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Murdered man’s friend recalls last phone call 19.01.12

by Linda McGrory

ONE of William McKeeney’s best friends has recalled their last phone call some nine hours before the Malin Head man was beaten to death on a Glasgow street.
Joe 'Henry' McLaughlin (71) said Mr McKeeney, a friend of 30 years, often rang him from Scotland to catch up on the news back at home.
"He rang me about 4 O'Clock on the Saturday to find out if there was anything going on at home. His phone was running low so he said he would call me back on Sunday evening. He liked to keep up with the news and phoned me often."
Mr McLaughlin, a retired haulage company boss from Malin, was told of his friend’s brutal killing on Sunday morning by one of his daughters.
"I've been in a kind of trance since I heard about Willie's murder. I can hardly believe it," he said.
Mr McKeeney (57) worked as a lorry driver for his friend for a number of years on and off.
The late Willie McKeeney, right, enjoys a joke with long-time pal, Joe Henry McLaughlin when their pair last met up, in Glasgow, in November.
"He drove all over the place for me. He drove fish from Greencastle to Dublin; he drove crab from Malin Head to France for me and he often took spuds to Dublin or Cork. Willie could turn his hand to anything. He was an all-round man and a real character,” added Mr McLaughlin. The father of Co Donegal sister folk act ‘The Henry Girls’, Mr McLaughlin fondly recalled Willie McKeeney’s love of singing and entertainment.
"He loved music and was great at recitations. He liked to do a recitation about a builder and barrel of bricks.”
The men last met up in November, when the retired haulier and his Scottish-born wife, Kathleen, attended a family wedding in Glasgow. The last photo of the friends together was taken by one of ‘The Henry Girls’ in a bar in Glasgow's Old Fruit Market. That night, Willie joined the popular sister group for an impromptu music session. Lead singer, Lorna McLaughlin, yesterday described Mr McKeeney as “so kind”. “He taught me a bit of welding one time when I had to make a musical instrument for a college project.”
Police in Glasgow are following several lines of inquiry into the Malin Head man's brutal killing in the early hours of last Sunday. Some 60 officers are working on the case and detectives want to interview two men described as Asian.
Willie McKeeney and his long-term partner Anne Marie (48), who witnessed the horrific killing, moved to her native Glasgow four years ago from Malin Head where she had worked as a cook at the Seaview Tavern.
Seaview Tavern owner, Michael Doherty, said: "Willie would call in to the pub quite a lot to collect Anne Marie from work. He was a grand lad. This is a shocking tragedy.”
The deceased man’s siblings, nieces and nephews are in regular touch with Strathclyde Police. Some relatives have already travelled to Scotland. It is not yet confirmed when the victim’s remains will be released to the family for burial. The funeral is to take place in Malin Head.
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