随着黑暗的落下,最终允许第一辆车离开大规模警察。但是,可以理解的是,没有人停止谈论苏格兰有史以来最受公开的黑帮。卡罗尔(Carroll)的意义后来在法庭上强调了调查枪击事件的侦探已汇总了99名潜在嫌疑人的清单。 2015年5月,威廉·“ Buff”帕特森(William“ Buff” Paterson)在杀害后逃到西班牙,被判谋杀罪,并告诉他必须至少被判入狱22年。阿姆斯特朗勋爵(Lord Armstrong)告诉他:“这不是当下发生的自发事件,实际上是处决的。”杰米·丹尼尔(Jamie Daniel)的去世,享年58岁,是故事中第三章的催化剂。这引发了针对他同事的暴力活动。受害者包括他的继任者史蒂文·“邦佐”·丹尼尔(Steven“ Bonzo” Daniel),他在2017年5月高高的汽车追逐穿过格拉斯哥之后遭受了可怕的面部受伤。后来,法院听到了一个图形说明,他听到了他如何撞击了他在撞垂直武器后如何撞到了他的斯柯达八颗Octavia后的图形说明,该武器被撞上了跟踪设备,并通过了旋转的方向盘。两年后,里昂家族的六个同伙被判犯有五个谋杀案,被判入狱。 Mulholland勋爵告诉他们:“您试图将格拉斯哥变成您的争执。”迪拜逮捕也与杰米“冰人”史蒂文森案有关,他去年因策划了1亿英镑的土地而被判入狱,以从南美从南美洲走私可卡因。在他的审判中,他对包括斯蒂芬·杰米森(Stephen Jamieson)在内的三名男子进行了特别的罪名,这是现在被认为是阿联酋被拘留的四个主要的黑社会人物之一。格拉斯哥的高等法院获悉,杰米森(Jamieson)目前的下落是“未知的”。去年12月,里昂/丹尼尔(Daniel)的仇恨被介绍给更广泛的英国观众,这是BBC六部分黑帮播客的重点。当时,大部分内容都是历史性的 - 但是到了夏天,生产商有理由委托新的一集。直到最近,罗斯·麦吉尔(Ross McGill)还是警方最著名的是游骑兵足球俱乐部的Ultras粉丝团体联盟熊队的前负责人。但是在三月份在爱丁堡发生了一个黑帮仇恨之后,他的名字开始出现在小报中。报道表明,麦吉尔曾经在伊布罗克斯露台上协调圣歌,现在正在策划他在迪拜的新家中中央腰带的暴力浪潮。两人在现场被宣布死亡。第二天早上,当他们死亡的消息传到苏格兰时,谋杀案确实令人震惊。现年46岁的埃迪·詹(Eddie JNR)和43岁的莫纳汉(Monaghan)是里昂犯罪组织的主要参与者。这对夫妇在双重葬礼之后被火化,他们俩都在以前的生活中幸存下来。埃迪(Eddie)在2006年的一次袭击中被枪击并受伤,据信凯文·格尔比尔(Gerbil)卡罗尔(Carroll)进行了枪击。莫纳汉(Monaghan)因卡罗尔(Carroll)的谋杀而受到审判,此前针对他的案件在2012年倒塌。人们自然而然地怀疑谋杀案与过去两个月在苏格兰发生的暴力有关。但是在6月3日,苏格兰警察说,目前没有什么可暗示枪击事件与正在进行的帮派战争有关的枪击事件,该战争正在Portaledge行动下进行调查。这是一些执法消息来源的观察,他们说双重命中率标志着爱丁堡和格拉斯哥的事件的重大升级。一位西班牙侦探意外地说,后来告诉记者,一名与谋杀案有关的利物浦男子是对手丹尼尔·甘(Daniel Gang)的成员。苏格兰警察的回应是保持其最初的立场 - 它不知道枪击事件与仇恨有关,或者是从苏格兰计划的。本月晚些时候,首席警官乔·法雷尔(Jo Farrell)表示,侦探正在建立情报,以针对相关团体的领导人。她向任何从外国指导苏格兰暴力事件的人的信息是:“我们将追随你。”当被问及如果某人在迪拜时可以做什么时,法雷尔说,官员们正在与皇家办公室和国家犯罪局紧密合作,“看我们是否可以使这些人从这些国家退回”。在随后的几周中,警官在Portaledeed行动下进一步逮捕了 - 总计达到57-但有一种感觉,势头正在放缓。然后是迪拜的猛扑,这使部队感到惊讶。英国广播公司苏格兰新闻知道,这四名男子是针对阿拉伯联合酋长国(UAE)的罪名。但是到目前为止,尚未得到海湾的正式确认,更不用说逮捕他们了。触发因素是麦吉尔(McGill)和总部位于爱丁堡的马克·理查森(Mark Richardson)(与丹尼尔(Daniel)犯罪集团有联系的马克·理查森(Mark Richardson),据说涉及假钞票的毒品交易。麦吉尔(McGill)的相对匿名与理查森(Richardson)形成鲜明对比。理查森(Richardson)于2018年因在侦探所说的苏格兰最复杂的犯罪团伙中的角色而入狱。 4月,袭击从首都传播到格拉斯哥,暴力从故意的大火升级为可怕的袭击。受害者的个人资料也开始出现。他们包括与丹尼尔(Daniel)家族相关的个人,自然会导致侦探怀疑里昂氏族在事件中有很大的帮助。在一个事件中,一名72岁的妇女和一个12岁男孩在格拉斯哥北部米尔顿的一所房屋中遭到袭击。一名54岁男子在他在爱丁堡的家外面也受到了严重伤害。随着事件的数量螺旋,视频和威胁在Tamo Junta的旗帜下发布在社交媒体上。据报道,该团伙是由迈阿密昵称的麦吉尔(McGill)领导的。执法消息来源认为,这种策略与史蒂文·里昂斯(Steven Lyons)造成了紧张关系,史蒂文·里昂斯(Steven Lyons)很满足于在迪拜保持低调。在2006年车库枪击案中受伤后不久,里昂最初离开苏格兰前往西班牙之后就定居在那里。但是在几周的时间里,袭击使该国一些领先的黑社会人物及其同事们置于警察的关注下。史蒂文·里昂斯(Steven Lyons)的犯罪联盟包括与迪拜的基纳汉犯罪集团的联系。据了解,他与创始人克里斯蒂(Christy)的儿子,前拳击发起人丹尼尔·基纳汉(Daniel Kinahan)建立了关系。 Kinahan:爱尔兰黑手党的真实故事Stephen Dempster告诉BBC苏格兰的Scotcast,到2010年代中期,Lyons Group通过利用Cartel的全球网络变得更大,更富有。英国广播公司的记者还说,阿联酋是主要罪犯的吸引人目的地。他说:“迪拜有一定的自由。你可以花钱。有财产要购买。” “这也是一个有轻巧的金融法规的地方。”在大多数情况下,史蒂文·里昂(Steven Lyons)的业务主要是在阴影中进行的 - 但是在西班牙有一天晚上改变了一切。 5月31日,一名孤独的枪手走进福吉罗拉(Fuengirola)的一家海滨酒吧,开枪射击了他的兄弟埃迪·里昂斯(Eddie Lyons Jnr)。然后,犯罪嫌疑人在里面追捕埃迪的朋友罗斯·莫纳汉(Ross Monaghan),开火。迪拜四个主要的苏格兰犯罪人物被捕后,在被拘留十多天后仍被神秘笼罩。自9月16日以来,史蒂文·里昂(Steven Lyons),罗斯·麦吉尔(Ross McGill),斯蒂芬·贾米森(Stephen Jamieson)和史蒂文·拉伍德(Steven Larwood)自9月16日以来一直在阿拉伯联合酋长国举行。苏格兰警察认为,这四个人都与犯罪关系有关,从进口毒品到中央腰带的新浪潮。海湾袭击是里昂与丹尼尔家庭之间一场血腥仇恨的最新发展,该仇恨已有25年了。这两个团伙现在都在第二代领导人身上。里昂犯罪集团目前由迪拜四人之一史蒂文·里昂(Steven Lyons)领导。在他的父亲埃迪(Eddie)的领导下,北拉纳克郡康伯纳尔德(Cumbernauld)的领导才能突出。杰米·丹尼尔(Jamie Daniel)是在格拉斯哥的Possil的废金属经销商开始后成为百万富翁的,他建立并带领犯罪家族以他的名字命名。当他于2016年7月因癌症去世时,没有明显的继任者,但他留下的力量真空最终被他的侄子史蒂文·“邦佐”·丹尼尔(Steven“ Bonzo” Daniel)填补。据说这两个家庭之间的痛苦竞争可以追溯到2001年在格拉斯哥北部的丹尼尔安全屋(Daniel Safe House)盗窃了20,000英镑的可卡因。但是,在2006年12月,当两个蒙面的枪手走进了他的叔叔的Mot Garage之后,2006年12月,当21岁的迈克尔·里昂斯(Michael Lyons)被枪杀时,这一消息成为头条新闻。史蒂文·里昂(Steven Lyons)和同事罗伯特·皮克特(Robert Pickett)在伏击中受伤,后来在法庭上被描述为“像教父的场景”。 2008年5月,丹尼尔帮派成员雷蒙德·安德森(Raymond Anderson)和詹姆斯·麦克唐纳(James McDonald)被判犯有袭击罪,每人被判入狱35年,后来在上诉中减少了。随后进行了一系列的tit攻击攻击,从枪击到绑架,但2010年1月,这场仇恨夺回了第二名受害者。丹尼尔·克兰(Daniel Clan)执行者凯文·“格尔比尔”·卡洛尔(Kevin“ Gerbil” Carroll)安排在格拉斯哥的罗伯罗斯顿(Robroyston)的Asda商店外面与毒贩斯蒂芬·格伦(Stephen Glen)会面。格伦后来回忆说:“您现在为我工作,任何不排队的人都会被撞到。”几分钟后,现年29岁的卡洛尔(Carroll)坐在停车场的奥迪A3的后座上,大众高尔夫停了下来。当午餐时间购物者看着时,两名枪手出去开枪打了13次卡罗尔。当时我是《每日唱片》的犯罪记者,并被及时送往一个冻结的零售公园。一周的迪拜警方通过电子邮件说:“由于机密性,我们无法共享此信息。”鉴于信息真空,接下来发生的事情尚不清楚。但是最近引入爱尔兰的黑社会谋杀嫌疑人肖恩·麦戈文(Sean McGovern)提高了里昂,麦吉尔,杰米森和拉伍德可能返回苏格兰的前景。迪拜被拘留的创始人拉达·斯特林(Radha Stirling)表示,阿联酋最近正在与引渡请求合作,而逮捕的人比过去更频繁地想要人们。她说:“虽然英国几乎肯定会推动引渡,但是否会批准这样的请求。”这位总部位于伦敦的人权律师表示,由于侵犯人权,不公平的审判,歧视和酷刑的风险,英国历史上一直拒绝引渡阿联酋航空。她补充说:“如果将所指控的逃犯撤离使英国的逃亡者越来越多地被送去,那将是令人沮丧的。”英国广播公司苏格兰新闻尝试了几种途径,以获取有关逮捕的信息。我们没有收到迪拜政府,英国驻迪拜大使馆或伦敦的阿联酋大使馆的回应。外国,英联邦和发展办公室的发言人只会说,它与阿联酋和地方当局的一个英国人的家人接触。仍然存在许多未解决的问题,接下来发生的事情是任何人的猜测。但是,总部位于海湾的有组织犯罪分子将对迪拜四人的命运感兴趣,直到上周,他们一直认为他们是不可动摇的。苏格兰劳工领袖还批评了改革的“胆汁”,因为他在英国大会的Foysol Choudhury上向代表讲话时,将作为一个独立地进行,同时进行工党调查。苏格兰周日报纸的首页故事的评论。爱丁堡在戏剧性的最后几秒钟内遭受了伤心欲绝,马丁·罗杰·法里亚斯(Martin Roger Farias)在其联合橄榄球冠军赛中获得了Zebre的胜利。罗斯·多切蒂(Rose Docherty)在格拉斯哥女王伊丽莎白大学医院外举行了一个标志。
From drug theft to Dubai arrests: How a Scottish gangland feud went global
The arrests of four major Scottish crime figures in Dubai remain shrouded in mystery more than 10 days after they were taken into custody. Steven Lyons, Ross McGill, Stephen Jamieson and Steven Larwood have been held in the United Arab Emirates since 16 September. Police Scotland believe all four are linked to criminality, ranging from drug importation to a fresh wave of gangland violence across the central belt. The Gulf raids are the latest development in a bloody feud between the Lyons and the Daniel families which has raged for 25 years. Both gangs are now on their second generation of leaders. The Lyons crime group is currently headed by Steven Lyons, one of the Dubai four. It rose to prominence under the leadership of his father Eddie, of Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire. Jamie Daniel - who became a millionaire after starting out as a scrap metal dealer in Glasgow's Possil - founded and led the crime clan bearing his name. When he died from cancer in July 2016 there was no obvious successor but the power vacuum he left behind was eventually filled by his nephew, Steven "Bonzo" Daniel. The bitter rivalry between the two families is said to date back to the theft of a £20,000 stash of cocaine from a Daniel safe house in the north of Glasgow in 2001. But in December 2006 it became headline news when Michael Lyons, 21, was shot dead after two masked gunmen walked into his uncle's MoT garage. Steven Lyons and an associate, Robert Pickett, were injured in the ambush, which was later described in court as "like a scene out of The Godfather". In May 2008, Daniel gang members Raymond Anderson and James McDonald were convicted of the attack and each sentenced to 35 years in jail, which was later reduced on appeal. A series of tit-for-tat attacks followed, ranging from shootings to kidnappings, but it would be January 2010 before the feud claimed a second victim. Daniel clan enforcer Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll had arranged to meet drug dealer Stephen Glen outside an Asda store in Glasgow's Robroyston. Glen later recalled being told: "You're working for me now, anybody that doesn't fall in line is going to get banged." Minutes later Carroll, 29, was sitting in the back seat of an Audi A3 in the car park when a Volkswagen Golf screeched to a halt. As lunchtime shoppers looked on, two gunmen got out and shot Carroll 13 times. I was the Daily Record's crime reporter at the time and was sent to a retail park frozen in time. As darkness fell, the first vehicles were eventually allowed to leave the massive police cordon. But, understandably, no-one stopped to speak about the most public gangland hit ever carried out in Scotland. Carroll's significance was later highlighted in court when it emerged detectives investigating the shooting had compiled a list of 99 potential suspects. In May 2015, William "Buff" Paterson, who fled to Spain after the killing, was convicted of murder and told he must serve a minimum of 22 years in jail. Judge Lord Armstrong told him: "It was not a spontaneous event which happened on the spur of the moment, it was in effect an execution." Jamie Daniel's death, at the age of 58, was the catalyst for the third significant chapter in the story. It sparked a savage campaign of violence against his associates. The victims included his successor, Steven "Bonzo" Daniel, who was left with horrific facial injuries after a high-speed car chase through Glasgow in May 2017. A court later heard a graphic account of how he was attacked with bladed weapons after he crashed his Skoda Octavia - which had been fitted with a tracking device - and passed out behind the wheel. Two years later, six associates of the Lyons family were jailed after being found guilty of five murder plots. Lord Mulholland told them: "You sought to turn Glasgow into a war zone for your feud." The Dubai arrests also have a link to the case of Jamie "Iceman" Stevenson, who was jailed last year for masterminding a £100m plot to smuggle cocaine from South America in boxes of bananas. During his trial, he lodged a special defence of incrimination against three men including Stephen Jamieson, one of the four major gangland figures now believed to be in custody in the UAE. The High Court in Glasgow heard that Jamieson's present whereabouts were "unknown". Last December, the Lyons/Daniel feud was introduced to a wider UK audience as the focus of a six-part BBC Gangster podcast. At that time, much of the content was historical - but by the summer the producers had reason to commission a new episode. Until recently, Ross McGill was best known to police as the former head of Rangers Football Club's ultras fan group, the Union Bears. But after a gangland feud erupted in Edinburgh in March, his name began to appear in the tabloids. Reports suggested McGill, who once co-ordinated chants on the Ibrox terraces, was now orchestrating the wave of violence across the central belt from his new home in Dubai. The trigger was a falling out between McGill and Edinburgh-based Mark Richardson - who has connections to the Daniel crime group - over a drug deal said to involve fake bank notes. McGill's relative anonymity contrasted with Richardson, who was jailed in 2018 for his role in what detectives described as Scotland's most sophisticated crime gang. In April, the attacks spread from the capital to Glasgow and the violence escalated from deliberate fires to terrifying assaults. A profile of the victims also began to emerge. They included individuals linked to the Daniel family, which naturally led detectives to suspect the Lyons clan had a significant hand in events. In one incident, a 72-year-old woman and a 12-year-old boy were attacked at a house in Milton in the north of Glasgow. A 54-year-old man was also seriously injured outside his home in Edinburgh. As the number of incidents spiralled, videos and threats were posted on social media under the banner of Tamo Junta. The gang is reportedly led by McGill, who goes by the nickname Miami. This tactic is believed by law enforcement sources to have created tensions with Steven Lyons, who had been content to keep a low profile in Dubai. Lyons had settled there after initially leaving Scotland for Spain, soon after being injured in the 2006 garage shooting. But in the space of a few weeks the attacks put some of the country's leading underworld figures and their associates back under the police spotlight. Steven Lyons' criminal alliances include ties to the Dubai-based Kinahan crime group. He is understood to have forged a relationship with founder Christy's son, former boxing promoter Daniel Kinahan, while living in the Costa del Sol. Stephen Dempster, producer of Kinahan: The True Story of Ireland's Mafia, told BBC Scotland's Scotcast that by the mid-2010s the Lyons group had become bigger and wealthier by tapping into the cartel's global network. The BBC journalist also said the UAE was an attractive destination for major criminals. "There is a level of freedom in Dubai. You can spend your money. There is property to be bought," he said. "It's also a place with light touch financial regulation." For the most part, Steven Lyons' business was largely conducted in the shadows - but one night in Spain changed everything. On 31 May, a lone gunman walked into a beachfront bar in Fuengirola and shot his brother, Eddie Lyons Jnr. The suspect then pursued Eddie's friend, Ross Monaghan, inside and opened fire. Both men were pronounced dead at the scene. As the news of their deaths reached Scotland the following morning, there was a genuine sense of shock at the murders. Eddie Jnr, 46, and Monaghan, 43, were major players in the Lyons crime group. The pair, who were cremated following a double funeral, had both survived previous attempts on their lives. Eddie was shot and wounded in a 2006 attack which was believed to have been carried out by Kevin "Gerbil" Carroll. Monaghan stood trial for Carroll's murder before the case against him collapsed in 2012. Five years later, he was shot outside a Glasgow primary school. There was a natural suspicion that the murders were linked to the violence which had played out in Scotland over the previous two months. But on 3 June, Police Scotland said there was currently nothing to suggest the shootings were related to the ongoing gang war, which it is investigating under Operation Portaledge. This chimed with the observations of some law enforcement sources who said the double hit marked a significant escalation from events in Edinburgh and Glasgow. In an unexpected twist, a Spanish detective later told reporters that a Liverpool man, arrested in connection with the murders, was a member of the rival Daniel gang. Police Scotland responded by maintaining its original position - that it wasn't aware of any evidence the shootings were linked to the feud, or had been planned from Scotland. Later in the month, Chief Constable Jo Farrell said detectives were building intelligence to target the leaders of the groups involved. Her message to anyone directing violence in Scotland from a foreign country was: "We'll be coming after you." Asked what could be done if someone was based in Dubai, Farrell said officers were working closely with the Crown Office and the National Crime Agency "to see if we can get those people back from those countries". In the weeks that followed, officers made further arrests under Operation Portaledge - taking the total to 57 - but there was a sense that the momentum was slowing. And then came the swoop in Dubai, which caught the force by surprise. BBC Scotland News understands the four men were targeted in connection with alleged offences in the United Arab Emirates (UAE). But to date there has been no official confirmation from the Gulf about the arrests, let alone why they were made. A week on, all Dubai Police would say, via email, was: "We cannot share this information due to confidentiality." Given the information vacuum, what happens next is unclear. But the recent extradition to Ireland of gangland murder suspect Sean McGovern raises the prospect that Lyons, McGill, Jamieson and Larwood could return to Scotland. Radha Stirling, founder of Detained in Dubai, said the UAE had recently been co-operating with extradition requests and arresting wanted people more frequently than it had in the past. "While the UK will almost certainly push for extradition, it remains to be seen whether such a request will be granted," she said. The London-based human rights lawyer said the UK had historically declined extraditions to the Emirates due to the risk of human rights violations, unfair trials, discrimination and torture. "It would be disheartening if the removal of alleged fugitives to Britain put ordinary citizens at increased risk of being sent the other way," she added. BBC Scotland News tried several avenues to obtain information about the arrests. We received no response from the Dubai government, the UK embassy in Dubai, or the UAE embassy in London. A spokesman for the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office would only say that it was in contact with the family of one British man in the UAE and the local authorities. Many unanswered questions remain and what happens next is anyone's guess. But the fate of the Dubai four will be watched with interest by Gulf-based organised criminals who, until last week, believed they were untouchable. The Scottish Labour leader also criticised the "bile" of Reform as he addressed delegates at the party's UK conference Foysol Choudhury will sit as an independent while a Labour Party investigation is carried out. A review of the front page stories from the Sunday newspapers in Scotland. Edinburgh suffered heartbreak in the dramatic final seconds as Martin Roger Farias' penalty secured victory for Zebre in their United Rugby Championship opener. Rose Docherty was holding a sign outside the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow.
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