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Trevor Deely case - new witness

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,820 ✭✭✭smelly sock


    20Wheel wrote: »
    But bodies float. And the canal locks were all closed.

    Maybe further along the route. After the locks.

    There's no known footage of him from the US embassy. And that's a place that would probably have no shortage of cameras. Likewise the Israeli embassy.

    Dublin bay??


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,868 ✭✭✭Day Lewin


    BDI wrote: »
    And nearly every fit young healthy man in Ireland visits Amsterdam for the weed and the coffee.

    I imagine that the sex workers in the area must have been questioned about this; whether they'd seen TD passing, for instance - or if he'd ever been a customer - but the Guards and the family and friends all seem unanimous that the latter was NOT the case.
    And it was such a dirty night, even the streetwalkers were not to be seen.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 713 ✭✭✭bunderoon


    Any chance the place where he worked is a reason for his disappearance?
    A few wanted something and the office party was the perfect time to do it.

    We have the water accident and the gangster/prostitute possibilities.
    The face that he worked for a bank should not be ruled out of hand.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,238 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    20Wheel wrote: »
    But bodies float. And the canal locks were all closed.

    Maybe further along the route. After the locks.

    There's no known footage of him from the US embassy. And that's a place that would probably have no shortage of cameras. Likewise the Israeli embassy.

    But he was past the Canal by the time he was spotted on Haddington Rd heading east, which incidentally leads towards the coast.

    And he would have had to cross the Dodder to get home from where he was last spotted, so he was close to a fast flowing body of water on a stormy night


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,238 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    bunderoon wrote: »
    Any chance the place where he worked is a reason for his disappearance?
    A few wanted something and the office party was the perfect time to do it.

    We have the water accident and the gangster/prostitute possibilities.
    The face that he worked for a bank should not be ruled out of hand.

    No, again it's just complete folly

    He was a junior IT engineer at a asset management arm of a bank

    Explain to us how his job would have been relevant


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 554 ✭✭✭Fiftyfilthy


    But he was past the Canal by the time he was spotted on Haddington Rd heading east, which incidentally leads towards the coast.

    And he would have had to cross the Dodder to get home from where he was last spotted, so he was close to a fast flowing body of water on a stormy night


    If he took a left After the Bank machine , brings you parallel to Haddington Road and directly by the canal again onto Percy place


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 728 ✭✭✭20Wheel


    But he was past the Canal by the time he was spotted on Haddington Rd heading east, which incidentally leads towards the coast.

    And he would have had to cross the Dodder to get home from where he was last spotted, so he was close to a fast flowing body of water on a stormy night

    Afaik it's locks all the way down.
    At Haddington Rd, point of last footage he was still several locks from any free river.

    On a mobile device so I'm a bit restricted here.

    Putin is a dictator. Putin should face justice at the Hague. All good Russians should work to depose Putin. Russias war in Ukraine is illegal and morally wrong.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,676 ✭✭✭strandroad


    But he was past the Canal by the time he was spotted on Haddington Rd heading east, which incidentally leads towards the coast.

    And he would have had to cross the Dodder to get home from where he was last spotted, so he was close to a fast flowing body of water on a stormy night

    The Dodder is not easy to fall into at any of the crossings in the area, the bridges at Ballsbridge, Lansdowne Road, Bath Avenue are all secured with walls and railings, you can't step around or under the bridge to pee or anything like it, the banks are not accessible. It's all paved and walled. The Dodder walk wouldn't be on his way unless he walked a large loop and was only coming home; it is paved and secured today but when was that done?

    The Canal banks are grassy and accessible but he was walking away and not towards it unless he took Percy Place rather than Haddington Road (away from his place?) or continued all the way to the basin. No location before the basin is likely anyway, because of the locks.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,466 ✭✭✭✭John_Rambo


    BDI wrote: »
    And nearly every fit young healthy man in Ireland visits Amsterdam for the weed and the coffee.

    Every fit young healthy man? Speak for yourself BDI.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,820 ✭✭✭smelly sock


    strandroad wrote: »
    The Dodder is not easy to fall into at any of the crossings in the area, the bridges at Ballsbridge, Lansdowne Road, Bath Avenue are all secured with walls and railings, you can't step around or under the bridge to pee or anything like it, the banks are not accessible. It's all paved and walled. The Dodder walk wouldn't be on his way unless he walked a large loop and was only coming home; it is paved and secured today but when was that done?

    The Canal banks are grassy and accessible but he was walking away and not towards it unless he took Percy Place rather than Haddington Road (away from his place?) or continued all the way to the basin. No location before the basin is likely anyway, because of the locks.

    Dublin bay.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,238 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    If he took a left After the Bank machine , brings you parallel to Haddington Road and directly by the canal again onto Percy place
    20Wheel wrote: »
    Afaik it's locks all the way down.
    At Haddington Rd, point of last footage he was still several locks from any free river.

    On a mobile device so I'm a bit restricted here.

    If he hand turned left onto Percy Place from Haddington Rd, and fell into the canal then we would not be having this conversation.
    Because his body would have been found a long long time ago.

    So I think "turning left onto Percy Place and falling into canal" can be removed from the list of thinks that might have happened


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,466 ✭✭✭✭John_Rambo


    Dublin bay.

    To dispose a body in Dublin bay and keep it hidden would involve nasty logistics including invasive tempering with the corpse, heavy weights, tidal knowledge and probably a boat with night time navigational abilities and the personal to a
    operate the craft. Without such, the unfortunate deceased would have washed up on the East coast sooner or later.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,820 ✭✭✭smelly sock


    John_Rambo wrote: »
    To dispose a body in Dublin bay and keep it hidden would involve nasty logistics including invasive tempering with the corpse, heavy weights, tidal knowledge and probably a boat with night time navigational abilities and the personal to a
    operate the craft. Without such, the unfortunate deceased would have washed up on the East coast sooner or later.


    Suicide.

    Google Conor Whooley.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 554 ✭✭✭Fiftyfilthy


    If he hand turned left onto Percy Place from Haddington Rd, and fell into the canal then we would not be having this conversation.
    Because his body would have been found a long long time ago.

    So I think "turning left onto Percy Place and falling into canal" can be removed from the list of thinks that might have happened


    True, but could have carried on walking to the basin


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,238 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    John_Rambo wrote: »
    To dispose a body in Dublin bay and keep it hidden would involve nasty logistics including invasive tempering with the corpse, heavy weights, tidal knowledge and probably a boat with night time navigational abilities and the personal to a
    operate the craft. Without such, the unfortunate deceased would have washed up on the East coast sooner or later.

    And maybe the unfortunate individual did wash up on the East coast (I'm not suggesting that Trevor's body was dumped in the sea by the way)

    There is a case from a few years ago of an unidentified body being found on a Louth beach in 2006

    10 years later it was identified as being that of a Dublin man that went missing in 2006.

    Now I personally think that the publicity surrounding Trevor's disappearance would have reduced the likelihood of the body of a 20 something year old male turning up on an Irish coast and no one saying "maybe it's that guy missing from Dublin that has been all over the news this past few /days/weeks/months"

    But it is still possible, and very possible if it turned up on the coast of the UK.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,466 ✭✭✭✭John_Rambo


    Suicide.

    Google Conor Whooley.

    I know, shocking story, but most suicides in the bay end up on the East coast. I spend a lot of time in and on the water in Dublin bay. I've come across a few and my fellow water friends have come found more. It's the nature of the tides and it's how Irish Waters sewerage ends up on the beaches. There's the odd outlier like the tragic Conor Whooley case, but there's a huge amount of suicides and most are found on local beaches.

    Edit.. you just don't hear about the ones that are found locally. There's no story there.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 728 ✭✭✭20Wheel


    bunderoon wrote: »
    Any chance the place where he worked is a reason for his disappearance?
    A few wanted something and the office party was the perfect time to do it.

    We have the water accident and the gangster/prostitute possibilities.
    The face that he worked for a bank should not be ruled out of hand.

    Maybe he was just recognised by local criminals as yer man who works in the bank. While having a few in bucks.

    Marked as an opportunity for a mugging or other crime.
    Young Country lad, soft target, bank worker probably has a few quid. Few pints in him. They could have known his route. Seeing him regularly around their area.

    So one stands by the pillar on wilton terrace, a point td has to pass no matter the route. There won't be any cabs, and he has to go home.

    Another watches for him to leave. Calls the first guy. They've planned a point further along on his route to ambush him.

    MIB steps out from the pillar sees its yer man from the bank indeed. Goes to the gate expecting TD to follow, which he does. Sizes him up with some muggers questions. You got a smoke? etc.

    But its a bit busy on that corner for a mugging. Bank building, security.

    TD goes in, MIB hangs back. TD leaves. MIB follows. TD turns down Haddington the plan is in motion.

    The spotter has a car, he'll be in front of TD, MIB will be behind. They'll rip him off somewhere quiet along his route home. Then they'll hop in the car with tds wallet. And off away.

    It goes very wrong. Well known to gardai locally they don't have the luxury of simply legging it in the era of dna/forensics. But they do have a car

    Thats my guess anyway.

    Putin is a dictator. Putin should face justice at the Hague. All good Russians should work to depose Putin. Russias war in Ukraine is illegal and morally wrong.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,466 ✭✭✭✭John_Rambo


    20Wheel wrote: »
    Maybe he was just recognised by local criminals as yer man who works in the bank. While having a few in bucks.

    Marked as an opportunity for a mugging or other crime.
    Young Country lad, soft target, bank worker probably has a few quid. Few pints in him. They could have known his route. Seeing him regularly around their area.

    So one stands by the pillar on wilton terrace, a point td has to pass no matter the route. There won't be any cabs, and he has to go home.

    Another watches for him to leave. Calls the first guy. They've planned a point further along on his route to ambush him.

    MIB steps out from the pillar sees its yer man from the bank indeed. Goes to the gate expecting TD to follow, which he does. Sizes him up with some muggers questions. You got a smoke? etc.

    But its a bit busy on that corner for a mugging. Bank building, security.

    TD goes in, MIB hangs back. TD leaves. MIB follows. TD turns down Haddington the plan is in motion.

    The spotter has a car, he'll be in front of TD, MIB will be behind. They'll rip him off somewhere quiet along his route home. Then they'll hop in the car with tds wallet. And off away.

    It goes very wrong. Well known to gardai locally they don't have the luxury of simply legging it in the era of dna/forensics. But they do have a car

    Thats my guess anyway.

    They'd more money than any of the young bankers. They were rolling in cash, mugging wasn't and still isn't a thing for them.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,868 ✭✭✭Day Lewin


    20Wheel wrote: »
    Maybe he was just recognised by local criminals as yer man who works in the bank. While having a few in bucks.

    Marked as an opportunity for a mugging or other crime.
    Young Country lad, soft target, bank worker probably has a few quid. Few pints in him. They could have known his route. Seeing him regularly around their area.

    So one stands by the pillar on wilton terrace, a point td has to pass no matter the route. There won't be any cabs, and he has to go home.

    Another watches for him to leave. Calls the first guy. They've planned a point further along on his route to ambush him.

    MIB steps out from the pillar sees its yer man from the bank indeed. Goes to the gate expecting TD to follow, which he does. Sizes him up with some muggers questions. You got a smoke? etc.

    But its a bit busy on that corner for a mugging. Bank building, security.

    TD goes in, MIB hangs back. TD leaves. MIB follows. TD turns down Haddington the plan is in motion.

    The spotter has a car, he'll be in front of TD, MIB will be behind. They'll rip him off somewhere quiet along his route home. Then they'll hop in the car with tds wallet. And off away.

    It goes very wrong. Well known to gardai locally they don't have the luxury of simply legging it in the era of dna/forensics. But they do have a car

    Thats my guess anyway.

    This is clearly reasoned and in line with the known facts. May well be quite close to what really happened.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,466 ✭✭✭✭John_Rambo


    sugarman wrote: »
    I think he meant a few drinks in Buck Whaley's, not bucks as in cash.. but that's a very fair point, none of them are petty thieves. As a young lad in the year 2000, you'd probably only have £20 or £30 on you for a night out. Pittance.

    Oh right... fair enough. I still, like you, find it hard to believe there'd be such a complicated sting that includes cars and spotters to mug someone at the end of a night. Maybe a cash van or a jewellery shop, but not a young fella heading home.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 728 ✭✭✭20Wheel


    John_Rambo wrote: »
    They'd more money than any of the young bankers. They were rolling in cash, mugging wasn't and still isn't a thing for them.

    Why not. Criminals do mug people. Opportunist thief mindset. They think different.

    Putin is a dictator. Putin should face justice at the Hague. All good Russians should work to depose Putin. Russias war in Ukraine is illegal and morally wrong.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 728 ✭✭✭20Wheel


    John_Rambo wrote: »
    Oh right... fair enough. I still, like you, find it hard to believe there'd be such a complicated sting that includes cars and spotters to mug someone at the end of a night. Maybe a cash van or a jewellery shop, but not a young fella heading home.

    Hardly that sophisticated.

    That young country lad we see around has a few in him.

    I'll go ahead, you wait at the corner follow behind . I'll call you when he leaves.

    Putin is a dictator. Putin should face justice at the Hague. All good Russians should work to depose Putin. Russias war in Ukraine is illegal and morally wrong.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,676 ✭✭✭strandroad


    John_Rambo wrote: »
    Oh right... fair enough. I still, like you, find it hard to believe there'd be such a complicated sting that includes cars and spotters to mug someone at the end of a night. Maybe a cash van or a jewellery shop, but not a young fella heading home.

    There are and were ATMs in the area, you could threaten someone to withdraw cash, up to their daily limit anyway.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,238 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    John_Rambo wrote: »
    Oh right... fair enough. I still, like you, find it hard to believe there'd be such a complicated sting that includes cars and spotters to mug someone at the end of a night. Maybe a cash van or a jewellery shop, but not a young fella heading home.

    And to hang around in the cold and wet in full view of CCTV as part of the plan ?

    Hardly


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 10,466 ✭✭✭✭John_Rambo


    20Wheel wrote: »
    Why not. Criminals do mug people. Opportunist thief mindset. They think different.

    I knew a few absolute crazies in the area. As nuts as they were, I just don't see them putting much effort in to a mugging. They left that to opportunistic druggies, teenagers and desperates and fence them off for a decent profit. I was working in the area as a photographer and I was offered seriously expensive robbed gear.

    However, they'd really kick off if they felt they were "belittled" or if someone slighted them or got the better of them. They'd be more likely to exact revenge on someone that had an altercation with them and got the upper hand.

    Basically they were bullies, narcissistic bullies and if a young fella got the better of them on their turf, they'd come back with friends and all guns blazing to keep face.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 728 ✭✭✭20Wheel


    And to hang around in the cold and wet in full view of CCTV as part of the plan ?

    Hardly

    If they were on the gear, looking for cash for a hit. Lightning balls wouldn't stop a fiend.

    Putin is a dictator. Putin should face justice at the Hague. All good Russians should work to depose Putin. Russias war in Ukraine is illegal and morally wrong.



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    20Wheel wrote: »
    There won't be any cabs, and he has to go home.

    Jesus Christ the way that's said is so sinister and not something that's ever entered my mind before. This taxi strike was known ahead of time. If there was any premeditated angle, it makes sense to do something on that night in a sense. Now I'm not saying you're right but it's definitely another direction of thought.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,238 ✭✭✭✭Fr Tod Umptious


    20Wheel wrote: »
    If they were on the gear, looking for cash for a hit. Lightning balls wouldn't stop a fiend.

    But why wait 30 mins in the cold and wet for a single target when there are many many more around ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 728 ✭✭✭20Wheel


    Omackeral wrote: »
    Jesus Christ the way that's said is so sinister and not something that's ever entered my mind before. This taxi strike was known ahead of time. If there was any premeditated angle, it makes sense to do something on that night in a sense. Now I'm not saying you're right but it's definitely another direction of thought.

    Yeah. I'm not taking this theory as gospel. Just the shape that seems best fit the hole, from what vague details are out there.

    Putin is a dictator. Putin should face justice at the Hague. All good Russians should work to depose Putin. Russias war in Ukraine is illegal and morally wrong.



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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,171 ✭✭✭oneilla


    see that now thanks i think i read his work place is different now? are the gates still there? or even the bank

    The gates are still there as is the pillar. It wasn't a commercial bank open to the public but like, a block of offices. Fwiw the old ATM CCTV camera is still at Milanos restaurant on the corner of Haddington Rd/Baggot St.
    On the last thread (which descended into an absolute ****e-show) I remember a guy talking about passing up somewhere along a similar route to Trevor Deely and was followed then chased by a group which he thankfully got away from...

    He said he made contact and reported it to the guards before he got into the details he said the guard he was speaking to asked him was he followed by a gang. 

    Apparently the cops were well aware of several attempted muggings in the area by a group.  Didn’t a prostitute who fell foul for owing a drug gang in the vicinity get stabbed to death a year or two before this incident happened too that many thought were perhaps linked to this too?

    Indeed the last thread turned ridiculous however on your last point: That was Sinead Kelly who was murdered in 1998. Around the time of the renewed appeal and release of enhanced video footage in 2017, John Mooney had a piece in the Sunday Times about Trevor in which there was a random mention to Sinead's murder. I can't link to it as the ST is paywalled but at the time this reference seemed very random and out of place. Then the search at Chapelizod began a few months later and a lot of the papers published stories along the line that Trevor fell foul of a criminal at a chance encounter. And then there's this new witness whose "sex has not been disclosed" - to quote the piece linked in the OP.

    It wasn't just posters here speculating about links to crime figures and prostitutes in the area. Many column inches were filled with quotes from unnamed Garda sources openly portraying a certain narrative.

    Fwiw, Trevor's father is quoted
    here
    :
    "We are none the wiser," said Michael.

    "To say that it is done and dusted is nonsense and very insensitive. It is an impossible thing for his family to live with and we are still appealing for information. We are never going to give up hope and we need help with the appeal from any body with any information to talk to the gardai."


This discussion has been closed.
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