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The case was discussed in episode 4 of the 2015 investigative series Donal MacIntyre: Unsolved entitled: The Case of Annie McCarrick. McCarrick's disappearance is covered in MISSING: Beyond the Vanishing Triangle, a two-part true crime documentary first aired in May 2023 on RTÉ One. [16]
Donal MacIntyre is an Irish investigative journalist, specialising in investigations, undercover operations and television exposés. He has also worked as a presenter of both television news and documentaries on various UK channels. In 2007, MacIntyre directed A Very British Gangster, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival.
Donald Macintyre (Indian Army officer) (1831–1903), recipient of the Victoria Cross; Donald Macintyre (Royal Navy officer) (1904–1981), Royal Navy officer in World War II and author; Donal MacIntyre (born 1966), investigative journalist; Donald Macintyre (journalist), journalist and political commentator for The Independent
Donal MacIntyre – presenter on ITV's London Tonight; Robert MacNeil; Richard Madeley – reporter on Border Television's Lookaround and presenter on Yorkshire Television's Calendar during the 1970s, before moving onto Granada Reports in the early 1980s.
Donal MacIntyre: Unsolved is a British crime reality series in which investigative journalist and self-proclaimed criminologist Donal MacIntyre investigates a number of well noted "cold cases", for which the police have never been able to reach a conclusion.
In November 2006, the UK's Five television channel transmitted an observational documentary on Adair made by Donal MacIntyre. The focus of the film centred around Adair and another supposedly reformed character, a former neo-Nazi from Germany known as Nick Greger, and their trip to Uganda to build an orphanage.
Macintyre was born in Kincraig, Scotland in 1831, the second son of Donald Macintyre of Calcutta and his wife, Margaret Mackenzie.Of his sisters, one married the army surgeon William Brydon, one of the few European survivors of the 1842 retreat from Kabul, and another James Travers, who won the VC in the Indian Mutiny.
At Home with the Noonans is a four-part documentary presented, produced and directed by Donal MacIntyre. It shows the lives of members of a criminal gang run by Domenyk Noonan in Manchester, England. The first episode was broadcast on 22 April 2012 on Crime & Investigation Network in the UK. [1]