Shooting of Eddie Hutch Snr
The shooting of Eddie Hutch Snr occurred on 8 February 2016.[1] Eddie was the brother of Gerry Hutch,[1] the leader of the Hutch gang, which was in a feud with the Kinahan gang, led by Christy Kinahan. The feud of the two criminal gangs, called the 2015–16 Irish gangland feud, in the Republic of Ireland resulted in the deaths of ten people.[2]
Before shooting
Eddie was a brother of Gerry Hutch and was considered a non-violent criminal, having convictions for small-time fraud and shoplifting.[1] Eddie took legal action when courts decided that he did not qualify for compensation from Dublin Corporation when his local authority home burned down while he was in prison for breaching a barring order.[3] Eventually he was awarded the full IR₤20,000 amount.[3]
However, he had been suspected of helping his brother launder proceeds from crime and had was one of a large number of his brothers' associates targeted by Operation Alpha, the first major operation of the Criminal Assets Bureau (CAB).[1][3] A bank account in his name containing €160,000 was seized by the CAB.[3]
He had also worked as a taxi driver.[1] He was an uncle of Gary Hutch who was shot dead in September 2015.[3]
Shooting
Men broke into his house on Poplar Row, North Strand, Dublin at about 7.45pm on 8 February, and Eddie Hutch was shot nine times.[1] His partner was at home at the time, but was not injured.[1]
The motive for his killing is thought by Gardaí to be revenge for the shooting of David Byrne.[4][5]
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Eddie Hutch senior has been shot dead in Dublin's north inner city". Irish Independent.
- ↑ Lally, Conor (18 August 2016). "Timeline: The 10 men killed in the Kinahan-Hutch feud". The Irish Times. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Lally, Conor (9 Feb 2016). "Who are the Hutches? A profile of the Dublin family". The Irish Times.
- ↑ O'Keefe, Cormac (12 Feb 2016). "Progress in gang killings, but no arrests imminent". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 25 Mar 2016.
- ↑ O'Leary, Jennifer (15 Mar 2016). "Christy Kinahan: Inside the Dublin kingpin's European drugs enterprise". BBC Northern Ireland. Retrieved 25 Mar 2016.