
Family of murdered Lyons kingpin Ross Monaghan say notorious rivals DIDN'T order executions
The Lyons and Daniels have been at war for decades, with both sides involved in sickening violence
THE grief-stricken family of murdered Lyons gang kingpin Ross Monaghan last night sensationally said their Daniel clan enemies are not to blame.
We can reveal the bitter Glasgow rivals have put their own conflict on hold amid suspicions a foreign crew ordered the Costa del Sol pub hit on hoods Monaghan, 43, and Eddie Lyons Jnr, 46.
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Eddie Lyons Jnr was shot dead at the Irish bar in Spain last weekend
Credit: Alan MacGregor Ewing - The Sun Glasgow
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Family of Ross Monaghan sensationally said their Daniel clan enemies are not to blame.
Credit: PA:Press Association
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Spanish cops are continuing to hunt the gunman who struck in Fuengirola on Saturday
Credit: Solarpix
The relative said: 'The one thing people need to know is the Daniels are not behind this.
"There are other theories about who is behind it, but the one thing we know for sure is it's got nothing to do with the Daniels or Mark Richardson.'
The relative also insisted that despite leading lives of crime, both victims were much-loved family men.
Tragically, Eddie Lyons Jnr's death came just weeks after his teenage daughter passed away from illness.
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The relative added: 'Ross obviously did what he did and the family accept that, but people have been saying some very horrible things.
'They have to remember Ross was a father and a son. Eddie had only just buried his daughter and so you can imagine this has hit everyone extremely hard — none more so than his brother Steven Lyons who is extremely upset.'
The Lyons and Daniels have been at war for decades, with both sides involved in sickening violence.
We told yesterday how the under-siege Daniels are said to have set aside £500,000 to deal with potential revenge attacks amid fears they would be wrongly blamed for the killings.
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A source said: 'Neither side can take the moral high ground but for once there is genuine shock at what's happened in Spain on both sides.
'The last thing the Lyons and the Daniels need is more bloodshed, so it's easy to see why they want to make it clear that these murders are the work of another crime gang operating outside Scotland.'
The FULL story of Scotland's biggest gangster Jamie 'The Iceman' Stevenson Coming This Sunday
Spanish cops are continuing to hunt the gunman who struck in Fuengirola on Saturday.
Police Scotland has also ruled out claims the assassinations were plotted by warring mobsters here.

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Sign up now for the latest news on the North Wales Live Whatsapp community Mike spent a month unconscious in hospital, with his then-pregnant daughter Hayley and sister Nicola flying out to be by his side as he lay hooked up to ventilator machines. (Image: PA) After being repatriated to Salford Royal Hospital, Mike spent the remaining year of his life unable to move or speak, in a vegetative state and needing around the clock care. He tragically died in August of 2019. He was just 48. On what would have been his 54th birthday, Mike's daughter Hayley said the family has spent years in the dark and "unable to have closure without answers" as they issued another desperate appeal for information. Hayley said: "You can't ever really move on, because you don't have any answers. It's been years and we haven't been told anything." She added: "At the time, there were so many different witness stories. At one point we were told it was a stag party and someone in camouflage clothing. 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North Wales Live
an hour ago
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"They said they have never been able to get the sound of him hitting the ground out of their head." Mike, whose full name is Michael, was 47-years-old when he went on the holiday to the Spanish town with a group of friends to celebrate a birthday and watch the 2018 football World Cup. His group of 30 were on the Avenue de Mallorca strip and had been to the Hippodrome Bar when the lifelong Manchester United fan became separated from his friends. In the early hours of the morning he became involved in a dispute with another group and was subsequently knocked to the ground and suffered catastrophic head injuries. There was an investigation by the Spanish police which concluded without anyone being prosecuted. During the investigations carried out by Greater Manchester Police, detectives interviewed over 15 English holidaymakers who were there on the night of the attack. They established that the man suspected of assaulting Mike was described as a white man aged in his 20s or 30s, with a larger than average build, 5ft 7ins to 6ft tall, who was possibly wearing camouflage clothing. The attack happened in an area popular with tourists. Bars were busy with drinkers watching the World Cup and enjoying a night out. Hayley, 36, added: "My dad's partner at the time got the call from one of his friends to tell her what had happened. When you hear that, you still never think it will be as bad as what we walked into. "When I first saw him in the hospital and he was lying there with tubes everywhere it was so painful I had to walk back out. I was pregnant with one of my daughters, and I flew out the next day with my partner. "Between me and Nicola his sister we kept going back and forth to make sure he was never on his own. It was so hard on us all. I had a young child at the time too, so it was really difficult." Mike was flown back and admitted to Salford Royal Hospital. Despite surviving until the August the following year, Hayley said he was unable to move or speak, and that she had "already lost him" before his life support was turned off. "He couldn't move, he couldn't talk and he couldn't breathe without a machine," Hayley added. "But there were days where it seemed like he was getting better and he'd take breaths on his own. "It would build up our hope up and we thought he might be able to have some quality of life. But every time you got up there, you'd hit a brick wall. "Only his eyes were his very limited communication via blinking. You never knew if he understood you or not. It was like we'd already lost him. He was such a proud person and for him to be like that... it just wasn't him. He was always out and about and active. "My dad never got to hold her or touch my daughter because he was in hospital. In 2022, I had a son which would have been his only grandson. He had always wanted a grandson." Greater Manchester Police confirmed there had been no updates in the case, which remains in the hands of Spanish authorities. Hayley added: "It was like the Spanish police just thought a British man had gone over, got p***ed and started a fight. But my dad was not a violent person. "We want to get this out there again, to see if anyone can remember anything or will speak out." Anyone who may have information or remember anything that may resonate from a trip to Benidorm in the summer of 2018 is still urged to contact police with any details they may have. Mike had been wearing a red Hugo boss t-shirt on the night in question and was outside the Hippodrome bar in Benidorm Square when a fight broke out with a group of five or six men. Anyone with information should contact the police's Major Incident Team on 0161 856 6777 quoting Operation Thurston. Details can be passed anonymously to the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.