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Martin "Marlo" Hyland


Martin "Marlo" Hyland (1 September 1969 – 12 December 2006) was a major Irish criminal and gang boss.

Martin Hyland was born to a working-class family from Saint Attracta Road in Cabra, Dublin. As a teenager he led a gang of young criminals from Cabra, involved in burglary, car theft and robbery. In 1986, eighteen-year-old Hyland was sent to prison for various offences including conspiracy to commit robbery, burglary, malicious damage and car theft.

After his release from serving a short prison sentence in the early 1990s, Hyland became involved in drug dealing. He moved into the big league of crime when he became associated with P.J. Judge, a major drugs trafficker and gang leader from Finglas.

P.J. Judge was shot dead outside the Royal Oak pub in Finglas in December 1996. Gardaí suspect he was killed by Provisional IRA because of his erratic and violent nature. Within a few years of Judge's death, Hyland had become the dominant figure in organised crime in North Dublin. He controlled a large gang of drug dealers and armed robbers from Cabra, Finglas and Ballymun. The gang were involved in the importation of large shipments of cannabis, cocaine, ecstasy and heroin as well as VAT fraud, car theft, armed robbery, extortion and the supply of firearms. Between 2002 and 2004 his gang was involved in a spate of robberies of security vans delivering money to ATM bank machines in Dublin. In a ten-month period alone, between October 2003 to July 2004, they got away with an estimated €3 million.

Hyland also had links with other major criminal gangs in Dublin and supplied guns to one of the factions involved in the Crumlin-Drimnagh feud. He also supplied guns to the notorious McCarthy-Dundon gang who are heavily involved in the Limerick feud.

All the criminal activity meant that Hyland and his associates were soaring to the top of the "most wanted" list. In September 2005, Gardaí decided to adapt a full on multi agency tactical approach to stop his gang. The plan, involving Gardaí and customs, was codenamed Operation Oak. The operation was a huge success and within the first few months it had led to the seizure of 30 kilos of heroin, 35 kilos of cocaine and 1,427 kilos of cannabis. A number of stolen vehicles, €200,000 in cash and weapons including AK47s were also recovered. Twenty six of Hyland's associates were also facing serious charges, which led to resentment and bad feeling within the gang. As Gardaí pressure increased Hyland became more isolated as gang members blamed him for all the attention. In November 2006 and again on 7 December, Hyland was warned by Gardaí, as is protocol, that his life was in danger.


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