logo
'The Gucci gang is gone' says mum of murdered Zach Parker after Glen Ward jailed

'The Gucci gang is gone' says mum of murdered Zach Parker after Glen Ward jailed

Dublin Live18-06-2025
Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info
The mother of murder victim Zach Parker says she's "delighted" that his boss Glen Ward is now in jail - as she warns against a life of crime and says: "The Gucci Gang is gone".
Drug dealer Zach Parker (23) was gunned down outside a gym in Swords metres from his family home on January 17, 2019 - the first gangland murder of the bitter Coolock feud that also saw three of his pals killed. Speaking as she marked what should've been Zach's 30th birthday this week, a heartbroken Siobhan Parker said her son wanted out of his life of crime - and revealed how she learned of his involvement in the notorious 'Gucci Gang' led by Glen Ward.
Ward (32) was in April finally unmasked as the criminal referred to as 'Mr Flashy' after he was jailed to five years and six months in prison for firing a semi automatic rifle from the back door of a Finglas home. Speaking at her son's graveside as she placed 30th birthday balloons, Ms Parker, who said she doesn't blame Ward for involving her son in a life of crime told us: "Yeah I was delighted like (that he went to jail) but at the same time they're still in a prison where they're gonna be looked after and everything.
"No I don't (blame him). We all have our demons, we all have our own personalities. If you want to do something you do it. But if you're groomed you're groomed.
"They'll be out in no time. Bullet proof vests are not going to save you. Zach got shot in the head. A Louis Vuitton bag is not gonna save you either. It's just bling bling bling."
Speaking about marking her son's birthday Ms Parker said: "It's Zach's 30th birthday. He would've loved to have had a party. He's probably having a party up there. It's to acknowledge a milestone he didn't catch up on."
Describing the past six and a half years since her son's death as "horrific," Ms Parker said: "I've been in rehab twice, I've been in hospital. But hopefully things will get better. The Gucci Gang is gone."
It is believed that Zach was murdered after seeking a drug debt from a young criminal in the North Dublin area. Ms Parker says she knew her son was involved in drug dealing but that she only learned how deep after he died - when she met Glen Ward and close pal Sean Little after he died. Little was himself shot dead in May 2019 - as he looked for revenge for the murder of Zach.
"I actually didn't really know the depths that he was in. You know, I knew the circumstances of the drug situation but now it's getting worse and like they're going around on scooters getting paid left right and centre and it's getting worse and worse. So I reckon Zach is probably in a better place. He was harmless," Ms Parker told us.
Warning other young people away from a life of crime she added: "I used to love on a Sunday evening watching Love/Hate. I thought it was the best thing until it was reality for me.
"They (young people) don't listen to their Mammies anyway. They're going around on scooters and getting paid. That's great for them at that age - getting a pair of runners for nothing. You know what I mean, like they're grooming them."
Speaking about the first time she met Glen Ward, Sean Little and other members of the notorious 'Gucci Gang' which terrorised Finglas, Ms Parker said: "I didn't really know until I went into Beaumont that night and that's when I met the lads. Like Sean Little and that.
"I never met them before. (Glen Ward) was there yeah but I wouldn't have known him. They had a vigil and he was there as well.
"Zach wanted to get out of it. He never told me anything now. He would never tell me anything. He was in the Gucci Gang and he was the first to die in the Gucci Gang. And then poor Sean.
"I personally think Zach was a lovely fella and he was the bestest barber in Swords, so people keep telling me. He was a softie. I don't even know how he got into the drug situation but it's money."
Saying her "life changed" when Zach died, Ms Parker said Sean Little vowed for revenge - and told her partner that he would find who was responsible before he was blasted to death on 21 May 2019. She said: "Absolutely one million per cent (he wanted revenge) for Zach. He loved him. He was a very lovable person. He was a big softie like deep down.
"Sean Little came in to me and he said he doesn't owe money, I can promise you here and now. The day after he passed he came in and said he didn't owe money.
"He said to Gary I'm gonna find out who f*cking did this. They were so close. I didn't realise. He said he's gonna find out if it kills him. It did kill him didn't it?"
Speaking about the moment she found out her son had been shot dead at the front of the gym, which was located just over a wall next to her home, Ms Parker said: "Gary, he came in. I was in the bedroom watching telly, he came in and said did you hear that and I said yeah, what the f*cks going on.
"Then I seen him running across the way and I looked out the window. I started ringing Zach to see what was going on. I didn't realise it was him.
"Then I went over and he was getting CPR done on him. They said go straight into Beaumont.
"So we went straight in. My friend texted Oh My God there's been a shooting at the gym, someone's dead. It's horrific. I'm so angry."
In August 2022 the DPP directed no charges be brought against a suspect arrested by gardai in connection with Zach's murder. It is understood the young man has connections to deceased crime boss Tommy 'The Zombie' Savage, who died of natural causes at the age of 71 in 2021.
Ms Parker says she doesn't know why her son was murdered - but that she hopes to one day get justice for his death.
"They said no charges. I'd have my suspicions. I want to get justice. I'm not going to get closure but I do want to get justice," she said. "But I do think he's in a better place because the way things are going now they don't just shoot you after three months, they shoot you straight away."
Saying she believed her own son was groomed into a life of crime, Ms Parker said it started with his friendship with the late Sean Little. She said: "I do yeah definitely 100 per cent (think Zach was groomed). Sean Little came in and got his haircut and never met him before in his life.
"He had a good life ahead of him. He could've opened up his own barber and cleaned up. I'm not just saying it because I'm his Mam. He was the best barber in Swords.
"He used to draw all his tattoos and then go in and get them done. I didn't know until he was dead that he was in it. I never met them until that night."
Ms Parker says she is relieved that the crime gang led by Glen Ward - which featured the likes of her son, Sean Little, Hamid Sanambar, Caolan Smyth, and others, is now gone - but she fears it will be replaced with another. "It's well gone now. I am relieved but it'll be another gang, there will be another name."It isn't good because you're watching your back left right and centre," she said.
Ms Parker has since left the house she lived in in Swords - because it carries with it too many painful memories. "We knew we couldn't stay in the house. I couldn't stay there. I was looking out the window at it (the place he was killed)," she said.
Join our Dublin Live breaking news service on WhatsApp. Click this link to receive your daily dose of Dublin Live content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.
For all the latest news from Dublin and surrounding areas visit our homepage.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Man who claimed partner deliberately stabbed herself fails in appeal
Man who claimed partner deliberately stabbed herself fails in appeal

Irish Times

time5 days ago

  • Irish Times

Man who claimed partner deliberately stabbed herself fails in appeal

A man convicted of manslaughter, who claimed that his partner deliberately stabbed herself to death, has failed in a bid to have his 12-and-a-half-year sentence reduced on appeal. Martin Hayes (36) was found not guilty of Amadea McDermott's (27) murder, but guilty of her manslaughter by the majority verdict of a Central Criminal Court jury in November 2023. Hayes, with an address at Poddle Close, Crumlin, Dublin 12, had pleaded not guilty to murdering the mother of two at her home in Rathvale Drive, Ayrfield, Coolock, on or about July 20th, 2017. He told the trial that his partner inflicted the injury on herself. Hayes had admitted using violence against Ms McDermott in his own evidence to the trial. READ MORE Mr Justice Paul McDermott sentenced him to 12 years and six months in November 2023. Speaking following Haye's conviction in 2023, Eucharia McDermott described her sister's killer as a 'deranged monster'. Hayes appealed his sentence, arguing that the judge gave excessive weight to the aggravating factors in the case, specifically in setting a headline sentence of 14 years. James Dwyer SC, defence counsel for Hayes, also argued that inadequate weight was given to the mitigating factors in the case resulting in a final sentence that was 'higher than it should have been'. In dismissing the appeal on Tuesday, Mr Justice Patrick McCarthy said there were limited mitigating factors in this case. He said the judge rightly placed the offence in the category attracting a headline sentence of between ten and 15 years. The offence was aggravated by domestic violence, he said, noting there had been evidence of 'fresh violence' to the face of the deceased, which it was accepted occurred on the night of the killing as well as older bruises indicating previous violence. Mr Justice McCarthy said there was also evidence of 'an unhealthy, extreme and unfounded' view of purported impropriety of a sexual nature which indicated a 'very significant form of coercive control'. He also noted the circumstances of the appeal were 'slightly out of the ordinary' in that it had been contended that the judge fell into error in the decision he made as to the factual circumstances for the basis of manslaughter. Dismissing this ground of appeal, he said the trial judge approached the matter in a rational way upon the evidence and adopted what might be described as 'the rational, obvious and clear view' of what happened. Imposing sentence in November 2023, Mr Justice Paul McDermott said the killing was clearly a case of domestic violence and he noted that during her life, Hayes had tracked Ms McDermott's movements using a secret app on her phone. The judge further noted the recent bruises on Ms McDermott's body as recorded by a pathologist following her death and evidence that Hayes had a history of aggressive and violent behaviour towards his victim. In 2023, Amadea McDermott's sister, Eucharia, said that Hayes had told 'lie after lie without a shred of evidence' in his testimony to the trial when he falsely alleged that Ms McDermott had caused her own death by stabbing herself. She thanked gardaí and the prosecution team who had, she said, 'helped to convict this violent, sick, evil, twisted, deranged monster.'

Keir Starmer was quick to condemn Kneecap, but strangely silent on Moygashel
Keir Starmer was quick to condemn Kneecap, but strangely silent on Moygashel

Irish Times

time14-07-2025

  • Irish Times

Keir Starmer was quick to condemn Kneecap, but strangely silent on Moygashel

It's hard to avoid images and scenes that provoke disgust these days, but the burning of effigies of people in a boat atop a bonfire in Moygashel in Co Tyrone last week is an especially grotesque brand of racism. Stormont's First Minister Michelle O'Neill referred to 'openly racist displays that are sickening and deplorable' and called for political leadership. Where is that leadership? And how can it effectively tackle these annual expressions of unhinged hate? Where is the Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, Hilary Benn , on this? Keir Starmer found the time to speak about an Irish band playing Glastonbury , making interventions that exerted huge political pressure on the festival. Why did he not have anything to say about the premeditated, explicit and threatening racism on display in Moygashel last week? In June Starmer condemned the racist violence in Ballymena . In May Starmer made his Enoch Powell-esque 'island of strangers' speech. Note the singular 'island'. Starmer is especially well-placed to speak on the North given that he was a human rights adviser to the Northern Ireland Policing Board, yet he said nothing. READ MORE Yvette Cooper declared Palestine Action a 'proscribed' group, turning a bunch of people protesting against genocide into 'terrorists' in the eyes of the law (and rhetoric) overnight. Expressing support for Palestine Action is now illegal in the UK – a ludicrous, dangerous situation that frames those desiring peace and an end to war crimes and mass murder as the enemy. There was not a peep from her on Moygashel either. Kemi Badenoch accused the BBC of 'rewarding extremism' by broadcasting Kneecap's Glastonbury set. On Moygashel's spectacle of actual extremism, however, she has been silent. Those who have called it out for what it is deserve credit. They include John McDowell, the Church of Ireland Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland. He described it as 'racist, threatening and offensive. It certainly has nothing whatsoever to do with Christianity or with Protestant culture and is in fact inhuman and deeply sub-Christian'. Sinn Féin's Colm Gildernew labelled it a 'clear incitement to hatred'. UUP leader Mike Nesbitt described it as 'sickening, deplorable and entirely out of step with what is supposed to be a cultural celebration'. Amnesty International's Patrick Corrigan called it a 'vile, dehumanising act that fuels hatred and racism'. Claire Hanna, the leader of the SDLP, called it 'disgusting' and 'a deeply dehumanising provocation'. On Friday, Taoiseach Micheál Martin said he 'was dismayed' by the display. 'Archbishop McDowell made a strong comment on it and he's right – it's racist, threatening, and offensive and it's unChristian and lacking in any appreciation of human dignity.' [ 'Clear incitement to hatred': Calls for removal of migrant effigies in boat placed on loyalist bonfire Opens in new window ] The PSNI eventually said they were investigating the 'material placed upon a bonfire' as a 'hate incident'. The PSNI did not dismantle another bonfire in Belfast when a city council committee voted that such action should be taken, and asked the PSNI to assist contractors in doing so. The request to have it removed was rooted in concerns that the electricity supply to Belfast City Hospital and Royal Victoria Hospital was at risk due to the proximity of that bonfire to a substation, and because there is asbestos at the bonfire site. The decision to let it burn regardless was driven by the potential for violence. The decision is understandable in operational terms – had the PSNI set about dismantling it, riots were inevitable, and everyone knows that threat of violence ultimately emanates from the UDA and the UVF. Northern Ireland's Environment Minister and Alliance Party MLA Andrew Muir also told the BBC that 'the removal of asbestos is very complex and delicate. It requires the site to be completely vacated.' He asked people 'not to light this bonfire if they could.' Year in, year out, the burning of effigies, hate slogans and flags is accepted. Were it not, effective action would be taken to end it. The reluctance to interfere – by politicians and police – is unacceptable when there are lives at risk, both from direct racist violence and the incitement of it. This is a tired cycle, the playing out of a pathetic desire for negative attention. Perhaps there is even a subconscious – or a tacit – understanding that the Britain those making such effigies are loyal to barely thinks about them. This reality may be so painful that it produces a desire to burn something. Anything. Anyone. Boats, mannequins, effigies, flags. I take no issue with bonfires as spectacle and community events celebrating culture. In a pluralist society, expressions of identity, community, and the rituals and traditions that accompany them are important. But there is something rotten about leveraging what is supposed to be an expression of long-standing culture and tradition for contemporary expressions of racist hate, with phraseology borrowed from the likes of Nigel Farage (a man who once got paid a few quid to say 'up the Ra' during his pathetic hustle selling personalised video clip messages via Cameo). It's a pity the imagery of this bonfire did not make the front pages the world over. Maybe then, the blind eye could open to confront a spectacle of festering racism and red hot hate.

'The Gucci gang is gone' says mum of murdered Zach Parker after Glen Ward jailed
'The Gucci gang is gone' says mum of murdered Zach Parker after Glen Ward jailed

Dublin Live

time18-06-2025

  • Dublin Live

'The Gucci gang is gone' says mum of murdered Zach Parker after Glen Ward jailed

Our community members are treated to special offers, promotions and adverts from us and our partners. You can check out at any time. More info The mother of murder victim Zach Parker says she's "delighted" that his boss Glen Ward is now in jail - as she warns against a life of crime and says: "The Gucci Gang is gone". Drug dealer Zach Parker (23) was gunned down outside a gym in Swords metres from his family home on January 17, 2019 - the first gangland murder of the bitter Coolock feud that also saw three of his pals killed. Speaking as she marked what should've been Zach's 30th birthday this week, a heartbroken Siobhan Parker said her son wanted out of his life of crime - and revealed how she learned of his involvement in the notorious 'Gucci Gang' led by Glen Ward. Ward (32) was in April finally unmasked as the criminal referred to as 'Mr Flashy' after he was jailed to five years and six months in prison for firing a semi automatic rifle from the back door of a Finglas home. Speaking at her son's graveside as she placed 30th birthday balloons, Ms Parker, who said she doesn't blame Ward for involving her son in a life of crime told us: "Yeah I was delighted like (that he went to jail) but at the same time they're still in a prison where they're gonna be looked after and everything. "No I don't (blame him). We all have our demons, we all have our own personalities. If you want to do something you do it. But if you're groomed you're groomed. "They'll be out in no time. Bullet proof vests are not going to save you. Zach got shot in the head. A Louis Vuitton bag is not gonna save you either. It's just bling bling bling." Speaking about marking her son's birthday Ms Parker said: "It's Zach's 30th birthday. He would've loved to have had a party. He's probably having a party up there. It's to acknowledge a milestone he didn't catch up on." Describing the past six and a half years since her son's death as "horrific," Ms Parker said: "I've been in rehab twice, I've been in hospital. But hopefully things will get better. The Gucci Gang is gone." It is believed that Zach was murdered after seeking a drug debt from a young criminal in the North Dublin area. Ms Parker says she knew her son was involved in drug dealing but that she only learned how deep after he died - when she met Glen Ward and close pal Sean Little after he died. Little was himself shot dead in May 2019 - as he looked for revenge for the murder of Zach. "I actually didn't really know the depths that he was in. You know, I knew the circumstances of the drug situation but now it's getting worse and like they're going around on scooters getting paid left right and centre and it's getting worse and worse. So I reckon Zach is probably in a better place. He was harmless," Ms Parker told us. Warning other young people away from a life of crime she added: "I used to love on a Sunday evening watching Love/Hate. I thought it was the best thing until it was reality for me. "They (young people) don't listen to their Mammies anyway. They're going around on scooters and getting paid. That's great for them at that age - getting a pair of runners for nothing. You know what I mean, like they're grooming them." Speaking about the first time she met Glen Ward, Sean Little and other members of the notorious 'Gucci Gang' which terrorised Finglas, Ms Parker said: "I didn't really know until I went into Beaumont that night and that's when I met the lads. Like Sean Little and that. "I never met them before. (Glen Ward) was there yeah but I wouldn't have known him. They had a vigil and he was there as well. "Zach wanted to get out of it. He never told me anything now. He would never tell me anything. He was in the Gucci Gang and he was the first to die in the Gucci Gang. And then poor Sean. "I personally think Zach was a lovely fella and he was the bestest barber in Swords, so people keep telling me. He was a softie. I don't even know how he got into the drug situation but it's money." Saying her "life changed" when Zach died, Ms Parker said Sean Little vowed for revenge - and told her partner that he would find who was responsible before he was blasted to death on 21 May 2019. She said: "Absolutely one million per cent (he wanted revenge) for Zach. He loved him. He was a very lovable person. He was a big softie like deep down. "Sean Little came in to me and he said he doesn't owe money, I can promise you here and now. The day after he passed he came in and said he didn't owe money. "He said to Gary I'm gonna find out who f*cking did this. They were so close. I didn't realise. He said he's gonna find out if it kills him. It did kill him didn't it?" Speaking about the moment she found out her son had been shot dead at the front of the gym, which was located just over a wall next to her home, Ms Parker said: "Gary, he came in. I was in the bedroom watching telly, he came in and said did you hear that and I said yeah, what the f*cks going on. "Then I seen him running across the way and I looked out the window. I started ringing Zach to see what was going on. I didn't realise it was him. "Then I went over and he was getting CPR done on him. They said go straight into Beaumont. "So we went straight in. My friend texted Oh My God there's been a shooting at the gym, someone's dead. It's horrific. I'm so angry." In August 2022 the DPP directed no charges be brought against a suspect arrested by gardai in connection with Zach's murder. It is understood the young man has connections to deceased crime boss Tommy 'The Zombie' Savage, who died of natural causes at the age of 71 in 2021. Ms Parker says she doesn't know why her son was murdered - but that she hopes to one day get justice for his death. "They said no charges. I'd have my suspicions. I want to get justice. I'm not going to get closure but I do want to get justice," she said. "But I do think he's in a better place because the way things are going now they don't just shoot you after three months, they shoot you straight away." Saying she believed her own son was groomed into a life of crime, Ms Parker said it started with his friendship with the late Sean Little. She said: "I do yeah definitely 100 per cent (think Zach was groomed). Sean Little came in and got his haircut and never met him before in his life. "He had a good life ahead of him. He could've opened up his own barber and cleaned up. I'm not just saying it because I'm his Mam. He was the best barber in Swords. "He used to draw all his tattoos and then go in and get them done. I didn't know until he was dead that he was in it. I never met them until that night." Ms Parker says she is relieved that the crime gang led by Glen Ward - which featured the likes of her son, Sean Little, Hamid Sanambar, Caolan Smyth, and others, is now gone - but she fears it will be replaced with another. "It's well gone now. I am relieved but it'll be another gang, there will be another name."It isn't good because you're watching your back left right and centre," she said. Ms Parker has since left the house she lived in in Swords - because it carries with it too many painful memories. "We knew we couldn't stay in the house. I couldn't stay there. I was looking out the window at it (the place he was killed)," she said. Join our Dublin Live breaking news service on WhatsApp. Click this link to receive your daily dose of Dublin Live content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice. For all the latest news from Dublin and surrounding areas visit our homepage.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store