Interpol has joined the hunt for a Jordanian national who fled Ireland after an American mother was found suffocated in her home — but Irish authorities spent days shielding his identity from the public, and he may already be beyond reach in a country with no extradition treaty.
Jamey Carney, 43, a New York native who relocated to the scenic town of Killarney roughly five years ago, was discovered dead at her home on Muckross Road last Tuesday. She had suffered head injuries and suffocation, according to the Irish Times. By the time her body was found, the man Irish police call their "person of interest" had already traveled some 200 miles by bus to Dublin Airport and boarded a flight to Turkey. Irish media have identified him as Ahmad Al-Saqar, a 28-year-old Jordanian national who was in a romantic relationship with Carney.
Here is the part that should anger every citizen who expects government's first job to be protecting the public: Irish police refused to name Al-Saqar, describe him, or release his photograph for days — and may still be legally barred from doing so. A 2015 Irish immigration law protects the identities of asylum seekers, reportedly to shield them from those they claim to be fleeing. Gript.ie reported that law may explain the blackout. Irish broadcaster RTÉ said police claimed they were "not in a position" to comment on the man's age, name, or nationality "for legal reasons," but declined to specify what legal basis actually prevented disclosure.
"How is the public supposed to help with locating the alleged suspect when Irish authorities won't even release his name?" former FBI Special Agent Nicole Parker told Fox News Digital. "Time is of the essence. Every hour or day increases the chance the suspect disappears, destroys evidence or hurts others."
Dublin City Councilor Gavin Pepper put it more bluntly: "That man had a substantial head start. At the end of the day, it shouldn't matter what color your skin is. If you commit a heinous crime, your face should be all over every newspaper, every TV station. A manhunt is a manhunt."
Breitbart reported that Al-Saqar had previously been refused asylum in Ireland but was permitted to remain in the country while appealing the decision — a practice that keeps failed asylum seekers in circulation long after their claims have been rejected. He had reportedly been living with Carney in her Killarney home. The two are said to have met roughly 18 months ago at a pro-Palestinian protest in Ireland.
Newsweek noted that Al-Saqar has not been charged with any offense and has not been added to Europol's Most Wanted list. Irish police are coordinating with Interpol and Europol to obtain information on his whereabouts from Turkish officials. But Jordan, his home country, has no extradition treaty with Ireland — meaning even if he's located, getting him back may be impossible.
The Irish Times reported that police are said to be concerned the story may be "seized upon by the US far-right and political figures intent on stirring racial tensions in the Republic." That framing — worrying about narrative control while a killer walks free — tells you everything about where establishment priorities land.
Immigration has become a flashpoint in Ireland. Over one in five people in the country are now foreign-born, the product of mass migration imposed by Dublin elites. Protests and riots have become regular occurrences outside facilities planned to host more asylum seekers.
The State Department confirmed the death of an American citizen in Kerry, Ireland. The Mayor of Killarney, John O'Donoghue, said the killing was "like a dark cloud" over the town.
An American mother is dead. The suspect crossed borders with ease while the system designed to protect his identity gave him a head start. Interpol is now involved — but the real question is why it ever got this far.








