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Five years in jail for killing Irishman in Torrevieja

Elche

The case against the person accused of killing 36-year-old Irishman Carl Aidan Carr with a brass knuckle in Torrevieja in September 2018 was finally settled today in an Elche Court. The agreement between the defence, the prosecutor’s office, and the private prosecution led to a big drop in the prison sentences that were originally asked for. The main suspect in the crime, an Irishman named Wayne Patrick W., was represented by lawyer Francisco Miguel Galiana Botella. He was given five years in prison for murder and an extra year for illegally possessing weapons (a pistol was taken from him), which is less than the fifteen and three years in prison that were originally asked for each crime.

Four more defendants in the case, three of whom had lawyers named José Soler Martín, José Manuel Alamán, and Andrés Morales, were each given a three-month jail sentence for concealment instead of the three years that were originally asked for each of them.

The government and the victim’s family’s private prosecution both agreed that all the accused should be given the mitigating circumstance of undue delay. The perpetrator should also be given the mitigating circumstance of drug addiction and reparation for damages, since he paid 95,000 euros before the trial to make up for the emotional harm he caused to Carl Aidan Carr’s mother. There is still another 5,000 euros to pay, and it must be done by March 20 of next year, as agreed upon. This will avoid a hearing by jury.

Wayne Patrick W. has to go to report to jail between March 11th to 20th to finish his time. The victim of the crime was born on March 11th. His body was hidden in a rural area of the municipality of Rojales, and it wasn’t found until four months after he went missing.

The Irishman who was found guilty of the crime has tried to say sorry to the victim’s mother, who was in the Elche courtroom, but she has not accepted his words of regret.

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It took five defendants pleading guilty before the judge gave the decision “in voce” and agreed with what the Prosecutor’s Office and the private prosecution said in their written arguments. The murder happened early on September 17, 2018, in a house in the La Siesta neighbourhood of Torrevieja. The house was home to the Irishman who was killed, the suspect Wayne Patrick, and a third person involved named Simon Mark F., who died in Ireland while the case was being investigated.

“Sexual approaches”


Two men named Carl Aidan Carr and Simon Mark F. went to the house with three other women, one of whom was Wayne’s ex-girlfriend. The victim ended up having a relationship with her on the couch, which she called “sexual advances.” Simon went to a pub in Orihuela Costa to tell his ex-boyfriend what had happened. The two of them then went back to their flat in Torrevieja.

When he walked in, Carl and Wayne’s ex-girlfriend were arguing on the couch. To put an end to Carl’s life, Wayne hit him several times in the face with a brass knuckle, and the other suspect, who died in Ireland, stabbed him several times, according to the charge made by the prosecution and admitted by the defendant. The hits killed Carl by breaking “complex fractures of the facial bone.”

Wayne Patrick and Simon Mark called one of the people they thought was covering up the crime, cleaned up the blood in the house, and then drove the body to a piece of land in Rojales to bury it.

Three women have also been put on trial for hiding the crime. One of them is Wayne’s ex-girlfriend, who started the attack that killed him. Even though this woman knew that her ex-partner had killed Carl, she told the Civil Guard a lie in her first statement so that Wayne wouldn’t be investigated.

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Another woman who was found guilty of concealment gave Wayne Patrick a fake alibi by saying that he was with her in an Orihuela Costa pub the night of the crime and then at her house, where he stayed the night and left in the afternoon the next day.


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Gold shop in Denia robbed at gunpoint

Yesterday, Wednesday April 16th, a gold purchasing and selling establishment in Dénia was violently robbed at gunpoint. The incident occurred in the early afternoon, as the woman who manages the establishment was preparing to open up. Two individuals wearing helmets held her at gunpoint and escorted her into the store.

The criminals subsequently departed the establishment, which is situated on Avenida del Montgó. The exact amount of the theft remains undisclosed at this time.


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A blow to an armed gang that extorted cannabis clubs in the Vega Baja

“We are uncompromising; we will pursue the war against anyone. I am aware that you have a wife and children,” that’s one of the mafia-tinged threats sent to the owner of a cannabis club in San Fulgencio. In October, a British-born criminal gang that has been partially dismantled by the Guardia Civil for extorting cannabis smokers’ associations in the Vega Baja to take control of these establishments through death threats and intimidation with firearms robbed the owner of a cannabis club in San Fulgencio.

The gang, which functions similarly to a cartel, ultimately gained control of at least two cannabis smoking associations in the Vega Baja region. The investigation commenced with a burglary that occurred at a club in San Fulgencio last October. The owner was extorted and threatened with death in order for the group to retain half of the profits. Initially, he refrained from filing a complaint due to fear, as they threatened to “blow his head off” if he went to the police.

The Guardia Civil has apprehended two members of this gang since the robbery and is currently in the process of locating at least four additional individuals who were involved in the incident. Three Guardia Civil officers were injured by the suspect, who confined himself in the residence of a foreign couple and offered significant resistance, during the most recent arrest in Orihuela Costa at the beginning of April.

Two submachine guns, which are classified as weapons of war, and over 300 cartridges of varying calibres were present at the residence of the detainee, who was imprisoned and assisted by counsel Francisco Miguel Galiana Botella. The Guardia Civil’s investigation has verified that the 32-year-old man from Liverpool, who was previously known as Sonny James R., changed his name to Peter F. last year. The investigation also revealed that he has a lengthy criminal history in the U.K.

According to the Guardia Civil investigation, 85 amphetamine pills were confiscated from him at a club in Orihuela Costa, which the gang had also taken control of through threats. The court is now charging him with robbery with violence, threats, extortion, illegal possession of weapons, and drug trafficking. Additionally, he was charged with assault and assault and battery of three of the five officers who were required to subdue him, as a result of the kicks and strikes he employed to evade arrest. The Guardia Civil also incorporated the offences of unlawful detention and membership in a criminal organisation into its complaint.

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The Organised Crime and Anti-Drug Team (EDOA) of the Organic Judicial Police Unit of the Guardia Civil of Alicante is conducting the investigation in collaboration with the Territorial Judicial Police Team of Guardamar.

In these Vega Baja neighbourhoods, the extortion schemes of this gang have caused widespread social alarm. Witnesses have declined to testify before investigators due to their dread of the members of this criminal group, whom they regard as highly dangerous.

The robbery at a cannabis club in the La Marina neighbourhood of San Fulgencio was carried out on the afternoon of October 23rd, but the Guardia Civil was unaware of the incident until early November, when the wife of the establishment’s owner requested assistance through the Alertcops app. This was due to the fact that the victims did not file a crime report. Her wife reported that Sonny R., a British individual, had abducted her husband and the father of her children. She also stated that two weeks prior, he had requested €25,000 in payment. Additionally, she reported that two armed individuals had entered the garden of her residence in Pilar de la Horadada.

The victims reported the robbery following this contact, and the Guardia Civil established surveillance around the cannabis association, which is led by the complainant’s partner. A British male who had exited the club was apprehended and subsequently identified as one of the six perpetrators of the robbery.

The cannabis, €600 of the takings, and other personal belongings were confiscated after one of the club’s employees was threatened with a pistol during the robbery. The gang informed the owner, who was absent and was contacted by phone, that he was required to pay them €25,000, that they would retain half of the club’s proceeds, and that they would assume control from that day forward. In reality, they seized the keys to the establishment and commenced robbing the club the following day.

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In addition to the information provided about Sonny, the complainant also disclosed to the Guardia Civil that he had a meeting with another member of the criminal organisation following the robbery. The individual attempted to coerce him into signing a document that acknowledged that half of the business belonged to the gang that had robbed him, using threats. The six individuals who participated in the robbery accompanied him, but they did not assault him despite his refusal.

After the robbery, the British man who was apprehended in early April had departed Spain for several months. He is associated with two gunshots in the Liverpool area, one of which occurred at his mother’s residence, in the United Kingdom. Upon recognising the Guardia Civil’s presence in Orihuela Costa, he sought refuge in the residence of a married couple. Subsequently, he attempted to escape through the back entrance, but investigators apprehended him.


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Salmonella found in Día’s chicken burgers

The ‘Día Selection’ brand of chicken patties has been found to contain Salmonella by health authorities.

After receiving notification through SCIRI, the rapid information exchange system between autonomous communities, the Spanish Agency for Food Safety and Nutrition (Aesan) activated the food alert protocol.

The product in question is batch number 250969 and has an expiration date of 19/04/2025.

Plastic containers are used to present these packages, which contain six units each weighing 90 grammes, for a total weight of 540 grammes. They are stored in the refrigerator.

The initial distribution encompassed nine autonomous communities: Andalusia, Aragon, Asturias, Castile and Leon, Castile-La Mancha, Catalonia, Valencian Community, Galicia, and Madrid.

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Nevertheless, AESAN issued a cautionary note regarding potential secondary redistributions to other regions.

It is recommended that consumers who have this product refrain from eating it.

It is advised that you visit a health centre immediately if you have consumed the contaminated hamburgers and are experiencing symptoms such as diarrhoea, vomiting, fever, or headache, which are indicative of salmonellosis.

The authorities’ actions


The immediate withdrawal of the product from points of sale was coordinated by AESAN in collaboration with the afflicted autonomous communities. The SCIRI (Spanish Agency for International Trade and Development) facilitated the rapid dissemination of the alert to all potentially affected regions in order to safeguard public health.

Salmonella is one of the primary causes of foodborne illness, and this microbiological contamination poses a substantial health risk. To monitor potential cases associated with this outbreak, authorities are maintaining their surveillance protocol.

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