THE JANITORS WHO KNEW TOO MUCH. 🧹💻 10 MINUTES AGO: A bombshell link has shattered the “random attack” theory. Scarlett and Jason Faulkner weren’t just victims—they were insiders at the same Dublin tech giant.

Investigators are now pivoting from a street brawl to a corporate execution. Why were two siblings, working as janitors in the heart of Dublin’s tech hub, suddenly targeted? 🚩 Rumors are exploding that they stumbled upon something they weren’t meant to see in the server rooms—and now, both are dead. The “underground organization” whispers in Ireland are no longer just shadows; they are the lead suspect.

They weren’t just cleaning floors; they were collecting secrets. And the price of those secrets was their lives.

THE CORPORATE BLOODSHED HAS BEGUN. 🔥

See which Dublin tech firm is under emergency lockdown and the secret files they tried to hide here: 👇

In what is rapidly becoming the most convoluted criminal investigation in modern Irish history, a stunning new link has emerged that shifts the motive for the Faulkner tragedies from a roadside assault to high-level corporate espionage.

Just ten minutes ago, sources close to the National Bureau of Criminal Investigation revealed that both Scarlett Faulkner and her late brother, Jason, were formerly employed as janitorial staff at a high-profile, Dublin-based technology firm. This revelation has turned the “random attack” narrative on its head, as investigators now scrutinize the company’s internal operations and its potential ties to an underground organization operating within the state.

The “Invisible” Witnesses In the world of high-tech security, the janitor is often the most invisible person in the room. They have keys to the most sensitive offices, access to shredded documents, and presence in server rooms during the dead of night.

Sources indicate that during their time at the Dublin firm—the name of which is currently being withheld for legal reasons—the Faulkner siblings may have inadvertently crossed paths with a “shadow operation” embedded within the company’s infrastructure. “They weren’t just empty-nesters or random workers,” says a Dublin security consultant. “They were a duo who had eyes on the literal floor of a multi-billion euro operation. If they saw something they shouldn’t have, they became the ultimate liability.”

From Birdhill to the Boardroom The attack on Scarlett Faulkner on March 21 near Birdhill, Tipperary, was initially painted as a visceral, localized incident involving two women. However, the “Mystery Loop” of events—Scarlett’s death, followed by Jason’s suspicious recovery from the Abbey River 48 hours after her funeral—suggests a professional “cleaning” of a different sort.

Information leaked from the investigation suggests that Jason Faulkner was attempting to leverage information he and his sister had gathered during their employment to seek protection or justice. The 10-second audio clip released earlier, where Jason warns “they are watching,” now takes on a terrifyingly corporate tone. “They” may not be street thugs, but men in suits with the resources to make a man disappear into a river after he’s finished burying his sister.

The Scrutiny of the “Dublin Tech Giant” The tech firm in question is reportedly under “intense scrutiny” by authorities. Forensic accountants and cyber-crime units have joined the Gardaí in what is described as an unprecedented cross-agency probe.

Speculation on platforms like X and Reddit is rife, with many suggesting the firm is a front for an underground organization that handles “gray-market” data and political leverage. “This is New York Post-level drama meeting a John le Carré novel,” says one social media commentator. “Two siblings from Limerick find a glitch in the matrix of a Dublin tech firm, and within a month, they are both silenced. This wasn’t a fight over a parking spot. This was a hit.”

The Silent Underground The term “underground organization” in Ireland usually conjures images of paramilitary groups, but investigators are leaning toward a more modern, sophisticated entity—one that operates in the digital and physical shadows of the Irish economy.

With Jason’s death, the organization likely believed the threat was neutralized. However, the emergence of their shared employment history has provided a “smoking gun” for the prosecution. The mother and daughter currently in custody for the initial assault are now being looked at as “low-level assets”—distractions designed to keep the public eye on a street-level crime while the larger machinery of the organization retreated.

A Nation Demanding Answers As the court hearing approaches, the pressure on the Irish government to break the “anonymity shield” has reached a breaking point. If the suspects are tied to this powerful organization, the anonymity isn’t just protecting a minor; it’s protecting a conspiracy.

The Faulkner name has become a rallying cry for those who fear that Ireland’s “Tech Hub” status has provided a playground for organizations that think they are above the law. The janitors who knew too much have left a trail of breadcrumbs that leads directly to the heart of Dublin’s Silicon Docks. The only question remains: will the investigators follow it, or will the river be the final word?