' Kirwan (62) was shot six times as he sat in his car on December 22, 2016 at St Ronan's Drive, Clondalkin, Dublin 22.
He is believed to have been targeted because of perceived links to members of the Hutch family who were at war with the Kinahan cartel at the time.
McGovern, a convicted drug dealer suffered minor injuries after he was shot during the Regency Hotel bloodbath in February, 2016, when his gang was attacked by the Hutch gang.
He has been named in the Special Criminal Court by Detective Superintendent David Gallagher while giving evidence in the trial of Michael Crotty, who is accused of facilitating the murder of Noel Kirwan in 2016 by buying a mobile phone top-up for Sean McGovern.
He has also been identified by the US sanctions against the Kinahan Organised Crime Group.n the US Treasury sanctions document McGovern connections with the Kinahan Organised Crime Group are laid out.
Sean McGovern and David Byrne who died in the Regency attack
They claimed that he was involved with a cover company being used by the gang to launder money.
McGovern 'was designated for materially assisting, sponsoring, or providing financial, material, or technological support for, or goods or services to or in support of, Daniel Kinahan'.
The document alleged that McGovern: 'is Daniel Kinahan's advisor and closest confidant, and evidence indicates that all dealings with Daniel Kinahan go through Sean McGovern. Sean McGovern also has managed communications on behalf of Daniel Kinahan, and he sells multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine'.
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Agriland
a day ago
- Agriland
FSAI goes to High Court to enforce closure order on food business
The Food Safety Authority of Ireland (FSAI) went to the High Court last month to enforce a closure order on a business after it continued to trade despite the order. The closure order was one of 10 closure orders and two prohibition orders issued in July. These orders, collectively referred to as enforcement orders, were issued for breaches of food safety legislation under to the FSAI Act, 1998 and the European Union (Official Controls in Relation to Food Legislation) Regulations, 2020. Closures orders can refer to the immediate closure of all or part of the food premises, or all or some of its activities, while prohibition orders are designed to prohibit the sale of a product, either temporarily or permanently. The enforcement orders were issued by environmental health officers in the Health Service Executive (HSE). Four closure orders were served under the FSAI Act, 1998 on: Lidl Sallynoggin Road, Glenageary, Co. Dublin (order lifted on August 1); Creed's Foodstore, Burncourt, Cahir, Co. Tipperary (order lifted on August 6); Brandon Hotel (closed areas include all kitchen areas, including dry goods store, wash up areas, staff canteen, restaurant and stills area), Prince's Street, Tralee, Co. Kerry (order lifted on July 25); Emerald Park (closed area includes the storage unit located to the rear of 'coffee dock' in Emerald Park), Kilbrew, Ashbourne, Co. Meath (order lifted on July 15). A further six closure orders were issued under the European Union (Official Controls in Relation to Food Legislation) Regulations, 2020 on: Londis Athboy (closed areas include the deli/food preparation area and ice cream service area), Connaught Street, Athboy, Co. Meath (order lifted on July 28); KRS Catering Stall (closed activity includes the service of all foods prepared off-site and transported to the venue; closure does not apply to the sale or service of beverages and foods prepared on-site), Powerstown Park Racecourse, Clonmel, Co. Tipperary (order lifted on July 17); Tim Nessa, 2A John's Street, Co. Limerick; Hidden Dojo Asian Street food, 47A Phibsborough Road, Phibsborough, Dublin 7; Wakami Sushi & Asian, 47A Phibsborough Road, Phibsborough, Dublin 7; Costa Coffee, 1 Dawson Street, Dublin 2 (order lifted on July 4). In relation to one of the businesses listed above, Tim Nessa, 2A John's Street, Limerick, the FSAI said: "The FSAI is aware that this food to trade despite the service by the HSE on July 8, 2025 of a closure order. "As a result, and in accordance with the applicable legislation, the FSAI applied to the High Court for various orders including that the continuance of the food business operator be prohibited and that the food business premises should immediately close until the food business is notified in writing that contraventions in the closure order have been remedied, or further order of the High Court," the authority added. The FSAI said the court granted an order to this effect on July 29, and that the parties concerned are at liberty to apply to the High Court in the meantime. The authority said that the food business concerned will be monitored to ensure it complies with the High Court's order, the HSE's closure order, and the relevant food legislation. Elsewhere, one prohibition order was served under the FSAI Act, 1998 on Ballymaguire Foods Unlimited Company, Rathmooney, Lusk, Co. Dublin for pre-packaged turkey and ham dinners. Finally, one prohibition order was served under the European Union (Official Controls in Relation to Food Legislation) Regulations, 2020 on Timothy Onwuegbusi, 2A John's Street, Limerick and Emeka Ikebudu, 2A John's Street, Limerick, for various products. Without referring to any particular business, the FSAI said that some of the reasons for enforcement orders in July include: rat droppings in a dishwasher room and food store; inadequate means to wash hands; owners and staff not wearing clean protective clothing; dead beetles observed in the bottom of a container of packaged food; various foods being kept at unsafe temperatures; rat droppings found in a storage unit; numerous rodent droppings on shelving; dead cockroaches in a main kitchen; and extensive food debris. Commenting on July's enforcement orders, FSAI chief executive Greg Dempsey said: "Recent foodborne incidents serve as a stark reminder of the need for food businesses to maintain the highest food safety standards. Consumers are entitled to expect that the food they purchase is safe, and food businesses have a clear legal and moral responsibility to ensure that it is. "The FSAI can provide support and advice to food businesses to help them meet their obligations. However, as demonstrated by the enforcement actions this month, where food businesses do not comply with their obligations, we will take action," Dempsey added.


Sunday World
2 days ago
- Sunday World
Man who knocked out 14-year-old with hurley in street attack spared jail
Defendant assaulted one of the boys by striking him with a hurley on the head which knocked him out A chef who pleaded guilty to hitting a 14-year-old boy with a hurley and also assaulting his 16-year-old brother has been given a suspended 18 month jail sentence at Sligo Circuit Court Daniel Walsh, (31) of Mullauns, Ballina pleaded guilty to assaulted Adam and Josh Conroy causing them harm on June 7, 2021 at Main Street, Easkey. And he pleaded guilty to a charge of production of an article, namely a hurley, to intimidate or cause serious injury, while attacking Adam Conroy. The court heard the defendant had been the subject of a European Arrest Warrant after he had re-located to France in August 2021, a couple of months after the incident. Sergeant Kieran Whelan, led by Mr Leo Mulrooney, ,BL (Prosecuting) instructed by State Solicitor Ms Elisa McHugh told the court that Adam Conroy was 14 at the time of the assault and Josh was 16 and the defendant was 27. In a statement Adam Conroy said he and his family who were from Westmeath, were at a holiday home in Easkey on the date in question. He, his brother and a few other teenagers had ordered some takeaways at 4pm when one of the group waved to a passing car, thinking he knew them. The car stopped, and a passenger, who was not before the court walked towards the group and started pushing them and they told him they wanted no trouble. Walsh, who was the driver, also got out of the car and he and another man were holding hurleys and a woman was trying to stop them. Adam Conroy's statement added that Walsh came from behind him and hit him on the head with the hurley. The blow knocked him out and he was brought by ambulance to hospital. Josh Conroy stated that one of the men began throwing punches and one of them kicked him on the ground and gave him a 'smack' on the side of the head. The then 16-year-old said he could not be certain of who assaulted him. He was also brought to hospital. Daniel Walsh pictured outside Sligo Courthouse The court was told that one eyewitness said Josh Conroy's face was covered in blood and another eyewitness said Walsh had brought down the hurley on Adam Conroy's head like a sledge and he fell to the ground. In his own statement, Sergeant Whelan said Garda Orla Greevy spoke with members of the public who had witnessed the incident and got the number of the car which had a Dublin registration. Walsh was identified from CCTV footage obtained by Garda Sean Campbell, the court heard. A medical report on Adam Conroy showed he had a cut over his right ear, had headaches with cuts to his ear. The cuts had to be cleaned and injected with a local anaesthetic, the top of his ear was stitched, and he was prescribed antibiotics. Josh Conroy had nasal and lip swelling, a chipped tooth, nose blee, pain to his left elbow and right hand and swelling to his face. He was given pain relief, there was no fracture, but was given head injury advice. Walsh was arrested on June 28 2021 and confirmed he was the owner of the car and admitted he had taken part in the incident. He also confirmed that he had used the hurley but said: 'I poked the hurley at him, I didn't swing it.' The defendant then discarded the hurley because he panicked. He said he wanted to pay compensation to the Conroys. The defendant had previous convictions for having no insurance, making off without paying and obtaining goods by deception. He was arrested on October 31 last year as he had been in France and was extradited back to Ireland. Neither of the Conroys were in court but in a Victim Impact Statement Adam Conroy said he would never forget what had happened to him in Easkey and it 'was forever embedded in memory.' It was an attack that made him angry and frustrated and it happened when he was only 14. He had been in shock and in pain and he felt sick. And he had stopped playing hurling and it had affected him socially and it had a big effect on his well-being. In his Victim Impact Statement, Josh Conroy said it was an unprovoked attack, and he had recurring nightmare, was feeling anxious all the time and thought his brother had died. His confidence was low, and had been prescribed medication. Mr Des Dockery SC with Keith O'Grady BL, instructed by McGovern Walsh Soliciors said there had been no metal band on the hurley. The defendant co-operated fully with gardai and took responsibility for the assaults on both brothers even though there was some ambivalence about who gave Josh Conroy the smack. A passenger had punched Josh Conroy in the face but there were no charges. The defendant was sorry, and it was totally out of character. After the incident he had gone to work as a chef in County Monaghan and then to work in France and he wanted to compensate the brothers for his actions. Walsh, led by Mr Dockery agreed that he had carried out an appalling act of gratuitous violence on children half his age. 'It sickens me to the stomach.' he said. The other man, who had never been charged, 'had been a good friend at the time.' Asked for an explanation for his actions, he said: 'My life was spiralling out of control with alcohol and drug use.' He re-located to Monaghan. He had been working but he had separated from his partner of seven year and he turned to alcohol. The defendant had a daughter who was six years of age then and was now eleven. He went to Monaghan to work and later got a job in Nice as a chef and had learned the language. He was now in a new relationship with an Irish woman, and they were to be married shortly. They had two small children. The defendant told the court that while in France he went to AA as he had lost everything. 'I got help and I am now 29 months sober.' He said he was also supporting others in recovery as a sponsor. The defendant had got work as a chef in Blessington, County Wicklow and had a three bed-roomed house for him and his family. He had also been offered promotion to take over the restaurant and he intended to become an addiction counsellor. The defendant had been to the gym and had run a half marathon for charity as he wanted to give something back to charity. He had worked hard to gather €10,000 for each of the victims. One sum had come from an inheritance and the other was borrowed from the Credit Union. The defendant had been drug tested in Naas on June 30 and had come up negative for drugs and drink in urine samples. He was asking the court for a chance Mr Dockery asked the court to give credit for an early plea. It was an act of stupidity, impulsive and irrational and the defendant was not the primary instigator but crossed the road to get involved. The Probation report showed he had deep remorse and was at a medium risk of re-offending. The defendant had made a big gesture of compensation, but he knew it was not definitive. He had been deemed suitable for a community service order with certain conditions. If he was jailed, he would lose his home. Copies of references were handed into court. Daniel Walsh pictured outside Sligo Courthouse News in 90 Seconds - August 12th Mr Dockery asked the court to make the defendant's rehabilitation as a matter of importance and he wondered if an immediate custodial sentence would be of any benefit to society. Judge Ronan Munro noted the two brothers had done nothing wrong. It was a shocking incident and Josh Conroy's face was covered in blood. It was clear from their Victim Impact Statements that the incident had significant long term effects on both of them. It was an unprovoked attack on two children and the defendant went out of his way, and he had sent them to hospital. The custody threshold had been crossed the judge added. The defendant had an early guilty plea and had shown remorse and had offered €20,000 compensation but money does not help in getting him off. But it was a penal sum. The Judge imposed an 18 month sentence, suspended for five years on payment of €20,000. Walsh was ordered to comply with all requirements of the probation service, attend AA meetings, address anti-social behaviour and anger management and engage with the probation service.


Irish Daily Mirror
2 days ago
- Irish Daily Mirror
Gardai expect major decision on charging Kinahan to come soon
Gardai are hopeful of bringing charges against the Kinahan cartel leaders - almost two years on from asking the DPP to do so. In particular, officers believe they will soon be able to level a charge against mob boss Daniel Kinahan, who is still living in the United Arab Emirates - where Ireland now has a formal extradition process - as a final decision from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) is expected. Gardai are understood to want to charge Kinahan over the murder of Eddie Hutch, a brother of Gerry 'The Monk' Hutch - but they also want to hit him, his brother Christy Jr, and his father Christy Sr with charges relating to running a E1 billion international criminal organisation. A massive file was sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) in August 2023, recommending charges for all three leaders of the Kinahan cartel - and sources say the clock is now ticking on that decision. Officers are understood to be optimistic that they will finally soon be able to charge, and ultimately extradite the Kinahans back to this country to face justice. However An Garda Siochana are not officially saying anything about the matter. When asked by this paper if they have received a decision from the DPP, gardai said: 'An Garda Síochána does not comment on correspondence with the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions.' Garda Commissioner Drew Harris did however comment on the matter two years ago - saying a 'very comprehensive and wide-ranging investigation into numerous serious offences committed here in Ireland and that file has been submitted to the DPP.' And we would hope to see leadership figures within the Kinahan organised crime group brought to justice here in Ireland,' he said at the time. The decision has still not been announced as Mr Harris sees out his final days at the head of the force - before Deputy Commissioner Justin Kelly takes the top job next month. Sources previously told this paper that officers also wanted to charge Daniel Kinahan over a foiled plot six years ago to murder Hutch ally James 'Mago' Gately. Gardai from the Drugs and organised Crime Bureau became aware that Estonian hitman Imre Arakas (64) was sent by the cartel to Dublin in April 2017 as part of a plot to murder Gately in Belfast. The Irish Mirror's Crime Writers Michael O'Toole and Paul Healy are writing a new weekly newsletter called Crime Ireland. Click here to sign up and get it delivered to your inbox every week Armed detectives stormed the house in west Dublin where Arakas was holed up and arrested him before he could head north to carry out the murder bid. A DOCB detective seized an encrypted phone from Arakas that had a message on its display saying 'Kill Mago Gately.' The phone's security system kicked in seconds after the detective grabbed the handset from Arakas and the message auto-deleted – but not before the officer took a photo of the screen with his own device. Sources say officers later established that the phone that sent the murder message was a handset controlled by Kinahan – and that is a key piece of the evidence against the mob boss. Christy Kinahan "Dapper Don" Gardai are hopeful that the new extradition agreement with the UAE will help to ensure that the Kinahans are brought back here to face justice. It comes as cartel mobster Sean McGovern was successfully flown back here in May and is now facing a Special Criminal Court trial for the alleged murder of Noel 'Duck Egg' Kirwan. The bloody Kinahan Hutch feud saw 18 men shot dead and began when Daniel Kinahan ordered the murder of Gary Hutch in Spain in 2015 - and when the cartel attempted to murder Gerry 'The Monk' Hutch in Lanzarote that Christmas. It significantly escalated when the Hutch gang struck back in February 2016 - shooting dead Kinahan associate David Byrne in Dublin's Regency Hotel - in a hit that was primarily targeting Daniel Kinahan. The feud ultimately claimed the lives of The Monk's brother Eddie, their nephews Gareth and Derek Coakley Hutch - and saw multiple attempts by the cartel to kill his nephews Jonathan Patrick and his brother Patsy. Gerry Hutch Gerry Hutch himself was accused of the murder of David Byrne but walked free after three Judges of the Special Criminal Court found him not guilty - citing a lack of evidence that he committed the crime at all. The feud also saw innocent dad of two Mr Kirwan shot dead after he had been merely pictured with 'The Monk' at Eddie Hutch's funeral, as well as the veteran gangster's friend Noel 'Kingsize' Duggan. Innocent Dublin city council worker Trevor O'Neill was another victim - killed in a horrific case of mistaken identity by a gunman targeting Jonathan Hutch on the island of Majorca in August 2016. Another innocent man - homeless Dubliner Martin O'Rourke, was also shot dead in the capital in April 2016 - after a gunman was targeting a Hutch associate in the area. Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest news from the Irish Mirror direct to your inbox: Sign up here.