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Desperate leaked texts from ex mob boss John Gilligan reveal what his life is like behind bars in Spain

Desperate leaked texts from ex mob boss John Gilligan reveal what his life is like behind bars in Spain

Daily Mail​2 hours ago
The Irish gangster who was tried for the murder of journalist Veronica Guerin has reportedly been begging for money across WhatsApp groups from prison.
John Gilligan, 73, from Dublin, was imprisoned in Alicante, Spain after he was discovered running ' Breaking Bad'-style pink cocaine drug lab thought to have produced €8 million worth of narcotics.
Dubbed 'Factory John' by the media due to his involvement in warehouse heists, the mobster was placed in police custody after being arrested on 18 December - but is thought to have been unable to pay his lawyer due to unpaid legal bills from previous court appearances.
Now, the gang veteran is said to be sharing texts across WhatsApp groups in Spain and Ireland where he is begging for cash.
According to Sunday World, the messages read: 'My name is **** I am a good friend of John Gilligan, he is 73, and in prison in Spain broke. John helped loads in his life and now he needs help money wise, no amount too small.
'Please share this WhatsApp with you friend an how John's friends get to see it. To sent to lawyers bank account (Details given). RE John Gilligan. Money gram, western union or bank transfers.'
He is currently imprisoned in Forcalent where he has been for the last eight months, and is currently waiting to be charged, which he may have to wait up to four years for.
Gilligan is 'washed up' and desperately short of cash, say Gilligan's friends, according to the report.
Earlier this year, footage released revealed Gilligan being arrested by heavily-armed Spanish police at a two-bedroom apartment in Costa Blanca.
Accused of plying the region with cocaine with the help of a North Macedonia clan he allegedly led, Gilligan was placed in jail where he has been since Christmas, read reports by the Sunday World.
Upon his arrest, a revolver wrapped in plastic was also discovered at the property inside a hideaway on an outside wall.
The property situated near Torrevieja - where police are said to have discovered the laboratory - belonged to his ex-partner, Sharon Oliver, according to reports.
Gilligan has been attempting to raise funds for bail since Christmas while the investigation proceeds.
At the time of his arrest, he had been residing in his former partner's Spanish property rent free after she had returned to England following her own arrest on a previous drug offence which resulted in a fine for Gilligan and a suspended sentence.
She was eventually cleared in court of involvement in Gilligan's drugs business.
Once Ireland's biggest drug dealer, Gilligan's lost his hold over the narcotics trade after he was accused of order the murder of Veronica Guerin.
He was previously given a 22-month suspended prison sentence by a Spanish Court after admitting using a courier service to smuggle cannabis and prescription-only drugs without a licence to Ireland.
He previously served 17 years in prison for drug trafficking before being released in 2013.
He later moved to Spain where he owned a number of properties, including a pub called, The Judges Chambers.
Gilligan had been involved in low-level street dealing and was arrested in 2020 when police discovered a stash of cannabis and prescription drugs.
Following a short stint in custody, he was able to secure bail and was relieved of his sentence. It was during this time that he recorded a documentary and wrote a book claiming his innocence in the Veronica Guerin case.
But in December, lengthy surveillance operation by police revealed Gilligan had been supplying the region with pink cocaine.
He was arrested in a house filled with the illegal substances, but reports claim the Dublin-born gangster was just 'a small cog in the wheel', involved in little more than street dealing and small debt collection.
Desperate to get out of prison, where he has previously expressed fears over 'dying', texts begging for financial support for his bail began to circulate WhatsApp groups earlier this summer.
He currently owes a number of previous court appearances he must pay off first.
The operation leading the arrest was titled Operation Overlord and involved officers from elite Spanish police anti-drug units, as well as the UK's National Crime Agency.
Gilligan was accused of ordering the murder of the Sunday Independent journalist Guerin in 2001. He was instead sentenced to 28 years for smuggling cannabis, and was freed in 2013.
Guerin's murder led to multiple other convictions. Paul Ward was sentenced to life as an accomplice on the grounds he had disposed of the murder weapon, but the conviction was subsequently overturned on appeal.
Brian 'Tosser' Meehan was convicted of her murder and remains in prison, although reports last year said he could be out in just five years after he was transferred from a maximum security jail.
Guerin was working for the Sunday Independent when she was shot dead at a red traffic light on the Naas Dual Carriageway near Newlands Cross on the outskirts of Dublin on June 26 1996.
The Colt Python revolver used to shoot her by one of two men on a motorbike, which had been loaded with .357 Magnum Semiwadcutter bullets, was never found.
Her funeral was attend by Irish Taoiseach John Bruton, who described her murder as an 'attack on democracy' and the head of Ireland's armed forces.
In the run-up to her assassination, Ms Guerin had filed charges for assault against Gilligan after he allegedly hit her at his £5million equestrian centre in County Kildare in September 1995 while she tried to quiz him about how he made his money.
The judge who acquitted the drugs baron accepted he had made a chilling telephone threat on September 15 1995 to kill her and kidnap her five-year-old son.
The journalist also had shots fired at her house in October 1994.
The following January she opened her door to a gunman wearing a motorbike helmet who shot her in thigh the day after writing an article about another high-profile Irish criminal.
Award-winning Ms Guerin was killed two days before she was due to speak at a Freedom Forum conference in London. The topic of her segment was 'Dying to Tell the Story: Journalists at Risk.'
Within a week of her murder the Irish parliament enacted two pieces of legislations enabling assets from the proceeds of time to be seized by the government. It led to the formation of the Criminal Assets Bureau.
Her life - and death - was later turned into a film starring Cate Blanchett as the fearless reporter.
Gilligan was accused of ordering the murder but was acquitted at trial in 2001. He was instead sentenced to 28 years for smuggling cannabis, and was freed in 2013.
At the trial, Mr Justice Diarmuid O'Donovan said of Gilligan: 'Never in the history of Irish criminal jurisprudence has one person been presumed to have caused so much wretchedness to so many. A haemorrhage of harm that is unlikely to heal in a generation.'
When asked about how he felt when Ms Guerin was killed, he said: 'Nothing really. I could say it for the cameras, 'oh my God, I was shocked'.
'I wasn't. It didn't matter to me.'
When asked further about the reporting of crime and gang activities, he added: 'If you go into the kitchen, don't expect not to be burned.'
However, the crime boss did admit that the journalist's death was 'the beginning of the end for him'.
'I wish them people had never done it, for her sake and for her family's sake, not just for mine.'
In 2023, he appeared in a three-part series on Ireland's Virgin Media channel called Confessions of a Crime Boss, which has caused outrage on the Emerald Isle for 'glorifying' a notorious gangster.
Around the same time, he released a book, The Gilligan Tapes: Ireland's Most Notorious Crime Boss In His Own Words, where he revealed he fears dying in prison, and that he wishes he had never gone into crime.
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Molly would go on to claim she had been a victim of domestic abuse at Jason's hands - something his family has strongly denied. Molly claims she was woken up in the middle of the night by Jason's daughter Sarah - who had had a nightmare. The children's step-mother says Jack and Sarah would whisper at the bedroom door to get Molly's attention as they knew they weren't supposed to wake up Jason. After getting Sarah back to sleep in her room, Molly claims she returned to bed and accidentally disturbed Jason - who was furious that she had 'coddled' the eight-year-old. Downstairs, Molly's father - who had made an impromptu overnight visit with wife Sharon - said he heard 'thumping' and instantly felt something 'wasn't right'. Molly claims Jason wanted to make her be quiet so he covered her mouth and started choking her. 'At some point, when he stopped, I screamed, and he started again, and the next thing I remember is my dad standing in the doorway,' she told ABC. Thomas claims he walked into the couple's bedroom to find Jason with Molly in a chokehold. He says his son-in-law told him he was going to kill Molly as he dragged her towards their bathroom. At this point, Thomas claims he hit Jason in the back of the head with a metal baseball bat - but then alleges the Irish father was strong enough to grab it off of him. The pair claim a struggle ensued as Molly feared Jason would then hit Thomas with the bat. She added: 'I'm trying' to hit him with the bat, and hit him with this end of the bat, and hit him with my elbow, and hit him with my fist, or anything else... but I'm going to hang onto that bat. And he goes down, and I've got the bat... and I back off.' Thomas was the one to call 911 and a recording of the conversation reveals how he calmly told emergency services: 'My son-in-law got in a fight with my daughter, I intervened and he's in bad shape. We need help.' He added: 'He's bleeding all over and I may have killed him.' 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And still you hate yourself, hit yourself, cry in the shower, vomit, curse, shout at me. I feel so inadequate Molls. I've given you everything in my life including my and my kids hearts and I know you love us so so much but you still in the last three days only have done all the above things. I don't know what to do.' Meanwhile, emails sent from Molly to Jason show how she would chastise him over his 'loser sperm'. And Jason sent himself email records which catalogued things she had said to him, which include the 'loser sperm' jibe, as well as criticisms she made about his weight. One of his emails to himself (which he sent in March 2014, some four months before Molly purchased the infertility drugs) said: 'Molly says I'm so sick in the head. B**** I wished dead. I need more of the bed because I'm so fat. My boobs are bigger than hers. Loser sperm, loser sperm. Kids probably aren't even mine because of my loser sperm.' Following Jason's killing, in February 2016, the father and daughter pled not guilty to murder during Davidson Superior Court during a hearing. Greg Brown, the attorney representing the state of North Carolina in the case, said the crime was especially 'heinous, atrocious and cruel'. Both applied for bail, which was granted on the condition that $200,000 was lodged with the court for each defendant, that they surrender their passports and agree to cease all contact with Jason's immediate family, specifically his children Jack and Sarah. After their father's death, the two children were interviewed by officers who upheld Molly's claims that Jason 'physically and verbally hurt' their step-mother. Eight-year-old Sarah said at the time: 'He would scream at my mom every day, or sometimes twice a day. He would fight with her. One time I saw him step on her foot. He called her bad names.' In a separate interview, Jack said: 'He would physically and verbally hurt my mom. She would cry and try to plug her ears. Sometimes she would just curl herself up in a ball. It made me very sad and angry.' The children both also recalled being coached by Molly's mother Sharon to call her and use the code-words 'peacock' and 'galaxy' if their father turned violent. However, Sarah said she never actually had to put the plan into action - and simply practised a lot. Following their return to Ireland, Jack and Sarah recanted their statements - a move which Molly and Thomas' legal team have claimed was influenced by Jason's family. As a result, the judge deemed Sarah and Jack Corbett's initial statements inadmissible when the case went to trial. While the father and daughter never denied killing Jason, they always claimed they had acted in self-defence, with Thomas telling 20/20 in 2017: 'I'm going to do everything that I have to do to save her life. And if I die trying, well… she's my daughter. I'm not going to live with not trying. I'll tell you that.' He also said while giving evidence that he believed Jason was going to kill him, and that he continued to hit the father-of-two with a baseball bat until he felt Jason was no longer a threat. However, during the 2017 trial, prosecutors disputed claims that Molly and Tom Martens acted in self-defence, arguing that they started attacking Jason when he was asleep in bed. They said blood spatter on Tom's shorts indication that Jason had been hit while he was lying down. In addition, paramedics who had attended the scene said that Jason was cool to the touch - suggesting that the Martens had delaying contacting emergency services, to ensure that the father-of-two could not be saved. The prosecution team also argued that Jason and Molly had been in disagreement over whether she could adopt his two children in the lead-up to his death - something she wanted to do. In their closing statements, the prosecution claimed that Molly Martens 'bashed Jason's skull' after learning that he wanted to take the children back to Ireland. Jason's autopsy showed he died from blunt force trauma to his head. The description of the 'means of death' is a 'ball bat and landscaping stone'. During the trial, forensic experts argued that the physical evidence - including blood splatter patterns - proved that Jason sustained severe head injuries while on his bedroom floor. It has also been suggested that Jason sustained wounds post-mortem - meaning he was beaten after he died. After just hours of deliberation, the jury returned a guilty verdict for both Tom and Molly. They were sentenced to 20-25 years in prison. After finding the father and daughter guilty, juror Miriam Figueroa said they did not believe the choking incident took place as Molly never had any reported injuries from the hospital at the time. 'The evidence to me did not suggest that the story that was fabricated ever occurred,' she said. 'There was no doubt in my mind that I made and my fellow jurors made the right choice.' 'Once you hit a certain point and you do not stop, manslaughter or self-defence goes off the table. Once that point was matched where you could have stopped then and there, once the person was no longer an aggressor, if that were the case, and you continue, it's no longer self-defence.' Figueroa claimed the duo allowed some time to pass before contacting 911, suggesting that, if they were victim in the event, the call would have been their top priority. 'I think at some point dad came to help out and cover it up. There was blood on the pillow and on the comforter. That may have been the first blow, and then it progressed from that point where he got out of bed and she might have struck him more than one time in bed,' Figueroa speculated. Nancy Perez - who was another juror - said she struggled with Molly and Thomas' self-defence argument due to the graphic photos from the crime juror said she threw up in the courtroom after being shown a photo of Jason Corbett's body. After the guilty verdict was read in court, Molly Corbett said: 'I'm really sorry to my mom, he should have just killed me' according to ABC News. In 2020, the pair appealed and a new trial was ordered on the basis that some evidence was left out of their first trial that should have been shown to the jury. The North Carolina Supreme Court upheld that decision in 2021. This included evidence the defence said could have explained Tom Martens' state of mind on the night of the killing. They also argued that the children's statements should have been admissible. Towards the end of 2023, the judge accepted plea deals for involuntary manslaughter, in exchange for dropping the second degree murder charges. Instead of a whole new trial, the father-daughter pair had a sentencing hearing. At the hearing, the court was played a recording Molly had made of Jason in which he could be heard shouting at his wife for not preparing a meal that he wanted to eat with Jack and Sarah. Instead, Molly had fed the children early and taken them to play in the snow before Jason returned home from work. Jason is heard saying: 'I'm talking to you! Is this how you treat... you just ignore me? I said I'd like to have dinner with my family. I'm talking to you. I shouldn't have to say it over and over.' The short clip ends with Sarah screaming at Molly and Jason to try and put an end to the argument. It was argued by the prosecutor that this was manufactured evidence, and Molly had created the scenario to obtain the recording. However, it was used as a mitigating factor when it came to resentencing, and the pair were told they would have to serve just 51 and 74 months behind bars, according to reports. But each will served just seven months more in prison due to the good behaviour sentencing reduction earned during the 44 months they'd already served, their attorneys said Each will serve only seven months behind bars, thanks to good behaviour sentencing reduction earned during the 44 months they've already served, their attorneys said. Ahead of their release from prison the following June, North Carolina's former sheriff David Grice said Molly and Tom 'got off with a slap' for the 'gruesome' crime. The former sheriff wrote on social media: 'They got off with a slap. I have had to bite my tongue for years for fear of saying something which could have affected the appeals. It was a gruesome crime scene. I believe they (Tom and Molly) just spent enough money on appeals until the courts got worn down and accepted their last appeal.' According to the Irish Independent, Molly spent almost $200,000 from the sale of the house she shared with her late husband and his children on her legal bills. The publication also claims Molly's parents Tom and Sharon spent their life savings on lawyers fighting for the pair's freedom. In February this year, Jason and Mags' daughter Sarah Corbett Lynch, who moved back to Limerick, Ireland, with her brother following their father's death in 2015, to live with their aunt, published a memoir. In addition, Sarah claims that her stepmother had been controlling. For a start, she says that Molly, now 41, would tell people she was the children's birth mother. When they were in elementary school, she allegedly dyed their hair blond to look more like her but told Jason they were going through a 'phase'. And the alleged abuse didn't end there. Sarah claims that Molly would punch and slap the children when they 'misbehaved' - and says she once had to 'drag' her stepmom off a battered Jack when he was curled up on the ground in pain. But Molly's biggest flashpoint, Sarah says, was their birth mother, Margaret. 'Molly hated Jack or me talking about her,' Sarah recalls. Molly allegedly taunted them with claims that Margaret, who had died of an asthma attack in 2006, had been murdered by their father. 'Molly didn't have to warn us not to tell our dad,' Sarah recalls. 'We knew that, if we told him what she'd said, we'd get punished.' In the days after their father's death, Sarah and Jack had made statements to police and social workers which upheld Molly's claims that Jason had been abusive. However, following their return to Ireland in 2015 - where they were adopted by Jason's sister, Tracey Lynch, and her husband, David - they recanted the statements, which were then deemed inadmissible in court. Sarah says she is now haunted by those statements, which she says she was 'coached' into making. She alleges that Molly told her and her brother that if they didn't lie, they would be separated. Sarah said: 'We loved [Molly] and thought she was telling the truth. It was a combination of manipulation, gaslighting and coercive control. We were abused, didn't know it was abuse and were let down by a system that didn't recognize it as abuse.' Molly has denied the allegations. A statement from her lawyer cited the 2023 retrial, saying: 'The court found that it was Jack and Sarah's original statements about their abusive father that was 'the truth,' not the later claims made after they came under the influence of Tracey Lynch. The two forensic interviewers of the children, trained to spot lying and coaching, both said that the children had not been coached and told the truth.' They added: 'The children's original statements were corroborated by five brave women who came forward to testify about Jason's physical and emotional abuse of Molly and by a tape recording of Jason's abuse. The court further found that Molly acted that night in response to Jason's threat, duress, coercion and provocation.' As Sarah never got the opportunity to appear in court, she has said she hopes her book will help clear her father's name. She said: 'I wrote A Time For Truth as a tribute to our dad. He was a victim of abuse, but Jack and I survived it. Despite what happened, we're living our lives as fully as possible - in a way that would make Dad proud.'

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