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A map of Ireland showing the locations where some of the women went missing from 1993 to 1998.. Ireland's Vanishing Triangle [1] [2] [3] is a term commonly used in the Irish media when referring to a number of high-profile disappearances of Irish women from the late 1980s to the late 1990s.
Kyran Durnin is an Irish child who was reported missing to Gardaí at the end of August 2024, with the last confirmed sighting of him being in June 2022 when he was 6-years-old. A murder investigation was launched in October 2024, after Irish authorities received information suggesting that Kyran had died at some point in the previous two years.
In July 2018, on the 20th anniversary of her disappearance, her father called for a dedicated missing-persons unit to be set up. [9] Her parents were satisfied that the Gardaí in Kildare were doing everything possible to locate their daughter, but that a dedicated unit would help investigations into missing persons cases.
During an interview with the Irish Examiner on the 10th anniversary of Jo Jo's disappearance in 2005, Dullard's sister Mary Phelan insisted she knew the identity of the man who had murdered her, that this individual was the Garda's main suspect and he was the same person who had picked her up from the phone box in Moone at around 11.45pm on the ...
On 8 December 2000, Trevor Deely, a 22-year-old Irish man, disappeared in Dublin.He had been walking home around 4 a.m. from his work Christmas party, having stopped at his office on the way to retrieve an umbrella and arrange certain things for his shift the next day.
Fiona Pender's disappearance was highly publicized in Ireland and often included in connection with disappearances collectively known as Ireland's Vanishing Triangle. [14] In 2014, a memorial and walking trail were created to commemorate Fiona Pender in Offaly. Fiona's Way is a 4.5 km walk along the canal in Tullamore. [15]
The Independent Commission for the Location of Victims' Remains (ICLVR) was established by treaty between the United Kingdom Government and the Government of Ireland, made on 27 April 1999 in connection with the affairs of Northern Ireland, in order to locate 16 missing Irish and British people presumed murdered during The Troubles.