Irish police under fire for refusing to identify reported asylum seeker sought in American mother's murder

An international search has entered its fifth day following the killing of an American woman in Ireland, as Irish police continue to withhold both the name and description of the man they are pursuing. The decision has prompted mounting criticism from observers, including a former FBI agent and an Irish political figure.

Jamey Carney, 43, originally from New York and a resident of Ireland since 2021, was discovered dead in her home in Killarney, County Kerry, late Monday after reportedly suffering head injuries and suffocation, according to The Irish Times. The scenic town in Ireland’s southwest is a major draw for American visitors.

By the time Carney’s body was found Tuesday, the man described by Irish police as a “person of interest” had already made the roughly 200-mile trip from Killarney to Dublin Airport and left the country on a flight to Turkey, police said — an account that has fueled questions about why authorities have not released his identity.

Several Irish media outlets have reported that the person of interest is an asylum seeker from Jordan who arrived in Ireland in 2024, during a period of heightened debate over immigration into the island nation.

Composite image of Jamey Carney and Irish police officers patrolling Dublin.

American citizen Jamey Carney, left, and members of Ireland’s national police force, An Garda Síochána, patrol Grafton Street in Dublin in a file photo. Irish police have faced criticism for not publicly identifying the person of interest in Carney’s murder. (Jamey Carney/Facebook; Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

“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 said in an interview with INC News. “Time is of the essence. Every hour or day increases the chance the suspect disappears, destroys evidence or hurts others. Public help is critical. Withholding a photo, name or description for days while the suspect is on the run is counterproductive.”

Parker added that, in her view, U.S. authorities would generally move quickly to share identifying details if a foreign national were killed in the United States under comparable circumstances.

“Law enforcement — local, state and federal, including the FBI and U.S. Marshals — would aggressively release identifying information to the public,” she said. “The public’s help is often what leads to locating fugitives.”

Irish broadcaster RTÉ reported police said they were not in a position to comment on the person’s age, name or nationality for legal reasons, though authorities did not specify any such legal basis.

A 2015 immigration law protecting the identities of asylum seekers may explain why Irish police have not identified the person of interest, Gript.ie reported. According to the outlet, the law generally prohibits publishing the identities of asylum seekers to protect them from those they claim to be fleeing.

INC News asked Irish police to identify the person of interest and explain the legal basis for withholding his identity, but they declined to provide any new information, saying only that there were “no additional updates at this time.”

Independent Dublin City Councilor Gavin Pepper, a critic of mass immigration into Ireland, slammed the decision not to publicly identify the person of interest. He said the failure to do so is a serious public safety concern.

“That man had a substantial head start,” Pepper told INC News. “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.”

Irish police are treating Carney’s death as a murder.

Pepper said that had authorities publicly released the person’s identity sooner, law enforcement in the country where he landed could potentially have been waiting for him.

Not everyone agreed with emphasizing the man’s reported immigration status.

Ruth Coppinger, a member of the Irish parliament with the Trotskyist political party People Before Profit, criticized media reports identifying the man as an asylum seeker, accusing some outlets of “stoking the flames of racism,” according to Gript.ie. She argued in the Irish parliament that “the common denominator in violence against women is a man, not a nationality.”

Several news outlets – including the New York Post, The Irish Mirror, Irish Independent and Irish Examiner — identified the 28-year-old person of interest by name. Irish police and the Department of Justice declined to confirm his identity to INC News.

Carney’s body was discovered by her 13-year-old daughter in an upstairs bedroom of their home just before 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, The Irish Times reported.

Irish police issued alerts to airports, ports, train stations and bus stations within just over an hour of Carney’s body being discovered, the Irish Independent reported. However, the person of interest had already left Ireland.

The search is becoming increasingly difficult as the hours and days pass.

Irish police are now working with Interpol, Europol and Turkish authorities to try to locate the man after he flew to Istanbul. Detectives fear he may already have left Turkey with local assistance and traveled onward to Syria or his native Jordan, according to reports.

Side-by-side Facebook photos of Jamey Carney.

Side-by-side Facebook photos of American citizen Jamey Carney, who was found dead at her home in Killarney, County Kerry. Irish police have launched a murder investigation into her death. (Facebook)

An Irish police source also told INC News they believe locating the man will be difficult because he had already fled the country. Investigators believe he first arrived in the United Kingdom before traveling to Ireland, according to reports.

The killing comes as Ireland grapples with a rise in violence against women. Gript.ie reported that eight women have died in violent circumstances in the country this year, matching the total for all of 2025. According to the outlet’s analysis, only one of the identified or sought suspects in those cases was an Irish national.

Ireland does not record the ethnicity of those who commit crimes.

Carney was originally from Westchester County, just north of New York City. She moved to Ireland in 2021, according to the Irish Independent.

Her social media profiles described her as a “New Yorker in Ireland” and featured photos and videos of her with her daughter and a man she identified as her partner. In one recent post, she referred to them as a “mixed couple.”

Carney’s social media accounts also showed she supported the Free Palestine movement. Her Facebook bio described her as a “New Yorker in Ireland,” included the phrase “Free Palestine,” and read “Fk Ice,” an apparent reference to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). Several posts also showed the couple attending pro-Palestinian rallies together.

View of Inch Beach in County Kerry, Ireland.

The Inch Beach in County Kerry, Ireland, is a popular tourist destination on Ireland’s southwest coast, just a short drive from Killarney. (Michael Dorgan)

Posts on the social media accounts of the man named in media reports referred to Carney as “my love” and “my heart.”

His accounts also contain posts from the United Kingdom and Turkey in recent years.

Carney’s LinkedIn profile indicated she worked for a healthcare outsourcing company in Ireland after previously working as an insurance agent and real estate salesperson in the New York metropolitan area.

Split image of Jamey Carney and the town center of Killarney, Ireland.

American citizen Jamey Carney, left, was found dead at her home in Killarney, County Kerry. Irish police have launched a murder investigation into her death. (Jamey Carney/Facebook | iStock)

Carney’s sister, Devon Bennett, described her as “an insanely caring human being” who “dedicated so much of herself, her energy and her time to fighting for the rights of others,” according to the Irish Independent. Bennett said Carney was especially proud of her “brilliant daughter, Michaela.”

“We grew up in New York, but she spent much of her best years with Michaela in Bergen County, New Jersey,” Bennett told the outlet.

“Their true home, where they both felt they truly belonged, was the beautiful town of Killarney.”

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