logo
Social influencer gangster attacked after filming video where Scottish mobsters died

Social influencer gangster attacked after filming video where Scottish mobsters died

Edinburgh Live2 days ago
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
A gangster was brutally attacked just days after making a video at the scene of the murders of two Scottish mob leaders.
Self-styled social influencer Sam Walker – who has gathered a massive online following with reports on his criminal life – was seriously injured in the attack, which left him with a mass of staples in his skull. The attack came after he posted a video from Monaghan's bar in Fuengirola, in the Costa del Sol.
The "reportage" video was seen by some in the community as disrespectful to victims Ross Monaghan, who owned the bar, and his long-time friend and associate Eddie Lyons jnr. The pair were gunned down on May 31 in front of terrified punters who had been enjoying the Champions League final, reports the Daily Record.
READ MORE - Exact date Edinburgh heatwave coming as residents set for temperatures of 27C
READ MORE - Fans divided after Edinburgh Castle gig as Marti Pellow takes to stage
Walker, from Liverpool, had visited the scene shortly after the horror shootings and used the footage on his Instagram and TikTok platforms.
He is heard saying at the end of the footage: "This is a message to any one of yous out here. Stay on point, because if you get caught slipping. That's what happens. Three people have been whacked, two people are dead.
"Have a nice day, bam bam."
It later emerged that Walker was savagely attacked in nearby Puerto Banus, where he suffered serious head injuries in the assault believed by some other bloggers to have involved golf clubs. After surgery in a Spanish hospital, he made a series of videos, showing off the staples that were holding his head together.
(Image: Daily Record)
A source said: "Sam Walker is very well known and has a big social media following but he is not in the same criminal league as some of the big players who have settled here. Walker is known to create noise around his movements and to chase followers and hits, so there was scepticism at the seriousness of the attack at the start.
"But it does seem that he was very badly injured. It has been reported on several social media channels that the side of his head was 'caved in' and fragments of bone were lodged in his brain."
The source added: "We don't know for sure but the video he made shortly after the Glasgow people were murdered did not go down well in some quarters and there remains the question that he was attacked as revenge.
"Spanish police are well aware of this suggestion. There are various theories as to the motive for the attack. It is almost certainly related to gangland grudges."
In recent years, Walker has spent time in Sierra Leone, Turkey, Cyprus, Ireland, Thailand and other locations. His friends include other drug dealers and assorted criminals. The crook has attracted a big following on Instagram and TikTok but is mocked for fabricating stories.
He also been involved acts of kindness and charity work in Africa. In the summer of 2018, Walker filmed himself surrounded by celebrating children in a poverty-stricken slum in Sierra Leone.
He had just overseen the delivery of a container full of supplies and the installation of a water tank and pipes to the West African country's capital, Freetown. Amid clapping and cheering, one man said: "We are happy that our brother Sam has come to help us with water and sanitation. We thank God for him."
Walker told the camera: "Now, no child is going to have to drink dirty water again."
The crook had travelled by private jet to Belgium, flown to Spain, caught a cargo ship to Morocco, then driven through the Sahara desert to reach his destination. All throughout his journey, he taunted police officers in social media posts, laughing and posting at the end of his epic trip: "Better luck trying to catch me when I go out of the country next time, Merseyside Police."
In March last year, Walker further mocked police after skipping bail in the UK and fleeing back to Sierra Leone by private jet. He was arrested by local armed officers as he filmed a live TikTok video.
Self-confessed career criminal Walker – who once threatened to end the career of England football star Ross Barkley and was involved in an unlikely spat with actor Stephen Fry – was tracked down as he toured the streets of the impoverished African country.
In September last year, the 40-year-old Scouser was convicted of contempt of court for live streaming on TikTok from an Irish courtroom. Walker, said to have convictions for more than 130 offences, was in court to plead guilty to driving offences.
Monaghan, 43, was shot dead alongside Lyons jnr, 46, in Fuengirola. Both men were senior members of the Lyons crime family. An alleged hitman has appeared in court after being arrested over the double killing.
Michael Riley, 44, of Liverpool's Huyton, is also fighting extradition to Spain. Merseyside Police nicked Riley on June 13 after Spanish officers issued an international arrest warrant.
A magistrates court deemed him a flight risk and remanded him in custody.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Thugs, thieves and drug dealers could avoid court under radical plans to ease justice system backlog
Thugs, thieves and drug dealers could avoid court under radical plans to ease justice system backlog

Scottish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Thugs, thieves and drug dealers could avoid court under radical plans to ease justice system backlog

Jury trials would be scrapped for some drug dealers and sex offenders with a judge and two magistrates presiding instead JUSTICE SHAKE-UP Thugs, thieves and drug dealers could avoid court under radical plans to ease justice system backlog Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) THUGS, thieves and drug dealers could avoid going to crown court under plans to overhaul the clogged justice system. Offenders may avoid a criminal record and instead be sentenced to do unpaid work or get rehabilitation, it is proposed. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Criminals could avoid going to crown court under plans to overhaul the clogged justice system Sentences could be cut by 40 per cent, up from a third now, with an early guilty plea. Jury trials would be scrapped for some drug dealers and sex offenders with a judge and two magistrates presiding instead. They could impose sentences of up to three years' jail. The maximum penalty JPs could hand down would double to two years. READ MORE ON CRIME BIN IT Knife amnesty bin installed just yards from Wimbledon as crime warning is issued The shake-up, proposed in a report for the Government by retired judge Sir Brian Leveson, is an attempt to tackle the current backlog of 77,000 crown court cases. It has seen trial dates pushed back as far as 2029. Sir Brian said without the reforms there would be a 'breakdown in law and order' with 'society taking things into their own hands'. Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick said 'criminals like burglars and some killers will serve just a fifth of their sentences. That makes a mockery of our justice system.' Victims' Commissioner Baroness Newlove warned higher guilty plea discounts and out-of-court disposals 'will feel like justice diluted again'. Justice Secretary Shabana Mahmood has yet to announce which recommendations she will accept. First convicts leave Barlinnie after Scottish Government release 360 prisoners early due to overcrowding

Spanish-language journalist remains in ICE custody despite being granted bond
Spanish-language journalist remains in ICE custody despite being granted bond

NBC News

time3 hours ago

  • NBC News

Spanish-language journalist remains in ICE custody despite being granted bond

ATLANTA — A week after an immigration judge granted him bond, a Spanish-language journalist who was arrested while covering a protest last month remains in federal custody. Police just outside Atlanta arrested Mario Guevara while he was covering a protest on June 14, and he was turned over to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement several days later. He was being held at an immigration detention center in Folkston — in southeast Georgia, near the Florida border — when an immigration judge last week granted him bond. But when his family tried to pay the $7,500 bond last week, ICE didn't accept it and he has since been shuffled between three other jails, his lawyer Giovanni Diaz said. "We are of the opinion that there seems to be a concerted effort between different jurisdictions to keep him detained," Diaz said. Guevara built a large following Guevara, 47, fled El Salvador two decades ago and drew a loyal audience as a journalist covering immigration in the Atlanta area. He worked for Mundo Hispanico, a Spanish-language newspaper, for years before starting a digital news outlet called MG News. He was livestreaming video on social media from a DeKalb County rally protesting President Donald Trump's administration when local police arrested him. Guevara has been authorized to work and remain in the country, Diaz said. A previous immigration case against him was administratively closed more than a decade ago, and he has a pending green card application sponsored by his adult U.S. citizen son, the lawyer said. After Immigration Judge James Ward granted him bond, Guevara's family tried several times to pay it online but it wouldn't go through, Diaz said. They then went to pay it in person and ICE refused to accept it, he said. "What we didn't know was what was going on in the background," Diaz said, explaining that they have since learned that ICE was challenging his release to the Board of Immigration Appeals and asked to put the bond order on hold while that's pending. Moved from jail to jail to jail to jail to jail Another of Guevara's attorneys was then told that he was being transferred to Gwinnett County, in suburban Atlanta, because there were open warrants for his arrest on traffic charges there. He was taken to the Gwinnett jail last Thursday and was released the same day on bond in that case. Because his immigration bond had not been paid, he was taken back into ICE custody at that point, Diaz said. He was taken to Floyd County, about 65 miles northwest of Atlanta, where the county sheriff's office has an agreement to detain people for ICE. Floyd County Jail records showed that he was in custody there until Monday. Diaz said Guevara was then moved to a federal Bureau of Prisons facility in Atlanta, where he remained on Tuesday. The immigration judge agreed with Guevara's lawyers that the journalist is not a danger to the community, but ICE is arguing he's such a threat that he shouldn't be released, Diaz said. "We think it's overkill," the lawyer said. And in what Diaz characterized as a concerning development, Guevara was told while in custody in Gwinnett County that his phone was confiscated under a search warrant. What video of Guevara's arrest shows The video from his arrest shows Guevara wearing a bright red shirt under a protective vest with "PRESS" printed across his chest. He could be heard telling a police officer, "I'm a member of the media, officer." He was standing on a sidewalk with other journalists, with no sign of big crowds or confrontations around him, moments before he was taken away. DeKalb police charged Guevara with unlawful assembly, obstruction of police and being a pedestrian on or along the roadway. His lawyers worked to get him released and he was granted bond in DeKalb, but ICE had put a hold on him and he was held until they came to pick him up. DeKalb County Solicitor-General Donna Coleman-Stribling on June 25 dismissed those charges, saying that while probable cause existed to support the arrest, there wasn't enough evidence to support a prosecution. "At the time of his arrest, the video evidence shows Mr. Guevara generally in compliance and does not demonstrate the intent to disregard law enforcement directives," her office said in a news release. Amid outcry over arrest, traffic charges filed Guevara's arrest immediately drew widespread attention and was criticized by press freedom groups, which said he was simply doing his job. On June 20, the Gwinnett sheriff's office said it had secured warrants for Guevara's arrest on charges of distracted driving, failure to obey a traffic control device and reckless driving, saying that he had "compromised operational integrity and jeopardized the safety" of victims of a law enforcement case, investigators and Gwinnett residents. An initial incident report says the charges stem from a May 20 incident, which it says was reported June 17 — three days after his arrest at the protest. The narrative section of the report gives no details. Diaz said people charged with traffic violations are usually charged on the spot, and it is very unusual for an officer to swear out a warrant for arrest on such a violation a month later.

Reality star and model dies aged 32 as cops break down her door to find her body left alone for 20 days
Reality star and model dies aged 32 as cops break down her door to find her body left alone for 20 days

Scottish Sun

time4 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Reality star and model dies aged 32 as cops break down her door to find her body left alone for 20 days

Her body was found after a court ordered cops to vacate her flat after her rent was due for more than a year TRAGIC LOSS Reality star and model dies aged 32 as cops break down her door to find her body left alone for 20 days Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A POPULAR reality star who reportedly lived alone has tragically been found dead inside her flat. Cops reportedly found the body of Pakistani actress Humaira Asghar, who appeared on her country's version of Big Brother, two weeks after she died. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Reality star and model Humaira Asghar found dead aged 32 Credit: X/ @TamashaGharOFC 2 Cops reportedly found her body in a state of 'decomposition' Credit: Instagram Humaira, 32, is said to have lived alone in her flat in Karachi for more than seven years. But a court ordered cops to vacate her flat after her rent was due for more than a year, according to ScreenRant. This led authorities to discover her body, which local media reported was in a "state of decomposition". Senior police officer Syed Asad Raza told Images: "It appeared that the body was several days old." Dr Summaiya Syed, who is a part of the investigative process, said: "The body is in a very advanced stage of decomposition." While authorities have yet to reveal the cause of her death, they have ruled out murder as a possible cause. This is because no signs of forced entry were found inside her flat after cops broke in. Humaira is best known for starring on the reality show Tamasha Ghar in Pakistan and in the movie Jalaibee. Tamasha is a similar show to Big Brother, with houseguests competing against each other. The contestants are typically celebrities and other well-known people. Humaira also competed with the title of "pageant winner." More to follow... For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos. Like us on Facebook at TheSunUS and follow us on X at @TheUSSun

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