
Sean McGovern's return from Dubai marks Ireland's highest risk extradition since John Gilligan
Given it is the most significant extradition of an Irish gangland figure for 25 years, the
return of Sean McGovern
to his native
Dublin
is expected to involve a big security operation.
After arriving from Dubai at Casement Aerodrome in Baldonnel on an Irish Air Corps aircraft, McGovern is expected be taken immediately under armed escort to the
Special Criminal Court
to face charges of murder and directing organised crime.
The operation to bring him across Dublin, within a tight mobile security cordon, will likely involve a mix of
Defence Forces
and
Garda
personnel, most of them armed. The precise details of how he will be moved are tightly guarded, but such escorted journeys usually involve a convoy of vehicles.
However, in this case it is possible that at least some of the trip to the Courts of Criminal Justice (CCJ) complex in the north inner city could involve a helicopter flight.
READ MORE
Should even a portion of the escort be done by road it would involve rolling street closures to ensure the fastest journey time possible and minimise any possible security risk while McGovern is on the move, including any effort to free him.
That risk is the prime reason why a helicopter being used to bring him as close as possible to the CCJ has been considered an option during the planning stages.
Sean McGovern is expected be taken immediately under armed escort to the Criminal Courts of Justice in Dublin to face charges of murder and directing organised crime. Photograph: Matt Kavanagh
McGovern (39) has been one of a small group at the apex of the Kinahan cartel living openly in
Dubai
. He would likely serve 30 years in prison if convicted of the Kinahan-Hutch feud murder of Noel Kirwan (62) in 2016.
His is the highest risk extradition since
John Gilligan
was brought back from the UK to Ireland 25 years ago to face charges of murdering journalist Veronica Guerin and drug dealing.
Unlike Gilligan's extradition, performed under oft used arrangements between
Britain
and Ireland, McGovern's journey from Dubai is different. It is a red letter day for Irish policing, the Republic's and UAE's legal systems and the relationship between the State and the Emirate.
John Gilligan was brought from the UK to Ireland 25 years ago to face charges of murdering Veronica Guerin and drug dealing.
Photograph: Alan Betson
There is no extradition treaty between the EU and UAE, which has previously been slow to co-operate with western countries on law enforcement matters. McGovern is the first person ever extradited to Ireland from the UAE and he was also the first member of the Kinahan cartel arrested in Dubai.
He was being extradited under a special once-off legal arrangement agreed by authorities in the UAE and Ireland. Since he was arrested at his Dubai home last October, on foot of the extradition request by the Irish authorities, a new extradition agreement has been put in place.
However, that treaty, a permanent arrangement, cannot be retrospective. It means it can only be used for cases initiated after it was signed late last year, thus excluding McGovern's case.
It has taken a near 10-year diplomatic campaign – undertaken by successive government's and the Garda – to reach this juncture. Former assistant Garda commissioner John O'Driscoll, who died suddenly last year after retiring, was a central player in those efforts.
He was crucial to convincing the US to join the international fight against the cartel, which led to financial and travel sanctions being imposed on its leaders in Dubai. The involvement of the US authorities also ramped up pressure on the UAE to co-operate with Ireland.
Helen McEntee
travelled to Dubai to meet her counterparts while serving as minister for justice. Garda Commissioner
Drew Harris
has done likewise. When interviewed in Dubai last year by The Irish Times, Mr Harris said he believed the UAE authorities, including Dubai Police, were co-operating fully with him and his colleagues. He insisted that co-operation would lead to firm results.
The Kinahans – Christy snr, Daniel and Christopher jnr – were in 2022 named by the US Department of the Treasury as being at the apex of the criminal network and sanctions were put in place against them
That first result is the extradition of McGovern, though the bigger prizes – still being worked towards – are charges being approved against, and the extraditions of Christy Kinahan and his sons Daniel and Christopher, who remain headquartered in Dubai.
The murder McGovern is charged with, that of Noel Kirwan in December 2016, was regarded as particularly cruel. He was shot six times outside his home in Clondalkin as part of the Kinahan-Hutch feud, even though he was not involved in it or organised crime.
Mr Kirwan was pictured at the funeral of feud victim Eddie Hutch in February, 2016, alongside his brother, Gerard Hutch, known as The Monk. Gerard Hutch was named in
Criminal Assets Bureau (Cab)
evidence to the High Court as the main protagonist in the Kinahan-Hutch feud on the Hutch side. On the other side, Cab told the court, was Daniel Kinahan, Liam Byrne and Freddie Thompson. Byrne and Thompson have run the Kinahan cartel's Irish operation at different times.
Noel Kirwan, was shot dead in Dublin in December 2016
The fact Mr Kirwan was spotted at the Hutch funeral was enough for the cartel to target him.
As well as being charged with his murder, McGovern is also facing charges of directing organised crime in Dublin.
McGovern was a close associate of Liam Byrne and was a member of his gang – the 'Byrne organised crime group' – running the cartel's Irish operation. However, about a decade ago he began rapidly moving up the hierarchy in the cartel and moved to Dubai to effectively act as Daniel Kinahan's day-to-day right hand man.
McGovern was wounded in the Kinahan-Hutch feud-related attack at the Regency Hotel, north Dublin, in 2016, and was one of seven men at the apex of the cartel sanctioned by the US authorities in 2022.
At the time, he was described by the department of the treasury in the US as 'Daniel Kinahan's advisor and closest confidant'. It further stated that 'evidence indicates that all dealings with Daniel Kinahan go through Sean McGovern'.
McGovern, whose house in Crumlin, Dublin, was seized by Cab in 2019, also 'managed communications on behalf of Daniel Kinahan, and he sells multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine', it said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Irish Times
an hour ago
- Irish Times
Norwegian investor and Swedish hotel group bid €1.3bn for Dalata
Dalata has received a €1.3 billion takeover bid from Norwegian shareholder Eiendomsspar along with a hotel-owning associate of the firm, called Pandox. Eiendomsspar owns a 25 per cent stake in Sweden-based Pandox, whose portfolio includes the Leonardo hotels at Christ Church in Dublin, Cork, Galway and Belfast. The €6.05-a-share cash offer, which is non-binding, represents a 27.1 per cent premium to Dalata's closing price on March 5th. That was the last trading day prior to the announcement by Dalata of the commencement of a strategic review and formal sale process. The bid has come as a surprise as the Eiendomsspar-Pandox consortium had not been involved in a formal process that has been going on in recent months. Investment bank Rothschild has been leading that process. READ MORE [ Norwegian hotels investor builds 5.45% stake in Dalata Opens in new window ] 'The consortium has not participated in that process to date and has formulated and submitted the proposal independently, reflecting its interest in Dalata and its belief in the strong strategic and financial merits of a combination,' the consortium said in a statement. Eiendomsspar, which first emerged with a disclosable stake above 3 per cent in Dalata at the end of October. Its holding currently stands at 8.8 per cent.


Irish Examiner
an hour ago
- Irish Examiner
Man who fired shotgun in Carlow shopping centre had a known 'fascination for firearms'
A man with a known 'fascination for firearms' was on bail for gun charges when he fired shots in a Carlow shopping centre before fatally shooting himself. Gardaí had objected to bail for Evan Fitzgerald, aged 22, after he was caught last year with guns and ammunition which they said he admitted to having bought on the dark web. However, he was given bail on strict conditions and was due back in court on the charges this week. On Sunday, he walked through the Fairgreen Shopping Centre in Carlow firing a shotgun in the air. He then shot himself outside the shopping centre after being challenged by armed gardaí. It was a 'terrifying experience' for shoppers who fled the building when the gunman started shooting in the air, Assistant Garda Commissioner Paula Hilman said. The scene at Fairgreen Shopping Centre, Carlow on Sunday Photo: A girl sustained a minor leg injury when she fell while running from the centre. No one other than any of the shots fired injured the gunman, the assistant commissioner said. Mr Fitzgerald, who was from Portrushen, Kiltegan, at the border between Co Wicklow and Co Carlow, was arrested in March 2024 following an intelligence-led firearm trafficking operation. Gardaí seized a semi-automatic M1911 pistol, an automatic Koch G3 rifle, and ammunition after a car in which Mr Fitzgerald was travelling was stopped at Ponsonby Bridge near Straffan, Co Kildare. 'Mr Fitzgerald has a fascination with firearms,' Detective Garda Gavin Curran told the court. Mr Fitzgerald was granted bail in March 2024. Gardai blocking off roads leading to Fairgreen Shopping Centre, Carlow yesterday evening Photo: Sinn Féin TD Matt Carthy said reports that the suspect was on bail for firearms charges is 'deeply concerning'. It is unacceptable to have such serious crimes carried out by those on bail, he said. Figures released to Mr Carthy in recent weeks showed that, between 2022 and 2024, 64 crimes were committed by those on bail for possession of firearms — while 2,312 crimes in the period were carried out by individuals on bail for possession of offensive weapons. Mr Carthy called for a wider review of the enforcement and operation of bail laws. Following the shooting, bomb disposal experts were called from Collins Barracks in Cork to examine a possible explosive device after gardaí found a bottle containing an unknown substance on the body of the dead man. However, the area was later declared safe. Multiple reports of shots being fired in the shopping centre were made to gardaí at around 6.15pm on Sunday. 'Gardaí responded to the scene and met a large number of people running from the shopping centre,' Assistant Commissioner Hilman said. 'An unarmed uniform unit arriving at the scene observed the suspect exiting the shopping centre. 'The suspect discharged a firearm — a shotgun — into the air. Another plain clothes-armed garda unit responding drew their official firearms and identified themselves as armed gardaí. 'The suspect discharged the firearm again, self-inflicting a fatal wound. 'No member of An Garda Síochána discharged a weapon. This was meant to be a normal day out on a bank holiday weekend. This was a terrifying experience for every person that was present.' Forensic investigators at Fairgreen Shopping Centre, Carlow, where a man died following a shooting incident on Sunday evening. Picture: Niall Carson/PA Wire An autopsy will be carried out by the State pathologist in Dublin today. The suspect was described as 'white Irish' by gardaí after far-right and anti-immigrant sentiment was being stoked online, with false rumours circulating about the scale of the attack and the ethnicity of the shooter. The Hope and Courage Collective said the tragic incident was being used by prominent anti-migrant accounts to spread false claims and conspiracies. Gardaí have appealed for witnesses to come forward. Read More 41643889[#embed5]

Irish Times
2 hours ago
- Irish Times
‘It's ridiculous – we've nothing here': Co Kildare village to lose its last shop
'Older people and people with disabilities are so shocked, there was no forewarning really,' Johnstown resident David Stynes said as news filtered through the village that the only shop in the locality, Jordan's Centra, is due to close this week. 'It's ridiculous, we've nothing in the town,' the 65-year-old said. Located just off the N7, between Naas and Kill in Co Kildare , Johnstown, like 11 other Johnstowns in the east of the country, owes its name to the order of St John of Jerusalem, Knights Hospitaller, said local historian Brian McCabe. 'The original church is up the way. Since the 1300s, there has been a village here,' he said. From Naas originally, Mr Stynes has lived in Johnstown for the last three years and is a wheelchair user. He was candid about how the shop closure will affect him. READ MORE 'As you can see I'm not very mobile. I'm lucky I have an electric wheelchair, but if you're sitting at home and you realise eight, nine, 10 o'clock you have run out of bread, where are you supposed to go now?' He has already experienced some of the hardship that the shop closure will bring. 'I have to rely on the buses to get to Kill or Naas. But last week I was going up the ramp and the wheelchair toppled over and I ended up in hospital, so I can't really trust getting on the buses now,' he said. Mr Stynes, like many others, is critical of the lack of communal infrastructure in the village. 'What's the town going to be left with, a Chinese restaurant?' he said. 'For older and disabled people, it's going to be a nightmare.' Amenities in the area have not kept pace with significant population growth of recent times, say villagers. Photograph: Stephen Farrell The owner of the shop, Alan Jordan, who lives locally and whose children have worked in the store, said closing had been a difficult decision that was not taken lightly. 'The business has been growing and expanding, but unfortunately the premises is no longer fit for purpose,' he said. 'It has been outgrown by the size of the community, it can't provide the range of products that the community deserves. On three occasions over the last 12 years we have tried unsuccessfully to secure alternative sites in the village.' [ Irish post office network requires annual funding of €15m to avoid 'rapid closures' Opens in new window ] One of these sites, located across the road from the shop, remains vacant. 'We would have built a 4,000 sq ft store there with 44 car-parking spaces ... But that didn't come to pass; a group of local people weren't in favour.' The Jordan Centra group is the largest Centra chain in Ireland, with stores in eight other locations in Kildare and Dublin. The Jack and Jill Children's Foundation , whose administrative offices are located above the Centra store in Johnstown, has agreed to purchase the shop, pending the owner getting planning approval for its change of use, said Deirdre Walsh, chief executive of the charity. However, some locally have queried the need for increased storage space at the shop. Katelyn Dunne (19), who lives in Johnstown and works in the local Chinese restaurant, said: 'They were saying that you can't store everything in the shop, but you don't need everything in it, just the essentials: food and bread.' For many, the impending closure of the shop is further evidence of the hollowing out of a village and its environs, which has more than 1,300 inhabitants who already have no school or post office of their own. The local community centre has been closed since 2000 as the local council did not take it over, said Johnstown resident and Fine Gael councillor, Fintan Brett. There are hopes for the reopening of the Johnstown Inn pub this year. Photograph: Stephen Farrell However, one bright spot on the horizon is that the Johnstown Inn at the top of the village, which closed four or five years ago, has new owners and may open again at the end of the year, say locals. Another possible positive development for the village may involve the vacant site across from the Centra store, Mr McCabe said. 'We have plans for the site of the old Johnstown Garden Centre, we're in consultation with the council about developing that as a community area,' he said. In response to queries, Kildare County Council said it was 'actively pursuing' the provision of a community development facility for Johnstown, but due to commercial sensitivities was unable to disclose further details. While Johnstown may be something of a quiet village, the lack of services is frustrating for its residents especially as the area has seen significant population growth in recent times. The 2022 Census said the Johnstown area had a population of 1,320, with the largest age cohort being in the 15 to 19-years-old category. Ms Dunne is fully aware of the effect the shop closure will have on her peers. 'So many people around here have jobs there and lots of lads around here do work experience there and they won't be able to do that either,' she said. Johnstown has been bypassed several times – by the Naas dual carriageway in the 1960s and more recently by the N7. Locals are now wondering whether the village will remain permanently bypassed in terms of amenities. 'For the population, it's kind of ridiculous,' resident Alan Browne (43) said.