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Page/Link: Page URL: HTML link: The Free Library. Retrieved Dec 01 2018 from Byline: Derek Alexander and Russell Findlay A suspect linked to the Rea twins had pounds 99,960 of dirty money seized under proceeds of crime laws.
A tycoon cleared of major drugs and money laundering charges has been told by police that terrorist hitmen are plotting to kill him. Mario Rea, 33, was targeted by a gang linked to jailed tobacco smuggler Aidan Grew, 55, allegedly a key figure in the Real IRA. Former boxing promoter Rea - who lives in one of Scotland's most expensive streets - has been warned that his life is in danger. And sources say there are other threats closer to home after hoods from a notorious crime clan tried to attack him at his house last week. The Police Service of Northern Ireland tipped off Strathclyde Police, who issued a 'threat to life' warning - a so-called Osman Warning - to Rea on May 25.
A PSNI insider said: 'The gang believe Rea duped them over a tobacco deal. The threat was taken very seriously.' Another source in Northern Ireland said: 'A hitman from Crossmaglen in County Armagh was sent to look at his house in Bothwell.
They were either going to shoot him or throw a grenade in.' MI5 officers believe Grew is a senior member of the Real IRA, who carried out the 1998 Omagh bombing which killed 29 people. In the mid-80s, he got a 15-year sentence for a landmine attack on Ulster Defence Regiment soldiers in County Armagh. He is now serving three years for failing to pay a pounds 500,000 confiscation order following a tobacco smuggling conviction. Rea was forced to flee two hitmen from the Lyons crime clan last week.
He screeched away in a fourwheel drive to escape the attack after spotting the thugs. Last August, the Rea twins were blamed for battering crime clan member Eddie Lyons Jr at a party in Coatbridge. A source said: 'The likelihood is the hitmen were armed with knives, not guns, so Rea was lucky to escape.' The death threats emerged after Mario, his twin Carlo and their associates faced a major probe by the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency.
The twins, associate Barry Cushley, 33, and three other men were charged with drugs and money laundering offences in 2008. But in a blow to SCDEA, Crown Office prosecutors revealed they had dropped the case in March due to 'insufficient evidence'. Weeks earlier, we told how Rea was given a seven-year directorship ban for failing to explain where pounds 578,406 in the bank accounts of property firm DMR Assets came from. Rea also refused to say why pounds 776,509 was withdrawn from the firm, which he ran with Carlo. Today, we can reveal the scale of the twins' multi-millionpound property empire.
Rea lavished gifts on North Lanarkshire Council planning official Danny Welsh, 43, including football tickets, rounds of golf and use of his Spanish villa. WelshwassackedbyScotland's fourth-largest council in 2009 but SCDEA's corruption case against him and Rea was kicked out by the Crown Office. Carlo Rea SCDEA officers were stunned when they found internal council documents in Rea's home. They included paperwork relating to his proposed pounds 2.5million plan to build 41 houses in Main Street, Plains, Lanarkshire. Welsh was involved in Rea's planning application which the council approved but the site remains empty. Our probe has also uncovered the extent of the Reas' property-building aspirations - which have been foiled by SCDEA.
As well as the Plains development, Rea or his brother are linked to five plans approved by North Lanarkshire councillors. They included one by Carlo for 21 properties in Cleland and another from 'Mr Rea' for four homes in Caldercruix.
Three others were submitted to the council in the name of the now defunct Rea Property & Developments Ltd. They were for 14 flats in Coatbridge, 29 homes in Calderbank and 17 in Glenmavis.
A council insider said: 'When the SCDEA started quizzing senior planning officials, there was a realisation of how many Rea plans had been given the green light.' Rea Property & Developments Ltd were registered in Coatbridge but their sole shareholder was Dubai firm Magnum Overseas Ltd. Two Rea Property directors were Pakistani developers based in Lahore. When the Sunday Mail first exposed the Reas in 2007, we told how another of their Dubai-based firms had bought Dalziel Park Country Club, Motherwell, for pounds 2.5million. The brothers have now sold the club. A key Rea associate was pounds 300million fugitive VAT fraud suspect Imran Hussain, 34, who fled Glasgow for Dubai and is now in Lahore.
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A police source said: 'When the Reas bought Dalziel Park, Hussain was living the playboy life in Dubai before he was exiled to Lahore. 'The Dubai and Lahore connections on the Rea company paperwork were of great interest during the inquiry.' The twins and their pal Cushley were also cleared of a street attack on ex-boxer Craig Windsor Sr. Last year we revealed how Cushley and his brother Thomas, 26, were probed over 'ghosting' claims at a nursing home in Coatbridge. They allegedly cheated taxpayers of pounds 47,000 by claiming fees for a resident who died two years earlier. Strathclyde Police refused to comment but an insider said: 'Information that Rea's life was in danger was passed on by the PSNI and acted upon.' COPS CATCH A BAGMAN WITH pounds 100k Lanarkshire'.
Gormley was Mark Gormley, 25, was snared with two Louis Vuitton gift bags stuffed with cash in an SCDEA swoop. They had been tipped off that he was to take delivery of drugs or cash 'on behalf of an organised crime group active in and around north Lanarkshire'. Gormley was under surveillance when the handover with Andrew Sutcliffe, from Preston, Lancashire, took place in a car park in Motherwell. Officers later found the cash in the boot of his car in January 2008, which took four years to be formally confiscated at Hamilton Sheriff Court.
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A source said: 'Gormley is a daft boy who is in awe of the Reas and their money.' We can reveal Gormley was one of the six men arrested by the SCDEA in 2008 along with the Rea twins and Barry Cushley.
They were charged with drugs and money laundering offences but the Crown Office abandoned the case. Barry's brother Thomas is another Rea associate.
He has just bought Sannino restaurant in Glasgow, where he also has a bar. Last night, Gormley was unavailable and his mother refused to comment at the family home in Chapelhall, Lanarkshire. CAPTION(S): PALS Gormley, left, and Cushley TWIN Carlo Rea SUSPECT Aidan Grew MILLIONAIRES' ROW Mario Rea's home in Bothwell PLANS The Reas wanted 41 houses on one of their sites, in Lanarkshire, left, and country club they used to own, ARREST Barry Cushley, above, was held with the Reas WARNING Mario Rea, pictured at a boxing bout, has been told by police that his life is in danger.
Email Marc Bartra's smile is back, and it's as bright as ever ' I am aware you don't want to talk about the incident in Dortmund, so I know there's a question in there that we've obviously asked not be asked'. As the official started off by telling what exactly was off-limits, tiny little butterflies started fluttering around my stomach. I'd been looking forward to the interview with Bartra, not just because he is an A-grade footballer but also to try and understand the mind of someone who went through great trauma and it would have been fascinating to understand the psyche and inner workings of the man who overcame it all with a smile and a wave of his hand. I'd had the opening kept ready - the boom of the blast, the smash of the glass shattering, the thwack of the bone cracking.
But as Bartra's kind voice floated across from Seville, as he talked about the game he loves - the game we all love - with a lovely, almost child-like, passion, I realised what a mistake it had been to try and premeditate the interview. If in his silence about the blast he revealed that there were still some wounds taking its time to heal underneath the surface (none of us on the call asked him about the incident, not everyone in media is a soulless cretin, you know - we do respect the sensibilities and wishes of the people we write about), in his openness to talk about moving away from Germany he also helped shape the narrative away from the one that had been unofficially - and officially - swirling around his departure, nurtured by those in power at the Westfalenstadion.
'Marc Bartra is a wonderful person and a great footballer who immediately won our hearts,' said Dortmund chief executive Hans-Joachim Watzke in January while announcing the Catalonian's departure. 'Unfortunately, terrible things happened to him in Dortmund because of the cowardly attack. Against this background, we respect Marc's desire to return to his homeland and leave everything behind.' He had been asked to testify earlier that month as a witness in the bombing case, the pain, and suffering he had to endure clearly evident in the statement he made to the court - 'I feared for my life. I feared I would never see my family again,' it read. 'When I remember it, I don't feel good.'
Happiness By Mario Reading
All this had given us the image of a man running away from his nightmares, a man who wanted to leave his own private hell behind him. Hence my desire to start the interview with that incident. But as we talked, it became plainly evident that the decision was more a footballing one than anything else.