Search

16 Feb 2026

Two jailed for disposal of dismembered Louth teen's remains

Part of the background to the murder was an ongoing feud between criminal organisations in Drogheda

Two jailed for disposal of dismembered Louth teen's remains

Keane Mulready-Woods

Two criminals who showed "abhorrent inhumanity and disrespect" by helping dispose of the dismembered remains of murdered teenager Keane Mulready Woods have each been sentenced to six years in prison by the Special Criminal Court.
One of the offenders - Stephen Carberry - had his sentence reduced as, because he was on bail when he moved the body parts, his prison terms must run consecutively and Ms Justice Karen O'Connor said she is required to consider the total impact of the combined sentences.
In July 2023, Carberry was jailed for eight years after he was found guilty of being a "trusted cog" in a €1.5 million cocaine and ecstasy operation.
Ms Justice O'Connor, presiding at the three-judge court, today (MON) said it would be difficult to envisage a more egregious way to interfere in the investigation of a murder than that committed by Carberry (48) and Glen Bride (32).
At a previous hearing, Det Sgt Enda O'Sullivan told prosecutor John Byrne SC that gardai are satisfied that Keane was murdered by Robbie Lawlor, a notorious criminal linked to several violent deaths and who himself was shot dead in Belfast in April 2020.

The court heard that neither Carberry nor Bride had any involvement in or knowledge of the murder when it happened. However, both were involved in the transportation and disposal of Keane Mulready Woods's remains afterwards, intending to impede Lawlor's apprehension or prosecution.

Part of the background to the murder was an ongoing feud between criminal organisations in Drogheda, Louth and the 2019 murder of Richie Carberry, who was married to Robbie Lawlor's sister. Richie Carberry's brother, Stephen Carberry, drove a Volvo V40 from Drogheda to Dublin with Keane's remains in two bags in the boot. He left one of the bags at Moatview Gardens before parking the car in the Donnycarney area of north Dublin.

On January 14, Carberry brought Bride to Donnycarney and showed him where the car was parked. Shortly after midnight that night, Carberry and Bride took a taxi to Donnycarney and Bride got into the Volvo and drove to a secluded area at Trinity Terrace, off the Clonliffe Road, where he set the car on fire.

Delivering sentence today, Ms Justice O'Connor said the inhumanity and disrespect were abhorrent, and the grief caused to the victim's family is immeasurable and permanent.

She said: "To lose a child is every parent’s nightmare but what this family has suffered is beyond words." She said the child's parents had honoured their son with the dignity they have shown.

In relation to Carberry, she said his offending was at the very top end and she set a headline of ten years, the maximum penalty for the offence. However, the judge reduced that to seven years and six months after considering his guilty plea.

She further reduced the sentence to six years after taking into account the fact that Carberry was on bail when he committed this offence and she is therefore required to impose a consecutive sentence. The court has heard that Carberry, who has 77 previous convictions, was due for release in 2028 having been sentenced in 2023 for the offence under s.15a of the Misuse of Drugs Act.

The judge said she is required to impose a period of imprisonment consecutive to the one he is already serving, so she further reduced the term to take into account the principle that requires a judge to consider the total impact of sentencing.

Bride, who has 86 previous convictions, is also currently serving a sentence with a release date in 2027. Ms Justice O'Connor said he has more serious previous offending, including for violent offences, but played a lesser role than Carberry in the disposal of the body parts. She set a headline sentence of nine years for Bride, but having considered his guilty plea and expressions of remorse, she reduced that to six years, beginning from today's date.

Bride, formerly of Mount Olive Park, Kilbarrick, Dublin 5 previously pleaded guilty to assisting in the movement and disposal of the murdered teenager's body parts which had been stowed in the boot of a stolen Volvo V40 and left in a residential area in north Dublin.

Carberry of Sandymount Avenue, Dublin 4 previously pleaded guilty to charge that on a date between 13 January 2020 and 15 January 2020, both dates inclusive, within the State, knowing or believing another person to be guilty of the murder of Keane Mulready-Woods or some other arrestable offence, did without reasonable excuse, an act with intent to impede the apprehension or prosecution of that other person.

Keane Mulready-Woods was last seen alive in Drogheda on January 12, 2020. The following day, some of the teenager's body parts were found in a sports bag in the Moatview area of Coolock in Dublin. On January 15, further remains were found in a burning car that Bride had moved to a laneway in Drumcondra. Members of Dublin Fire Brigade discovered the remains in a sports bag in the boot.

The teen's torso was discovered 14 months later, on March 11, 2020, hidden in an overgrown ravine during a search of waste-ground at Rathmullan Park in Drogheda, near where the teenager was murdered.

At a previous hearing, Det Sgt O'Sullivan told prosecutor John Byrne SC that when Keane Mulready-Woods' mother, Elizabeth Mulready, reported her son missing at Drogheda Garda Station on January 13, 2020, gardai had just received a tip-off that the youngster had been murdered.

At 10pm that night, two walkers discovered the black Puma sports bag which Carberry had left at Moatview Gardens in north Dublin. Inside were human arms and legs, later identified through DNA analysis to belong to Keane.

Through analysis of CCTV and mobile phones, gardai established that Paul Crosby (30) and Gerard Cruise (55) brought Keane to Ged McKenna's home in Rathmullan Park, Drogheda after 6pm on January 12, 2020.

The last sighting of Keane was on CCTV showing him speaking with others, including Paul Crosby, outside McKenna's home at 6.48pm. Lawlor murdered him a short time later inside the house before his body was dismembered and placed into bags.

Det Sgt O'Sullivan said Glen Bride was not involved in the murder, nor was he aware that it was taking place. However, he did drive with another man and Robbie Lawlor from Drogheda to Dublin in the immediate aftermath of the murder.

A plan had been put in place to remove Keane's remains from the house in Rathmullan Park using a van but the vehicle failed to start. Instead they used the stolen Volvo V40 which was linked to Bride by CCTV from two garages in Dublin where he had fueled up on dates in December 2019 but drove off without paying.

Det Sgt O'Sullivan said Bride has 86 previous convictions including for causing serious harm, attempted robbery, carrying a firearm, criminal damage, drug possession and theft.

In February 2023, the Special Criminal Court jailed Drogheda criminal Paul Crosby (30), last of Rathmullan Park, for ten years for facilitating the "disgraceful and inhuman" murder of the teenager. The DPP accepted that Crosby did not know Keane was to be murdered when he delivered him to Robbie Lawlor.

Crosby's co-accused Gerard Cruise was considered by the court to be at a lower level and received a sentence of seven-and-a-half years with the final six months suspended for two years.

Cruise (51) with addresses in Drogheda and Lower Sherrard St, Dublin 1, had pleaded guilty to a charge that, with knowledge of the existence of a criminal organisation, he facilitated the murder of Keane Mulready-Woods at Rathmullan Park, Drogheda, Co Louth, between the dates of January 11 and 13, 2020, contrary to Section 72 of the Criminal Justice Act 2006.

Ged McKenna was sentenced to four years in prison for the offence of assisting an offender by cleaning up the crime scene following the murder at his home in Rathmullan Park.

In a victim impact statement written by Keane's mother Elizabeth and read at both Carberry's and Bride's sentencing hearings, she said nothing could ever prepare a parent for losing a child, but the way her son had been taken and what was done to him after his death had left a level of trauma that she will carry for the rest of her life.

Ms Mulready said instead of being allowed dignity in death, her son’s body was “cut up, scattered, and treated as if he was nothing”.

She added: “As if he was not someone’s son. As if he did not matter. The cruelty and inhumanity of disposing of my child’s body in pieces is something no parent should ever have to face.” She said knowing that parts of her son were left in different places around the country was a “constant and unbearable torment”.

She said not a day goes by that she isn’t “haunted” by images and thoughts of what was done to Keane.

“I relive it when I wake up, and it follows me when I try to sleep,” she said. “This is not grief that fades with time. It is trauma that lives inside me.”

She said her family has been “destroyed” by what happened and Keane’s siblings lost their brother “in the most brutal way imaginable”.

What hurts even more was that after her son was killed, “choices were made”, to further “disrespect him and to further harm us”, Ms Mulready added.
Read Next: Tax break for Dundalk to be operational by June

She said Keane deserved “dignity” and “respect” and deserved to be treated like “a human being, not as something to be discarded”.

“I speak today for my son because he no longer has a voice,” Ms Mulready said, asking the court to consider the “lifelong impact” this has had on her and her family and the “unimaginable cruelty” of what was done when deciding on a sentence.

In his Victim Impact Statement, which was also read to the court, Keane’s father, Barry Woods, questioned why “fully grown men with families of their own” would “take a 17-year-old boy” and dump his body parts as they did.

“We had to have his funeral with only half his body parts in his coffin. Horrible,” he said.

Mr Woods said he was still “haunted” by this “savage murder” and still has nightmares about what happened.

To continue reading this article,
please subscribe and support local journalism!


Subscribing will allow you access to all of our premium content and archived articles.

Subscribe

To continue reading this article for FREE,
please kindly register and/or log in.


Registration is absolutely 100% FREE and will help us personalise your experience on our sites. You can also sign up to our carefully curated newsletter(s) to keep up to date with your latest local news!

Register / Login

Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.

Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.