Couple arrested on suspicion of murder found living among rats in Limerick hovel

Hasan Ali Gori and Mary Ray, both 50s, were found living in squalor at wetlands located off Condell Road, surrounded by scurrying rats, rusting containers, and insect-infested bedding.
Couple arrested on suspicion of murder found living among rats in Limerick hovel

David Raleigh

A couple arrested on suspicion of murdering an 89-year-old woman are now living in squalid conditions in a rat-infested hovel on the outskirts of Limerick City — a year after the woman’s death shocked a quiet Tipperary town.

Hasan Ali Gori and Mary Ray, both 50s, were found living in squalor at wetlands located off Condell Road, surrounded by scurrying rats, rusting containers, and insect-infested bedding.

The couple strongly deny any role in the death of Ms Ray’s mother, Josephine “Josie” Ray, whose body was discovered in bed at her home in Nenagh on August 4th, 2024.

The elderly woman was found with facial bruising and appeared to have been strangled.

“I have nothing to do with this death, how is somebody accusing me of murder,” said Mr Ali Gori when approached for comment.

“This is hatred, I feel it’s racist. I didn’t do anything to anybody.”

Mary Ray was also adamant, saying: “No I hadn’t, no I hadn’t, no, no, I had not, no no.”

With rats darting near her feet, she added, “My mother loved me, she was mad about me, we lived together. It’s very hard for me, I miss her terrible, so much.”

Josephine 'Josie' Ray was found with facial bruising and appeared to have been strangled.

The couple were arrested by gardaí on the day of Josie Ray’s funeral and questioned on suspicion of murder but later released without charge. Eight months on from the great-grandmother’s death, Gardaí have said the “investigation is ongoing” and that “a file will be forwarded to the office of the Director of Public Prosecutions in due course”.

Mary, who found her mother’s lifeless body, said she initially thought Josie was asleep.

“I got an awful fright,” she recalled. “Her glasses were off in the bed… I said, ‘Mother, get up for your tea.’ But she wasn’t moving. I said, there’s something wrong with her. She must be dead.”

Josie Ray was ed at her funeral by her granddaughter Rosie as a “true lady” who loved style, laughter, and dancing.

Mary and Hasan said they are homeless and too afraid to return to Nenagh, citing alleged threats and an assault on Ali Gori shortly after their release from Garda custody. “We got attacked about my mother,” Mary said of a later incident at the wetlands camp. “They said, ‘You murdered your mother.’”

Mary Ray said she believes she was “in bed”, located upstairs in her mother’s home, when her mother, who slept downstairs, died.

“I was in bed and I don’t know who done it, that’s what I can’t make out. It’s terrible like. I gave her tea and biscuits that night, I was shocked, I still can’t believe it.”

When asked how he felt when he discovered Josie was dead, Mr Ali Gori replied: “Well, there’s nobody feels happy or joy, no, it’s only to be sorry for the people that person died for.”

He said he was also mourning his own mother, who he said died after suffering the shock of being told he had been arrested on suspicion of murdering Josie.

Mary and Hasan offered that, prior to Josie Ray’s death, Hasan ed an ambulance for the great grandmother following an incident. On another occasion, they said, they helped Josie up off the floor in her house after they heard a noise and found she had fallen off “a chair” and “broken her hip”.

Garda interactions with Josie at her home in the days before her death were referred to the Garda Síochána Ombudsman Commission (GSOC) including a Garda response at her house following a report of a disturbance less than 24-hours prior to her body been found.

Ms Ray was reportedly alive when gardaí called to her home on August 3rd, during which a number of persons were present at the home.

It’s reported that gardaí had also been called to Josie’s home on several occasions during the months prior to her death to deal with a number of different ­alleged complaints.

The rats are everywhere

Mary and Hasan’s current living conditions are dire. Surrounded by rodent burrows and rubbish, they boil soup, potatoes and rice on a campfire and rely on the occasional help of church volunteers.

“The rats are everywhere,” said Mary, who said she is on a “slow learner” disability allowance. Mr Ali Gori, defiant, added: “I’m not afraid of the rats… They only look for food.”

Pointing to a nearby tunnel, he shouted: “See here, it’s a big rat house, this is a new one, they start fighting for food or whatever, see, all around, it’s all rat houses here.”

Photo: Brendan Gleeson

Photo: Brendan Gleeson

Later on, pulling back their tent flap to reveal a metal bar, he explained: “It’s for protection because I don’t know the kind of people that come here.”

Despite the hardship, he insisted: “I have to enjoy life, who am I going to cry to?”

Their only hope, they said, lies in someone helping them find accommodation.

“We don’t have any hope of leaving here except the hope of getting a house,” Mr Ali Gori said.

It’s not safe to go back

Rolling up their sleeves, they reveal itching red lumps on their arms, which they believe are insect bites.

Much like their cooking pot, their toiletries and clothes hanging from tree branches lay unprotected from the rats and insects crawling around.

They are not the only ones living among the rats, and several tents have sprung up over the past few weeks and months.

Mary Ray and her Partner Hassan Ali Gori living in their Tent in Limerick City. Photo: Brendan Gleeson

Mr Ali Gori said he has advised Mary a number of times to go back to Nenagh but, he argued, “Mary will follow me anywhere I go, Mary will not leave me.”

At the point Ms Ray interjected: “I can’t (return) though, I can’t stay at my house, it’s not safe to go back.”

Surveying her bleak surroundings, Mary concluded: “Oh Jesus, the dirt of it, it’s hard…people will think we’re mad, living here.”

For now, they remain in the wetlands — haunted by Josie Ray’s death, surrounded by vermin, and still under the shadow of suspicion.

More in this section

Michael O'Sullivan File Photos Jockey Michael O’Sullivan (24) died of a severe traumatic brain injury, inquest hears
Ireland stock Four people arrested after couple in their 60s assaulted during burglary in Dublin
Winter weather Dec 6th 2024 Met Éireann issues yellow rain warnings for 19 counties

Sponsored Content

Digital advertising in focus at Irish Examiner’s Lunch & Learn event  Digital advertising in focus at Irish Examiner’s Lunch & Learn event 
Experience a burst of culture with Cork Midsummer Festival  Experience a burst of culture with Cork Midsummer Festival 
How to get involved in Bike Week 2025 How to get involved in Bike Week 2025
Us Cookie Policy and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited

Add Echolive.ie to your home screen - easy access to Cork news, views, sport and more