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Irish Mirror
Irish Mirror
National
John Hand

Gardai had to sweep churches for bombs and man rooftops for Hutch wakes and funerals

Gardai had to protect homes, sweep churches for bombs and man rooftops for Hutch family wakes and funerals to foil Kinahan cartel plans to kill mourners, a senior officer has revealed.

Inspector Tony Gallagher, who retired from the force after nearly 39 years this week, has told how he and his team had to take unprecedented measures due to the threat posed, saying: “It was like a warzone.”

In the wake of the February 5, 2016 Regency Hotel attack in north Dublin, which claimed the life of Kinahan associate David Byrne, the mob began their onslaught.

READ MORE: Hutch pal Gary Hanley who Kinahans want dead breaks cover for trip to Legoland

A total of 18 men were shot dead in the subsequent feud, a level of violence the State had never seen before from an organised crime gang.

Following Byrne’s murder, cartel boss Daniel Kinahan ordered his people to indiscriminately kill members of the Hutch family or anyone connected to them.

Three days later, on February 8, a gunman blasted Gerry “The Monk” Hutch’s elder brother Eddie to death at his north inner city home.

The 58-year-old was an innocent taxi driver.

As the feud spiralled out of control, Insp Gallagher, based at Mountjoy Garda station, was tasked with overseeing the operation around Eddie’s wake and funeral.

At the time, gardai had received information that the Kinahans had brought a hitman in from the UK.

He was tasked with targeting people at the wake, which was held at a Hutch relative’s home in the north inner city, and at the funeral at Our Lady of Lourdes Church on Sean MacDermott Street.

Rooftops in surrounding areas were also manned with armed officers due to fears Kinahan thugs might take aim from above.

Investigators had other information that the cortege could be targeted on its way to Glasnevin cemetery.

Speaking about Eddie’s funeral in an exclusive interview with the Irish Mirror, Insp Gallagher said: “It was an extraordinary time because in the preparations for our plan, we were getting intelligence that people were going to be targeted at the funeral and at the wake.

“So the in-depth detail you had to put into your plans to cater for all of the risks including out in a funeral home, including the mass... for the very first time we had bomb sweeps of the church.

“They were very different times. You get to hear, in the ether, different threats or proposed threats. And we couldn’t take them lightly.

“We occupied the rooftops ourselves. We planned for people who were going to target the funeral. We planned for people who had an intention perhaps for bringing incendiary devices to the funeral. So that involved using specialised units like the Emergency Response Unit for the very first time in normal policing.

“But such was the threat at hand, such was the potential audaciousness of the threat, we had to take every step possible.”

On the day of the funeral, The Monk hopped out of the back of a van outside the church. Gardai used surveillance cameras to identify him as he had disguised himself with a wig.

It was the last time he was seen in Ireland before his arrest in Spain last August.

That day, Hutch walked alongside Noel Kirwan, a friend who had no involvement in crime.

Unbeknownst to Gallagher at the time, he would later oversee the funeral of 62-year-old Kirwan, shot dead in his car by a Kinahan hitman in December of that year.

In all, the inspector led the policing plans around the funerals of Eddie, Kirwan, and The Monk’s nephew Gareth Hutch,36, in 2016 as well as that of Derek Coakley Hutch,27, and Jason “Buda” Molyneux, also 27, in 2018 after they were murdered within days of each other.

Gallagher told us: “It was like a war zone. You arrived at a situation where definitely you had the wake in the houses of each of the persons who fell victim to murder. It was like a heavily armed corden. And that was unusual and unnatural.”

Coakley Hutch, nephew of The Monk, was whacked near Wheatfield Prison by the Kinahan mob on January 20, 2018 just hours after visiting his brother Nathan in the jail.

Insp Gallagher explained how the family were unwilling to proceed with the funeral until Nathan was allowed out from prison to see his brother’s body, which gardai facilitated.

He said: “We organised a visit to the funeral home in the small hours of the morning to facilitate a grieving brother and of all things I felt it was a nice thing to do.

“For the prison authorities to allow for it under the control of a garda protection escort was also important and they were very willing.”

Just ten days after Coakley Hutch’s killing, the cartel got their next target,Molyneux, in a callous attack at James Larkin House in the North Strand area of Dublin.

Molyneux, a feared gangster, was close friends with Coakley Hutch and had been at his wake before he met his own bloody end.

Covert patrols were in place in the area at the time, but Gallagher believes the murder highlighted the risks cartel hitmen were willing to take.

He explained: “Molyneux the wake of Coakley Hutch and whilst on the way back from that wake, he was targeted.

“That was a particularly audacious hit considering the intensification of the patrols in our area that they were willing to take that chance.”

For Molyneux’s funeral, Gallagher felt there had to be a message to those in gangland and he spoke to the priest leading the ceremony.

He said: “I remember I had a very humane chat with him and I said to him,

‘where does it stop? I think as part of your talk at the church that there has to be some kind of message if appropriate and if it fits the occasion that in someway to dis-incentivise this gangland hierarchy, this gangland activity, that it’s not an attractive career because you’ll end up like the persons that you are at a mass for the grieving family of someone who died.

People are dying too young.’

“We talked about that and in his own way he introduced his own subtle message to the congregation.”

Molyneux’s murder was the last Kinahan hit as part of the feud, that left 18 men dead.

Gallagher added: “Now whether that was, I’m sure, entirely coincidental or perhaps families feeling the greater loss of young people who have died.

“I do feel it resonates with them because I have visited the families and they have suffered and still suffer. So there’s that enduring stress and grief that they have.”

Overall the feud claimed 18 lives but the cartel’s crimes haunted them.

Alleged Irish crime boss Daniel Kinahan (Irish Mirror)

Cartel bosses Daniel Kinahan,44, Christy Snr,65, and Christy Jnr,41, have $5million bounties on their heads as law enforcement from around the world close in on them.

As it stands here, gardai have had major success against the cartel with 79 convictions against members of the gang in recent years, including including 12 for murder and 23 for attempted murder among other offences.

But reflecting on the period of the Kinahan gang’s onslaught on the streets of Dublin, Gallagher said: “It was an escalation of threat that hit the world headlines. The whole boxing environment at the time was brought into the spotlight. It was an intensification of policing that I had never been involved in before.”

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