Pubdate: 18 Aug, 1999 Source: Examiner, The (Ireland) Copyright: Examiner Publications Ltd, 1999 Contact: http://www.examiner.ie/ Author: Carl O’Brien DRUGS TRADE FUELS GANG KILLINGS Carl O’Brien Reports On The Rising Number Of Deaths Linked To A Bloody Battle To Control Drug Trafficking THE YOUNG girl and her family had been out for a Sunday evening walk when her dog ran into a dilapidated shed within earshot of the roar of Dublin airport. Like all curious young girls she followed the dog in, but the scene was one no young girl should ever have to face - a badly decomposed body that bore all the signs of a vicious gangland execution. It was another entry into the violent chapter of the bloody turf wars which have marked the control of the city’s drug trade. Noel Heffernan, 35, had been hooded, gagged, bound, and badly beaten before being shot. He had most likely fallen foul of a notorious drug baron for whom he had sold cannabis, said garda sources. The result was a frightening illustration that gangland killings haven’t gone away. So far this year, there have been nine gang related killings in the country. In the aftermath of investigative journalist Veronica Guerin’s murder more than three years ago, opposition TDs claimed in stormy Dail sessions the underworld drug figures were beyond reproach. A crackdown on crime was announced and new Criminal Assets Bureau powers meant many of the bigger players were forced abroad to Spain, Belgium, Holland and England. "When the Gilligan gang were off the scene, the small time players decided to go out on their own. People are still trying to break into the market in Dublin, Cork and Limerick in an attempt to set up their own operations," a Garda National Drugs Unit source said. Far from smashing the trade, it fractured it into the hands of numerous smaller players and a new wave of turf wars have erupted a bid to control the city’s lucrative drug business. The evidence has been seen on the streets with three gangland killings in the capital this year. On January 7, taxi driver John Dillon from Glenties Park, Finglas was shot dead in his home. Gardai said he was murdered by criminal associates because of his decision to co-operate in a trial related to a serious crime. Three weeks later, Paschal Boland of Ashcroft Court, Mulhuddart was gunned down as he stepped out of his car, just outside his front door. Known to gardai as a cannabis dealer, law enforcement sources said the shooting was a typical gangland execution. While the streets of Dublin have seen most of the drug feuds, in many ways it is the pounds 40m drugs corridor across the border between Newry and Dundalk where the real potential for violent killings are. The drugs route, controlled primarily by paramilitary gangs, is the most important in the country and saw the killing of two dealers in quick succession earlier this year. Last June, Newry cannabis dealer Paul "Bull" Downey was abducted by masked men from a Newry hotel car park, beaten and shot before his body was dumped on the main Newry to Newtownhamilton Road. The killing was believed to have been carried out by the IRA, as was the murder just five weeks earlier of notorious Newry dealer Brendan "Speedy" Fagan. Both had benefited greatly from the assassination of Dundalk drug dealer Paddy Farrell who had clocked up a pounds 40m fortune from the Newry Dundalk drugs route. Security sources are bracing themselves for the bloody battles that go hand in hand with shifts in dealers’ power bases. As long as dealers are shot, as long as the market momentarily opens up and as long as there are entrepreneurs willing to muscle in on it, the killings will continue. "The problem is that the border area is one that’s hard to police. The RUC don’t always come down to the southern extreme of the border and the gardai can only cover so much south of the border. People will keep getting bumped off until it settled down until the two gangs controlling the trade come to some sort of arrangement," a garda source said. - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder