The garda investigation into the disappearance of Annie McCarrick 30 years ago has been upgraded to a murder inquiry.
She had also not turned up for work either on Saturday 27 or on the morning of Sunday 28. This is the last confirmed activity by Ms McCarrick. Ms McCarrick made arrangements with friends inviting them to her apartment for dinner the next day Saturday 27 March. She was not at home on Saturday 27 March when they called for dinner. On Thursday 25 March, Ms McCarrick was not working but called to Café Java to collect her wages. Her wages were not ready and she arranged to call again on Friday 26 to collect her wages.
Ms McCarrick, a 26-year-old American woman, was last seen at an AIB branch on Sandymount Road, Dublin 4 on March 26th, 1993.
The Garda investigation into Ms McCarrick's disappearance has remained active and open for over 30 years. By March 28th, friends of Ms McCarrick had become concerned for her welfare. A receipt gave the time of purchase as 11.02am — her last confirmed activity. Ms McCarrick is described as 5'8" in height, 10 stone, long brown hair. She is waiting 30 years for those answers. Ms McCarrick had moved permanently to Ireland from New York in January 1993.
Ms McCarrick (26), a young American woman who was living in Ireland at the time, went missing on March 26th, 1993. The last reported sighting of her was at ...
She appears to have left in a hurry as she did not put any of the shopping in the fridge. At 11.02am she went to her local Quinnsworth and bought food with a view to hosting a dinner party on the following evening with some of her friends. She was an only child who came to Ireland in the late 1980s and studied at St Patrick’s College, Maynooth. I, and the investigation team, are determined to gather all information to find answers and bring the matter to a conclusion. Detective Superintendent Carroll said Ms McCarrick’s father John died in 2009 without knowing what happened to his only child, but Ms McCarrick’s mother Nancy in New York “deserves to know what happened to her daughter on March 26th, 1993. Ms McCarrick (26), a young American woman who was living in Ireland at the time, went missing on March 26th, 1993.
Gardaí say the decision to upgrade the inquiry has been made 'based on the entirety of the information available to the investigation team at Irishtown ...
Gardaí established that groceries she had bought on the morning of Friday March 26, 1993, in Quinnsworth on Sandymount Road, had been left unpacked in shopping bags. Her visit was captured on the bank’s CCTV system. Speaking to RTÉ’s, Mr Harris said gardaí also want to particularly speak to “ any person who has information on the large brown handbag, which it's believed that it was in possession of Ms McCarrick when she went missing”. Let us make that decision. Gardaí say the decision to upgrade the inquiry was made "based on the entirety of the information available to the investigation team at Irishtown Garda Station". Senior officers also issued a specific appeal for anyone with information, especially in relation to a brown handbag that 26-year-old Annie McCarrick had at the time of her disappearance on March 26, 1993, to come forward.
Annie McCarrick, originally from the US, went missing from Dublin in March 1993.
Groceries purchased by Annie on the morning of Friday 26 March 1993, in Quinnsworth, Sandymount Road, had been left unpacked in shopping bags. She was not at home on Saturday 27 March when they called to have dinner after her invite. Annie McCarrick was born on 21 March 1967 and was 26 years old at the time of her disappearance. On Thursday 25 March 1993, though she was not working, Annie called to Café Java to collect her wages. On 28 March 1993, friends of Annie McCarrick were concerned for her welfare. Her wages were not ready and so she arranged to call again on Friday 26 March to collect her wages. Annie is described as 5’8″ in height, 10 stone, long brown hair. She settled in rental accommodation at St Catherine’s Court, Sandymount, Dublin 4, with two other tenants. She is waiting 30 years for those answers.” Let us make that decision,” he concluded. He continued: “There are person or persons, who have information on the disappearance of Annie McCarrick and her murder on or about 26 March 1993 and who haven’t yet spoken to Gardaí or who may have already spoken to Gardaí but were not in a position to tell everything that they know at that time.” “Annie’s mother Nancy deserves to know the truth, she deserves to know what happened to her daughter on or about the 26 March 1993.
Annie McCarrick went missing in Dublin in a disappearance that has baffled investigators for three decades.
"I want to speak with any person who has any information on the large brown handbag which it is believed that Annie was in possession of when she went missing. A receipt in the bags confirmed the date and time of purchase was March 26, 1993, at 11.02am. - Friday, March 26: Annie spoke to both her flatmates before they left separately to travel home for the weekend. Annie is described as 5'8" in height, 10 stone, long brown hair. A friend who turned up at her apartment that evening spoke to her flatmates. Annie also invited her friends to her apartment for dinner the next day. Annie McCarrick, 26, was last seen by her flatmates on March 26, 1993, before she went missing in a mystery that has baffled investigators for three decades. - Thursday, March 25: Annie was not working but called to Cafe Java to collect her wages. Annie's father John passed away without knowing what happened to his only child. [Sandymount](https://www.dublinlive.ie/all-about/sandymount) with two other tenants. She later went on to complete her college education at St Patrick’s College, Annie was excited planning for a visit by her mother Nancy on March 30.
The investigation into the disappearance of Us woman Annie McCarrick 30 years ago has been upgraded to a murder inquiry.
She then visited friends and stayed for dinner. A friend called to her apartment on the evening of the 28th and spoke with her flatmates. [Originally from Long Island in New York](https://www.newstalk.com/news/annie-mccarrick-case-to-be-upgraded-to-murder-investigation-1324388), she had been studying and working in Ireland for several years before her disappearance. She was not at home on Saturday 27th when they called for the dinner invite and she had not turned up for work either on Saturday 27th or on the morning of Sunday 28th. Let us make that decision.” On Thursday, March 25th, she was not working but called to her place of work to collect her wages.
Mysterious disappearance of young American in 1993 has been upgraded to a murder investigation.
A receipt in the bags confirmed the date and time of purchase as 11.02am that morning. Annie was not at home on Saturday, March 27 when they called for dinner, and she had not turned up for work that day, or the following morning. Her visit was captured on the bank’s CCTV system. Det Supt Carroll said there is a person, or persons, who have information on the disappearance of Annie McCarrick and her murder on or about March 26, 1993, and who have not yet spoken to gardaí or who may have already spoken to gardaí but were not in a position to tell everything they know at that time. She worked as a waitress at the Courtyard Restaurant in Donnybrook and as a waitress at Café Java on Leeson Street, and on March 17, 1993, she attended the St Patrick’s Day Parade with friends. They issued a specific appeal for anyone with information, especially in relation to a brown handbag Ms McCarrick had at the time of her disappearance on March 26, 1993, to come forward.
Annie McCarrick, from Long Island, New York, went missing in Ireland on 26 March 1993. Now, 30 years later, Irish police have said her disappearance is ...
Gardaí said she spoke with a soft Irish-American accent and when she disappeared it is believed she was in possession of a large brown leather bag. She appealed to anyone with any information about the disappearance of her only child to speak to the police. Asked if the family was holding out any hope that her daughter could still be alive, Mrs McCarrick said she did not think that was "remotely possible". Speaking to Irish broadcaster RTÉ, Annie McCarrick's mother Nancy said that she would "love to be able to find" her and bring her home to Long Island, New York. She said she hopes the police will now review all the evidence and information received to date. The mother of an American woman who disappeared in Ireland 30 years ago has said she hopes a new murder inquiry will "bring up something new".
Yesterday, on the 30th anniversary of her disappearance gardai have finally upgraded her case to a murder inquiry. For those of us who knew and loved Annie, ...
I do not believe Annie set foot in Johnnie Foxes the day she disappeared. The road from Enniskerry to Johnnie Foxes pub in Glencullen is not a short route. I was just a teenager at the time and when I first heard the news, I thought Annie had gone off travelling. But she had a soft nature. But Annie was from New York and seemed well able to take care of herself. She never went out with the staff on nights out. Myself and my colleagues were never interviewed as part of the investigation. The Annie I knew did not drink. Annie has never been given the dignity she deserves – and a place to rest, where friends and family can lay flowers. Somebody knows exactly what happened to Annie that fateful afternoon. For thirty long years there has been no trace of her. She was only 27.
The mother of missing Irish-American woman Annie McCarrick has appealed for any information that might help a newly-launched murder inquiry, adding that she ...
at an AIB bank on the Sandymount Road, close to where she lived. Let us make that decision." "If they have any, any, any, the smallest bit of information, if they would kindly let the gardaí know, it would be greatly, greatly appreciated." She also appealed to anyone with information to come forward and aid the murder inquiry, which was launched on Friday ahead of the 30th anniversary of Annie McCarrick's disappearance. She said her daughter "absolutely loved" living in Ireland but said it would be her "wish" to bring her home to the United States. The mother of missing Irish-American woman Annie McCarrick has appealed for any information that might help a newly-launched murder inquiry, adding that she would "love to be able to find her" and bring her home.