Wednesday, March, 11 2026 - Two violent convicted drug dealers have been jailed for three years over the m8rder of a 34-year-old Nigerian man, Quaham Babatunde, in Ireland.
Bruno Tache and Rory Carr attacked Babatunde after he had
been fatally st@bbed in Dublin city centre.
Babatunde d!ed after he was attacked following a St
Valentine's night out on South Anne Street in February 2025.
Tache, aged 21, with an address at Trimleston, Balbriggan in
Co Dublin, and 22-year-old Carr from Ard Na Gréine, Seapoint Lane in
Balbriggan, had pleaded guilty to affray and assault charges.
The violence began in the early hours of 15 February 2025
after an event at Club 22 on South Anne Street, which 400 people had bought
tickets for and the men had attended.
Tache drank large measures of spirits in the club but was
thrown out at around 2am because he was drunk.
When his friends came out an hour later, he and Rory Carr got
involved in a series of fights on South Anne Street, Duke Lane and Dawson
Street.
Bruno Tache attacked a man while Carr punched another man
twice as nearby Mr Babatunde was attacked and fatally st@bbed.
Another man is currently before the courts in Northern
Ireland charged with his m8rder.
Carr punched and kicked a person while they were on the
ground while Tache also attacked another man who then lost consciousness.
None of the two men were involved in the fatal st@bbing but
after Mr Babatunde was st@bbed, Carr punched him eight times, although not all
of the blows connected.
Carr had acted as a peacemaker earlier before becoming
involved in the violence.
Tache kicked Mr Babatunde in the head.
Detective Superintendent Katherina Joyce told the court at
the sentence hearing that gardaí identified suspects from the Balbriggan area
and commenced arrests two days later.
When gardaí told Carr after he was arrested and interviewed
that someone had died, he replied: “I had nothing to do with this m8rder, I
didn't know anyone was stabbed, I didn’t see a knife, I heard it on the news
the next morning and God rest his soul.”
Tache exercised his right to silence during questioning, but
when gardaí asked him about his clothes he replied: "I’ll be honest with
you the clothes are gone, everything is gone after the lads were
arrested."
Carr has 34 previous convictions and Tache has 20.
Both men were on bail on other charges at the time of the
attack and both were serving suspended sentences for other offences.
Six victim impact statements were handed in to the judge last
month but only one was read in court where the victim sustained an eye injury
and said they had been left blind for some months.
The victim said he "has never been at peace since the
day it happened" and that “the man who died was my best friend and it
could have been me."
Judge Orla Crowe said today that both Carr and Tache had
significant previous convictions and were on bail at the time and the
seriousness of the crimes have to be marked with a custodial sentence.
She also said that while the events of that night did not
take a lot of time, happening in a matter of seconds, they involved a huge
amount of violence and lawlessness.
Both had expressed remorse and written letters of apology and
Tache was now an enhanced prisoner.
She sentenced both men to three years and six months in
prison with the final six months suspended in light of their relatively young
ages and to encourage rehabilitation.

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