Sanctioned Kinahan cartel lieutenant found playing padel in Dubai
Bellingcat, in a collaboration with The Sunday Times published June 27, reported locating a sanctioned lieutenant of the Kinahan cartel at a padel club in west Dubai.
At a glance
- Bellingcat and The Sunday Times reported that a sanctioned Kinahan cartel lieutenant was found playing padel at a club in Dubai.
- The article was published June 27 as a collaboration between the two outlets.
VERDICT — CONFIRMED
A sanctioned lieutenant of the Kinahan cartel has been living openly in Dubai, where he was located playing padel at a club in the west of the city, Bellingcat reported on 27 June in a collaboration with The Sunday Times.
The man identified in the investigation is Ian Thomas Dixon, a 36-year-old Irish national sanctioned by the US Treasury in 2022 alongside the cartel's leadership — Christy Kinahan, Daniel Kinahan and Christopher Kinahan Jr. According to the US authorities cited in the reporting, Dixon managed finances and moved bulk currency for Daniel Kinahan and kept tabs on debt owed by a narco-trafficker.
Per the investigation, Dixon appeared in the club's promotional materials in late 2023 as "the poster boy for padel", and competed in tournaments under the alias "Ian Thomas", dropping his surname. Bellingcat reported locating him through facial recognition searches on publicly available engines, then matching him to tournament livestreams and social media posts from Asia Pacific Padel Tour events in December 2024; he and his doubles partner placed second in the APPT Dubai 2024 male amateur final. The club hosts Friday-evening competitions with cash prizes and presents itself as part of modern wellness culture, with climate-controlled courts, per the piece. Dixon did not respond to Bellingcat's questions.
Background
The Kinahan organised crime group, built by the Dublin-born Kinahan family, grew from Irish drug distribution into what investigators on both sides of the Atlantic describe as a transnational trafficking and money-laundering network. In 2022 the US Treasury sanctioned the group and its principals, and American authorities offered rewards for information leading to the leadership's conviction — measures intended to freeze the network out of the dollar system and pressure the jurisdictions hosting it.
The family's base for the past decade has been Dubai, whose property market, banking access and historically thin extradition practice made it a favoured refuge for wealthy fugitives and sanctioned figures. The emirate has faced sustained pressure from European and American law enforcement to act against organised crime figures resident there, and open-source investigations documenting sanctioned individuals living publicly in the city have become a recurring instrument of that pressure.
The reporting bears directly on that question: a designated cartel finance manager competing in public, livestreamed tournaments under a thin alias illustrates how lightly, per the investigation, US sanctions weigh on daily life in Dubai.
Irish Garda Commissioner Justin Kelly said investigations into remaining cartel members are ongoing, per the reporting.
What comes next
Watch for any response from Emirati authorities, who have in past high-profile cases moved against named individuals after publication, and for whether US or Irish authorities act on the location of a sanctioned figure identified in open sources. The Garda commissioner's statement that investigations continue frames the Irish state's posture, though no specific enforcement step was reported.
Key facts on file
- Bellingcat and The Sunday Times reported that a sanctioned Kinahan cartel lieutenant was found playing padel at a club in Dubai.
- The article was published June 27 as a collaboration between the two outlets.
