CRIME ON THE COSTAS
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BREAKING NEWS

Saturday 5 May 2012

THE mother of a teenager who went missing in the Costa del Sol four years ago has received a new lead.

Posted On 01:27 0 comments

 


amy-fitzpatrick

TOTAL MYSTERY: As Amy looked when she disappeared in 2008.

Amy Fitzpatrick went missing on New Year’s Day 2008 from Calahonda, age 15.

 

Amy’s mother, Audrey Fitzpatrick and partner Dave Mahon claim they have been approached through social networking site Facebook by an 'underworld' source.

“We were told that Eric ‘Lucky’ Wilson murdered Amy, that he was overheard boasting he had murdered her,” Mahon told EWN.

Wilson is a convicted killer, linked to the death of at least 10 people, is currently serving a 23-year jail term in Spain for the brutal killing of Englishman Daniel Smith in a shooting outside a bar in Riviera del Sol in June 2010. Smith, had stepped in to stop the Irishman harassing a young woman, a court heard during the trial.

Irish daily The Star reports that the woman in question was one of Amy’s friends. Wilson, 28, may have been the ‘older man’ reportedly seen out with her in the area where the shooting took place on the night she went missing, Amy’s mother suspects.

Now back in Dublin, Audrey Fitzpatrick and Dave Mahon have given Gardai this information and are set to make a formal statement next week which will be passed onto international policing agency Interpol.

Interpol is expected to send it to Spanish police, who shelved their probe into Amy’s disappearance in August last year.

Amy’s mother wants police to search the land Wilson was renting in Coin at the time of the teen’s disappearance.

“We think we are close to cracking the mystery of what happened to Amy,” said Mahon.

“It is the strongest information we have got so far and it is credible to us. We hope the Spanish police will act on this new information.”

The revelation about Wilson is in a new book written by Audrey in which she describes their pain and efforts in finding out what happened to Amy.

The book, which includes details of their secret meetings with Irish and English gangsters in the course of their search, is set for publication this summer.

 

amy

VANISHED: Missing teenager Amy Fitzpatrick with her mum Audrey.

‘We live with this every day with other parents of missing children’

 

ON New Year’s Day 2008, at 10pm, Amy Fitzpatrick said goodbye to her close friend Ashley Rose, with whom she had been babysitting Ashley’s brother at her friend’s house in Mijas Costa.

Amy should have arrived at her home on the Urbanisation Riviera del Sol in Mijas Costa, near Fuengirola, at about 10:10pm, as it was only a short walk away.

But, she never arrived home and has not been heard from or seen since that night.

Amy, an Irish girl, was 15 at the time; she has black hair, blue eyes and a pale complexion.

She is 1.65m tall. At the time of her disappearance, she was wearing dark-coloured crushed velvet tracksuit bottoms and a black T-shirt with the word ‘Diesel’ on it in various different colours.

She had no money, phone or passport. Amy's mother Audrey told EWN "It took a long time before I registered Amy was gone and I mean months and months".

My brother, when he came over to me form Ireland, said it all: ¨"this happens to other people" and he’s right people read about these things and think oh my god that’s terrible and go on with their lives. But we live this every day along with all the other parents of missing kids".


Wednesday 2 May 2012

Sicilian mafia 'no longer has head'

Posted On 15:31 0 comments

The Sicilian mafia no longer has a head, Italy's chief anti-mafia prosecutor said Wednesday. "Today there is no head and the cupola (supreme command) are all in jail. They tried to get organised again on two occasions but we managed to nip it in the bud," Pietro Grasso told Italian radio. Grasso said the hitherto reputed Cosa Nostra No.1, Matteo Messina Denaro, "is not the head of the Sicilian mafia". Messina Denaro, a 50-year-old clan boss from the Western Sicilian city of Messina, had been reported to have taken up the reins after a series of arrests of older Palermo chieftains. But Grasso said that was not the case. Messina Denaro is still the most wanted mafioso in Italy, however. Anti-mafia police have been waging a 'scorched earth' policy around him which has prompted some experts to suggest he has fled abroad. But Grasso said: "No, I believe he's still in Sicily". The anti-mafia prosecutor added that "today the State is stronger than the mafia", noting that "in the past three and a half years we have seized assets worth 40 billion euros and confiscated another three billion".


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