Tyson Fury is refused access to the US on a flight from Britain

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Tyson Fury ‘is refused access to the US’ as associates of mob boss Daniel Kinahan are barred from America

  • Heavyweight boxer Tyson Fury has reportedly been refused access to the US 
  • A Sunday World news journalist broke news of the alleged ban on Twitter
  • Other associates of mob boss Daniel Kinahan are also said to have been barred
  • Fury was photographed in Dubai in February with now US-sanctioned Kinahan

Tyson Fury has been refused access to the US over his alleged links to crime boss Daniel Kinahan, it emerged tonight.

The British boxer, 33, was in Liverpool tonight watching the Vacant IBF International Heavyweight Championship fight between Nathan Gorman and Thomas Salek at M&S Bank Arena.

It is not known on what day this is thought to have happened. MailOnline has contacted Fury’s representatives for comment.

Addressing claims that Irish boxing promoter Kinahan runs a global organised crime group, Fury previously said: ‘That’s none of my business and I don’t interfere with anybody else’s business.’

Tyson Fury has distanced himself from links with Daniel Kinahan - who is wanted by America

Tyson Fury has distanced himself from links with Daniel Kinahan – who is wanted by America

Boxing promoter Kalle Sauerland watches on with Tyson Fury during the Vacant IBF International Heavyweight Championship in Liverpool this evening

Boxing promoter Kalle Sauerland watches on with Tyson Fury during the Vacant IBF International Heavyweight Championship in Liverpool this evening

Tyson Fury arrives in Liverpool to watch Nathan Gorman during the Vacant IBF International Heavyweight Championship fight with Thomas Salek this evening

Tyson Fury arrives in Liverpool to watch Nathan Gorman during the Vacant IBF International Heavyweight Championship fight with Thomas Salek this evening

Fury (right) was photographed with mob boss Daniel Kinahan in Dubai in February

Fury (right) was photographed with mob boss Daniel Kinahan in Dubai in February

Fury, who was photographed in Dubai in February this year with the now US sanctioned Kinahan, said: ‘Because I had my picture taken with a man it doesn’t make me a criminal.

‘I’m just a boxer. There could be a criminal in this building.’

Kinahan has been named as a senior figure in organised crime in Dublin’s High Court, and in April this year the US Treasury imposed sanctions on him, his father Christy Kinahan and brother Christy Kinahan Jr as well as several associates of the Kinahan family.

The US Department of State also announced the offering of rewards of up to $5million for information leading to the arrest and/or conviction of the Kinahan family members.

Kinahan has advised Fury in the past, but Fury has not been accused of criminal activity. 

On April 12, the United States offered a $5million (£3.8million) reward for help arresting the leaders of Ireland’s Kinahan drug trafficking gang which it likened to some of the world’s most notorious crime networks.

From left to right: Daniel Kinahan, Christopher Kinahan Jr and Christopher Kinahan Sr have all been sanctioned by the US

From left to right: Daniel Kinahan, Christopher Kinahan Jr and Christopher Kinahan Sr have all been sanctioned by the US

Washington also imposed sanctions against gang leaders whom Irish police said had gone from dealing heroin and cocaine in Dublin in the 1990s to operating across Europe.

The US offered the reward for information that would lead to the ‘financial destruction’ of the Kinahan gang or the arrest and conviction of its leaders, Christy Kinahan Senior and his sons Daniel and Christopher Junior.     

A wide range of criminality by the gang, including more than a dozen murders, is estimated to have generated over £833 million (1 billion euros). 

Daniel Kinahan, one of the three leaders named by U.S. authorities, has been involved in organising high profile boxing fights in recent years. 

He was credited by world heavyweight champion Tyson Fury with helping broker a potential unification bout two years ago.

‘The Kinahan transnational criminal organisation joins the ranks of Italy’s Camorra, Mexico’s Los Zetas, Japan’s Yakuza and Russia’s ‘”Thieves In Law”,’ Gregory Gatjanis, an associate director at the U.S Treasury Department, told a news conference in Dublin.

The £3.8 million ($5 million) reward was also offered for information leading to the financial disruption of Daniel Kinahan, whom the Treasury said is believed to run day-to-day operations, his brother Christopher Junior and father Christopher Senior, the gang’s founder and leader. 

All three are in the United Arab Emirates, with whom Ireland does not have an extradition treaty. The U.S. Treasury said the group frequently uses Dubai as a hub for illicit activities.

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