
Wicklow gardaí renew appeal for information on missing Wicklow man
Gardaí are renewing their appeal for the public's assistance in locating 50-year-old Jason Kenna, who has been reported missing from Greystones, Co. Wicklow since Tuesday, July 29, 2025.
Jason is described as approximately 5'10" in height, of slim build, with brown hair and brown eyes. He may be travelling in a silver Ford Focus bearing a 09WW registration.
Both Gardaí and Jason's family are concerned for his welfare.
Anyone with information regarding Jason's whereabouts is asked to contact Bray Garda Station on (01) 666 5300, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111 or any Garda station.

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The Irish Sun
6 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
Young man, 20s, rushed to hospital after being struck by car on busy Cork road as gardai close road after horrific crash
The crash came just hours after fatal crash in Limerick CRASH PROBE Young man, 20s, rushed to hospital after being struck by car on busy Cork road as gardai close road after horrific crash A YOUNG man, aged in his 20s, has been rushed to hospital after being struck by a car on a busy road in Co Cork yesterday. The pedestrian was seriously injured in the collision on the N25 in Midleton at around 11:05pm last night. Gardai and emergency services received reports of the collision at Dunsfort and rushed to the scene. The man was taken to Cork University Hospital to be treated for injuries that are understood to be serious but non life-threatening. There have been no reports of any other injuries. An investigation has been launched into the collision. Gardai confirmed that the N25 road has been shut for a technical exam following the horrific crash and urged anyone who may have witnessed the collision to come forward. A spokesperson for the force said: "Gardai and emergency services attended the scene following report of a road traffic collision involving a pedestrian and a car, on the N25 at Dunsfort, Midleton, Co Cork, that occurred on Thursday 14th August 2025 at approximately 11.05pm. "The male pedestrian, aged in his 20's, was conveyed to Cork University Hospital for treatment of serious injuries, believed to be non-life-threatening at this time. "The road is currently closed for technical examination, with local diversions in place. "Investigations are ongoing. Gardai are appealing to anyone who witnessed the collision to come forward." Gardai and RSA measures aimed at driving crash deaths on Irish roads Cops are urging people with information, particularly those with camera footage of the road in the minutes leading up to and after the crash, to come forward to officers in Cork. The statement added: "Road users with camera footage (including dash-cam) who were in the area of Dunsfort, Midleton, Co. Cork, on Thursday 14th August 2025 between 10.45pm and 11.15pm are asked to make it available to Gardai. "Anyone with information is asked to contact Midleton Garda Station on (021) 462 1550, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111, or any Garda Station." LIMERICK FATAL CRASH The serious collision in Cork took place just hours after a man died and a woman was rushed to hospital following a crash in Co Limerick yesterday. The horrific collision, which involved two cars, took place on the N20 at Ballyouragan in Croom, Co Limerick at around 7:25am. A man, aged in his 40s, was pronounced dead at the scene. A woman, aged in her 30s, was rushed to hospital for treatment of injuries believed to be serious. Gardai confirmed that no other injuries have been reported. Anyone who may have witnessed the collision has been asked to come forward. Garda HQ said: "Anyone with information is asked to contact Henry Street Garda Station on 061 212400, the Garda Confidential Line on 1800 666 111, or any Garda station."


Sunday World
7 hours ago
- Sunday World
Head of Garda Organised Crime Bureau reveals why ‘top-tier' crime gangs have put away their guns
'BAD FOR BUSINESS' | Head of the Garda National Drugs and Organised Crime Bureau welcomes significant drop in gang violence, but says organised crime has not gone away Detective Chief Superintendent Séamus Boland said the GNDOCB's central strategy is to 'disrupt, dismantle, prosecute' organised crime gangs Detective Chief Superintendent Séamus Boland said 22 'top-tier' gangs are operating in Ireland, but there have been no gangland gun murders this year so far. Gardaí have also not been involved in foiling any murder plots, known as 'life-saving interventions', so far this year, and the bureau has seized just one firearm since January 1. This is 'an indication of how quiet the higher end of violence in organised crime is now', Mr Boland told the Sunday World , adding that the bureau has engaged in a total of 83 life-saving interventions since 2016. Of that figure, there were three last year and none in 2023. In 2016, there were 20 such operations; 26 in 2017; and 13 in 2018 as the Hutch-Kinahan feud threatened to spiral out of control. There were 14 in 2019 before the need for these 'intense' special operations lessened from that year onwards, which Mr Boland said is an indication of a decrease of murders and attacks at the highest levels of organised crime. Mr Boland, who is in charge of over 100 detectives, said it is 'bad for business' for criminal gangs to be engaged in gun crime, and they have finally realised this. He said the decrease is also a result of his bureau's strategy of targeting 'the people who were willing to pull the triggers'. 'A lot of people are serving lengthy sentences in our prison system for specific crimes, but they are without doubt responsible for multiple other violent crimes over the previous two decades,' Mr Boland said. Mr Boland said €82m in drugs has been seized so far this year, most of it cocaine Detective Chief Superintendent Séamus Boland said the GNDOCB's central strategy is to 'disrupt, dismantle, prosecute' organised crime gangs News in 90 Seconds - August 15th He added that gardaí have used intense and proactive investigations to take the majority of these criminals off the streets. 'Ireland is unique across Europe in that violent high-level crime is increasing in European countries, but the opposite is the experience here to date [this year]. That can change overnight and that is the challenge.' Mr Boland also revealed that €82m in drugs has been seized by the bureau so far this year, most of it cocaine, along with just over €1.4m in cash. He said 20 firearms were seized by the bureau last year, but 18 were linked to the investigation into Newry man Mark McCourt (34), who was arrested by GNDOCB officers in Co Louth in July last year. Mark McCourt and the seized weapons The Special Criminal Court heard last month that McCourt was the leader of an organised crime group supplying guns, ammunition and pipe bombs to other gangs north and south of the Border. 'If you go back to the height of the [Hutch-Kinahan] feud, 18 firearms were seized by GNDOCB in 2016, and we had 29 in 2017,' Mr Boland said. 'It is an indication of the work we are engaging in – how the higher end of organised groups up to now appeared to have pulled back from the extreme levels of violence they were engaged in.' However, Mr Boland stressed the need for vigilance, and pointed out that 10 years after the bureau began targeting them, the Kinahan crime group remain a target as they have not been fully dismantled. Disrupt, dismantle, prosecute. That is our strategy and we need to be resilient with all these groups When asked whether the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) was close to making a decision two years after the bureau submitted a massive, lengthy file on the gang's leadership, who are still based in Dubai, Mr Boland said there was no indication yet of a decision to charge Daniel and Christopher Kinahan and their father Christy Sr. 'Disrupt, dismantle, prosecute. That is our strategy and we need to be resilient with all these groups,' he said. While Mr Boland did not name any of the 22 major organised crime gangs who operate in Ireland, they include outfits such as The Family gang, the Mr Big mob, the Limerick-based Keane gang and the Hutch organised crime gang. These gangs feed off each other and assist each other, he said. They need 'logistic routes' into Ireland, whether it is the postal service, containers and trucks on ferries. 'It is all to do with corruption,' he said. 'They corrupt international truck drivers, they corrupt people who are working in ports and airports and they corrupt crews on bulk tankers.' Christy Kinahan Sr Mr Boland said only three crew members on a large vessel need to know about a drug-smuggling plot, sometimes involving multiple tonnes of cocaine, and can get paid hundreds of thousands of euro for their involvement in each shipment. 'Corruption is a huge factor. We can't identify all these corrupt people on our own,' Mr Boland said. 'We are very dependent on people who are legitimately working in these industries who have great knowledge of who the corrupt actors are, so we engage very closely with these people with our partners in Customs.' He said the bureau is 'well and truly alive' and 'conscious' of the efforts of transnational crime groups' attempts to corrupt people working at ports of entry into Ireland, and cited a successful operation that led to employees at Dublin Airport being convicted of importing cocaine over several years. Mr Boland has spent most of his long career investigating organised crime. He was a sergeant and lead investigator in the drugs unit at Pearse Street garda station when his team were involved in the seizure of over €1.5m of cocaine and ecstasy at a Holiday Inn in Dublin's south inner city in March 2000. This seizure led to a bitter falling-out among once-close associates in what became known as the Crumlin-Drimnagh feud, a bloody gang war claimed 16 lives. Cocaine seizure made by officers of the GNDOCB Reflecting on developments in the 25 years since, Mr Boland said: 'It was a totally different world back then. As a police organisation, we did not have the capabilities and the resilience that we have now to tackle these groups. 'He praised the 'very strong' organised crime legislation dating from 2006, as well as more recent money-laundering legislation, describing it as 'an absolute game-changer for us'. 'When I think back to who were the main organised crime groups in Ireland around that time, and even a few years before that, what we definitely have discovered is that people don't retire from organised crime,' he said. Recalling the Holiday Inn seizure, Mr Boland said that even then, the Kinahan group were ultimately responsible in the background for what was a huge haul at the time. 'One hundred per cent, absolutely – it was all part of that network. Leopards don't change their spots,' he added. Mr Boland stressed the need for proactive, rather than reactive, policing strategies when investigating groups such as the Kinahan cartel, who 'became so powerful in their own minds that they decided who lived or who died, and sometimes this was for some very minor arguments or personal grievances'.


Sunday World
14 hours ago
- Sunday World
Dubliner claims he's innocent after arson attack destroyed Cork pensioners' home
The two pensioners - both aged in their 80s - were not the actual target of the incident A man is vehemently protesting his innocence in respect of an alleged arson attack which caused €550,000 in damage and totally destroyed the home of two Cork pensioners. Paul McCarthy of Dowth Avenue, Cabra, Dublin, appeared before Cork District Court on a charge of arson at Fernbrook, Ballincrokig, in Co Cork, on April 24 last. The court previously heard that Mr McCarthy (37) was allegedly one of three men who drove from Dublin to Cork to set fire to a house. It was also previously alleged that the incident was video-recorded by one of the men. The two pensioners - both aged in their 80s - were not the actual target of the incident. Sgt John Kelleher told Judge John King that €550,000 worth of damage was caused to the property involved by the blaze. He stated this led to the 'complete destruction' of the house. Sgt Kelleher said that Mr McCarthy first appeared before the court on May 7 last in connection with his alleged role in the incident. He has been remanded in custody since. Sgt Kelleher said that forensic results are awaited in the case following the search of two properties. Gardaí applied for a four-week remand in custody in the case. Defence counsel Nicholas Hall BL said that his client will be insisting that he is entirely innocent of the crime. He stated that the searches were carried out early on and asked that the matter be expedited. Judge King remanded Mr McCarthy in ongoing custody until August 20 next for directions from the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). The accused will appear by video link again on that date. Garda Brian Murphy previously objected to bail when the matter first came before Cork District Court. He said that it was alleged that at 9pm on April 24 last a car arrived at the house in Ballincollig and three people emerged from the vehicle. "Two entered the curtilage of the property and ignited two glass petrol bombs with a blowtorch. They smashed a bedroom window and threw in these petrol bombs,' he said. 'The third person – believed to be Paul McCarthy – stands close to the vehicle and allegedly films the incident on his mobile phone. The Skoda Octavia enters the Plaza filling station in Portlaoise just before midnight and Paul McCarthy is identified, filling the car with €30 diesel and leaving without paying.' The vehicle was also detected passing the Watergrasshill toll plaza at 8.30pm that evening. Garda Murphy said that a man aged 87 and his 86-year-old wife were watching television in the house at the time. He told the court that the house was quickly engulfed in flames but the couple were unharmed. Garda Murphy said that if it had been a short time later the pensioners would have been in bed with potentially tragic consequences. 'Paul McCarthy had complete disregard for the elderly occupants of the property which was completely destroyed. From the initial investigations, gardai are not of the belief that these persons were the intended victims,' he said. He added that it was alleged that Mr McCarthy drove from Dublin with the two other individuals. Gardaí indicated to the court that, from their investigations, the two pensioners are not believed to have been the targets of the attack.