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Gangland mourners issued chilling threats over Eddie Lyons and Ross Monaghan funerals

Gangland mourners issued chilling threats over Eddie Lyons and Ross Monaghan funerals

Daily Record2 days ago
The message comes after it was revealed that Spanish authorities have released the bodies.
Gangland mourners who go to the funerals of murdered hoods Ross Monaghan and Eddie Lyons Jnr have been warned they'll be targeted next.
The sinister message comes after it emerged the pair's bodies have been released to their families by the Spanish authorities.

An online post - confirmed by the Record as genuine - blames Dubai based crime boss Ross McGill for the relentless gangland feud which has engulfed central Scotland since March.

It reads: 'Anyone who attends the funeral of Edward and Ross this week will be treated the exact same way as them.
'Family and friends take note.
'One man and his ego caused all this."
It's yet to be confirmed exactly where and when the funeral of the gunned down pair will be held.

The Lyons gangsters were drinking in Monaghans bar in the Costa del Sol after watching the Champions League Cup final when they were gunned down on May 31.
A hooded assassin was captured on CCTV storming the boozer and shooting both men dead in front of horrified holiday makers and staff.
Lyons Jnr had been on a golfing trip with pals when he decided to hook up with best friend Monaghan who lived there.

Last night a source said: "Things are really beginning to heat up again now, especially in Glasgow.
"A house connected to the Lyons was recently smashed into with a motor. It went straight into the front room with people inside.

"The main figures in the Lyons crew will want to show strength at the funerals but at the same time this will put a target on their backs.
"Their boss Steven lives in Dubai and didn't turn up for the last major funeral so it remains to be seen if he will this time."
McGill, 31, launched a brutal campaign of terror against Edinburgh mob boss Mark Richardson and Glasgow's Daniel crime clan after he was ripped off in a £500k cocaine deal paid for with fake bank notes earlier this year.

A number of properties connected to friends of the caged crime kingpin have also been set on fire across the central belt.
It's seen Richardson's associate David McMillan targeted three times at his home in the capital including a machete attack.
Last week Police Scotland confirmed a 50th arrest had been made in connection with the attacks as part of Operation Portaledge.

Confirming the release of the two bodies a Spanish judicial official said: 'Fuengirola's Court of Instruction Number
Two which is coordinating the judicial investigation into the murders has authorised the release of the bodies to their families for them to do what they believe to be appropriate.'

Double murder suspect Michael Riley, 44, is in prison in the UK awaiting likely forced extradition after being arrested in Liverpool last month,
Spanish police chiefs described the man who shot the mobsters late last month as a member of the rival Daniel crime clan, despite Police Scotland saying they had 'no intelligence' to suggest the killings were linked to the ongoing gangland turf war here.
Malaga-based Spanish National Police chief superintendent Pedro Agudo Novo revealed at a packed press conference the dramatic Liverpool arrest was made after detectives discovered the alleged hitman was about to flee his UK bolthole for a "paradise island tax haven."

He said: 'The double murder was carried out by a professional killer and member of one of the victims' rival gangs' before going on to detail how he fled Spain via Portugal and then took a plane to Leeds.
Last week Scotland's top cop, Chief Constable Jo Farrell, doubled down on the force's initial insistence it wasn't aware of any evidence Monaghan and Eddie Lyons Jnr's murders were linked to the ongoing gang feud here, or had been planned from Scotland.
Monaghans Fuengirola, the pub 43-year-old dad-of-two Ross owned and was shot dead moments after his gang pal was killed with a bullet to the neck on the terrace outside, has now reopened under the new name Irish Rover.

A local landlord known only as Clive is running the team working at the Fuengirola drinking hole.
After Monaghan's brutal gunshot killing, it emerged the career criminal also ran an online supermarket selling expats a taste from home as a successful sideline to the Costa del Sol pub where he was murdered.
He became a director of Costa Shop And Drop after fleeing to Spain following a botched hit attempt outside a Glasgow primary school.

Monaghan, cornered inside his bar moments after Lyons Jnr was shot dead, started selling Walkers Crisps, Weetabix, Colman's Mustard, Pot Noodle snacks and even Irn-Bru with the catchy sales slogan: 'Craving Your Favourite British Food?'
The company, which stocks products at a Malaga warehouse, also markets toiletries and beauty products. It offers next-day delivery on all orders placed within the Costa del Sol, describing itself online as a 'new and exciting' service and boasting: 'Our prices are often lower than the market leading competitors.'

Monaghan, a senior member of the Lyons gang, was appointed sole director of the Spanish firm on February 8 2021.
The mobster, who fled Scotland for Spain in 2017, was tried but acquitted over the murder of notorious Glasgow hood Kevin 'Gerbil' Carroll at an Asda car park in 2010.
In August 2017 he and Lyons Jr, 46, were cleared of being involved in a brutal street attack on three men outside the Campsie bar in Bishopbriggs, East Dunbartonshire.
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