Crumlin-Drimnagh feud

The Crumlin-Drimnagh feud is a feud between rival criminal gangs in south inner city Dublin, Ireland. The feud began in 2000 when a drugs seizure led to a split in a gang of young criminals in their late teens and early twenties, most of whom had grown up together and went to the same school. The resulting violence has led to 16 murders and scores of beatings, stabbings, shootings and pipe bomb attacks.[1]

Crumlin-Drimnagh feud
Date2000-
Location
South inner city Dublin, Ireland
Caused byDrugs
MethodsBeatings, stabbings, shootings and pipe bomb attacks
Casualties
Death(s)16
Arrested4

Background

By 2000 a group of young friends from Crumlin, Drimnagh and the south inner city had graduated from stealing cars and street dealing to become major suppliers of drugs in South Dublin. They developed contacts with a major Irish drugs trafficker in Spain who supplied them with cocaine, ecstasy and cannabis. Many of the shipments he delivered to Ireland also included guns which were later used in the feud.[1] Martin "Marlo" Hyland, a major organised crime figure from North Dublin also supplied guns to one of the feuding factions.[2]

On 9 March 2000 at the Holiday Inn on Pearse Street, three members of the gang were arrested with 2 kg of cocaine and 49,000 ecstasy tablets. All three refused to co-operate with investigating detectives. Declan Gavin, 20, a senior member of the gang was released after two days of questioning without being charged because he wasn't actually in the room with the drugs when Gardaí entered. The other two junior members of the gang, who were in the room, were charged with possession of cocaine and ecstasy with intent to supply. Although there is no evidence to suggest Gavin was an informer he was immediately labelled a "rat" by some gang members. This resulted in the gang splitting into two rival factions with Freddie Thompson, from Loreto Road in Maryland, leading one group and Brian Rattigan, from Cooley Road in Drimnagh, leading the other.[1]

First murders

The first victim of the feud was Declan Gavin who was murdered in August 2001. He was stabbed to death outside an Abrakebabra fast food restaurant in Crumlin by a masked man who escaped in a getaway car driven by an accomplice. The next killed was Joseph Rattigan, 18, brother of gang leader Brian. He was shot dead on Cooley Road in Drimnagh in July 2002. In 2003 Brian Rattigan was arrested for shooting at Gardaí in their patrol car as they pursued the car Rattigan was travelling in. Although Rattigan received a 13-year prison sentence for this incident, he continued to control the gang from his prison cell.[1]

Paul Warren, 24, who was a suspect in Joseph Rattigan's murder, was shot dead in a public house in Newmarket Square in February 2004. While Warren was drinking, two masked and armed men came into the pub, one stood at the front door guarding customers, while the other chased Warren in to the toilets and shot him twice, once in the face. Brian Rattigan was suspected of organizing the hit from prison using a mobile phone.[3]

2005-2007

John Roche, 25, from Crumlin and a suspect in the Warren hit, was shot dead as he walked to his apartment in Kilmainham in March 2005.[1] There were three killings in two days in November 2005 beginning with Darren Geoghegan, 26, from Drimnagh, and Gavin Byrne, 30, from Crumlin. Both men, who were senior members of the Thompson faction, were shot dead as they sat in a Lexus car in Firhouse after being lured to a meeting.[4] Two days later Noel Roche, a brother of John, was shot dead as he sat in traffic on Clontarf Road. His driver escaped unharmed.[5]

Wayne Zambra, 21, was shot dead as he sat in his car on Cameron Street in August 2006.[6] A month later Gary Bryan, 31, was shot dead as he worked on a car outside his girlfriend's house in Walkinstown.[7] Both men were part of the Rattigan faction. Three months later in December 2006, Eddie McCabe, 21, was tortured and beaten to death after he was abducted by Rattigan gang members. His mutilated body was dumped in a lane way in Inchicore.[1]

On 5 October 2007 Brian Downes, 40, and Edward Ward, 24, were shot dead outside a car dealership garage owned by Downes in Walkinstown. Gardaí suspect Downes, who provided false number plates and untraceable cars used in gangland murders and who had been arrested in connection with John Roche's murder, was the intended target and Ward, who had no connection to the feud, was killed to prevent him recognising the killer. Edward Ward was an innocent victim who left a wife and two daughters behind. There has been no convictions for this murder.[8]

2008 onwards

Shay O'Byrne, 27, was shot dead in front of his girlfriend (Brian Rattigan's sister) by a masked gunman outside their home in Tallaght in March 2009.[9]

There was a grenade attack on the home of a Thompson gang member on Knockarea Avenue in Drimnagh in June 2008. Despite extensive damage to the front of the house, there were no injuries to the five adults and one child inside at the time. Gardaí suspect the attack was linked to two other shootings days previously, one where a grandmother in her 50s was shot and injured in the shoulder.[10]

In July 2009, Anthony Cannon, 26, from Robert Street in the south inner city, was shot several times in the head in front of women and children at St. Mary's Avenue in Ballyfermot, west Dublin. His killer escaped on a motorcycle with an accomplice. Cannon, who was a senior member of the Rattigan gang, was wearing a bullet proof vest when he died and was a suspect in over a dozen serious incidents linked to the feud in the year before his death.[11][12]

Brian Rattigan was convicted of murdering Declan Gavin after a trial in December 2009. He was sentenced to life in prison to add to the 13-year sentence he got for shooting at Gardaí in 2003.[13] With the killing of Cannon and Rattigan's murder conviction, it had been hoped by those in the local community that the feud would end, with Thompson's rivals appearing to have more or less admitted defeat. However two killings in as many days brought the feud back to media attention.[14] Gerard Eglington, 27, was shot dead in front of his 11-year-old step-daughter and infant son in Portarlington, County Laois, on 24 September 2012 after a gunman entered his home. The next day Declan O'Reilly, 34, who had survived a previous attempt on his life, was shot dead in front of his young son as they walked along South Circular Road in Dublin.[15][16] Gardaí suspect both murders were ordered by a close associate of Freddie Thompson.[17]

Current situation

On 13 February 2013 Brian Rattigan was convicted of running a drugs network from his prison cell in Portlaoise prison and given an additional 17-year sentence. He was linked to 5 kg of heroin found in a house in Walkinstown through messages found on a mobile phone in his cell.[18] None of Rattigan's men were in court to support him when he was convicted and his gang has all but dissolved. Young criminals, many of them teenagers, consider Thompson and Rattigan "yesterday's men" and have been fighting their own war for control of the drug scene in the area.[19]

Freddie Thompson was convicted of murder in 2018. He was sentenced to life in prison for organising the murder of David Douglas in a killing linked to the Hutch-Kinahan feud.[20]

Convictions

All but three of the murders remain unsolved. As well as Brian Rattigan's conviction for the Gavin murder, twenty-three-year-old Craig White was convicted of Noel Roche's murder and was given a life sentence in July 2009 after his DNA was found on a pair of gloves that were found near the abandoned getaway car.[21] Gardaí suspect that White, who refused to talk during Garda interviews, was the driver while Paddy Doyle, who was killed in Spain in 2008, was the gunman.[22] Garrett O'Brien (35) and Eugene Cullen (30) were convicted after separate trials, and sentenced to life imprisonment for the murder of Shay O'Byrne in 2009.[23][24]

References

  1. McCaffrey, Mick (2010). Cocaine Wars. Chichester: Summersdale. ISBN 1849531226.
  2. Badfellas, Paul Williams (2011) Penguin Ireland ISBN 1844882713
  3. Brown, PJ (15 February 2013). "Enemy of the State". Herald.ie.
  4. Brady, Tom (18 July 2009). "How old feud between friends became bloodbath". Independent.ie.
  5. Murphy, Bronagh (15 July 2009). "Jury to see film of fatal shooting made by tourist". Independent.ie.
  6. Cusack, Jim (24 March 2013). "How drugs kingpin was caught in the act". Independent.ie.
  7. "Timeline of murder". Sunday World.com. 21 December 2009. Archived from the original on 12 November 2013.
  8. "Hunt for assassins as feud claims two lives". Irish Examiner. 8 October 2007.
  9. McDonald, Henry (15 March 2009). "Gangland murders provoke outrage". The Guardian.
  10. McEnroe, Juno (30 June 2008). "Hand grenade attack on family home in gang feud". Irish Examiner.
  11. "Killing takes gun death toll up to 17". Irish Independent. 18 July 2009.
  12. "Murdered gangster in machete attack". Herald.ie. 20 July 2009.
  13. "Dublin man found guilty of murder at fast food outlet". BreakingNews.ie. 17 December 2009.
  14. Cusack, Jim (14 October 2012). "This vicious gangland feud is far from over". Independent.ie.
  15. O'Keeffe, Cormac (25 September 2012). "Double gang deaths". Irish Examiner.
  16. O'Keeffe, Cormac (26 September 2012). "Gardai track gang members in murder hunt". Irish Examiner.
  17. Cusack, Jim (14 October 2012). "This vicious gangland feud is far from over". Independent.ie.
  18. Quann, Jack (12 February 2013). "Brian Rattigan convicted of drug dealing while in prison". Newstalk.ie.
  19. "Gardai seek to arrest 'Fat' Freddie". Independent.ie. 7 July 2013.
  20. "Convicted killer Freddie Thompson suspect in at least three other murders". Independent.ie. 31 August 2018.
  21. "Man gets life sentence for gangland murder". RTÉ News. 29 July 2009.
  22. Murphy, Cormac (30 July 2009). "Mindless bloodlust of Crumlin-Dimnagh feud laid bare in court as White convicted". Herald.ie.
  23. "Hitman shot dad-of-two to clear trivial drug debt". Herald.ie. 7 November 2012.
  24. "Man sentenced to life in prison for murder of father of two". Independent.ie. 19 March 2014.

Further reading

  • McCaffrey, Mick. "Cocaine Wars". Chichester:Summersdale, 2011. ISBN 978-1-84953-122-1
  • Williams, Paul. "Badfellas". Penguin, 2011. ISBN 1844882713
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