“WE DON’T WANT TROUBLE, JUST PEACE FOR HER”: THE HEARTBREAKING FINAL WISH OF SCARLETT FAULKNER’S FAMILY! 🕊️🕯️

The tension is at a breaking point, but one family is begging for silence. As Ireland prepares to say goodbye to the “lovely” mum whose life was stolen in the Birdhill ambush, her heartbroken relatives have issued a desperate plea: “No trouble. Just peace.” They don’t want riots, they don’t want revenge—they just want to carry their “angel” to her rest without more blood being spilled.

But can a grieving nation stay calm? With the “Man with the Limp” caught in a funeral sting and the 16-year-old’s chilling confession still echoing, the atmosphere is electric. Will this be a dignified farewell, or will the simmering rage boil over? The family’s emotional appeal is the only thing standing between peace and a city on the edge.

READ THE FULL EMOTIONAL STATEMENT AND SEE WHY THE GARDAÍ ARE ON HIGH ALERT FOR TODAY’S SERVICE! 👇🔥

It is the most difficult request a grieving family can make. In the shadow of a brutal roadside killing that has incited national fury, the family of Scarlett Faulkner has issued a stark, emotional plea to the public and the community: “We don’t want any trouble… just peace for her.” As thousands gather in Limerick today to bury the 29-year-old mother, the family’s message is clear: the day should belong to Scarlett’s memory, not to the vendettas that claimed her life.

The Calm Before the Storm

The appeal comes at a critical moment. Since Scarlett’s passing at Cork University Hospital, tensions between local factions and a public demanding “street justice” have reached a fever pitch. On digital platforms like Reddit and TikTok, calls for “retribution” have been met with a heavy-handed response from An Garda Síochána, who have deployed hundreds of officers to maintain order at the service.

“Scarlett was a lovely, kind-hearted mum,” a family representative stated. “She wouldn’t have wanted more violence in her name. We are asking everyone—please, let us bury our sister and daughter in peace. No shouting, no trouble. Just love.”

A ‘Lovely’ Mum Taken Too Soon

The family’s description of Scarlett as a “lovely mum” stands in agonizing contrast to the “Warrior” image that has taken over the national headlines. While the media focuses on the 11 blows and the iron bar, her family is desperately trying to reclaim her identity as a person. They remember a woman who lived for her young daughter, Oceanna, and whose smile could light up the gloomiest Limerick afternoon.

But the “Peace Plea” is also a tactical move. Legal sources suggest the family is acutely aware that any unrest at the funeral could be used by defense lawyers to argue for a change of venue or to claim that a fair trial for the suspects is impossible due to “mob mentality.”

Police on a Razor’s Edge

Despite the family’s plea, the authorities are taking no chances. The “Police Trap” that successfully snared a third suspect at the start of the funeral proceedings (as we previously reported) proved that the threat of violence—or the presence of those involved—is very real.

Tactical units remain stationed around St. Munchin’s Church, and drone surveillance is monitoring the funeral route to Mount St. Lawrence Cemetery. The Gardaí are walking a razor’s edge: trying to respect the family’s wish for a quiet farewell while preparing for the possibility that the “culture of silence” might break in a very loud, very violent way.

The ‘Blind Item’ Fear

Rumors continue to swirl on community Discord servers about potential “counter-protests” or appearances by associates of the suspects. This is exactly what the Faulkner family is trying to prevent. Their plea for “just peace” is a direct message to those who might seek to turn a funeral into a battlefield.

“They have lost enough,” a local priest noted during the morning prayers. “To lose the dignity of her funeral to more fighting would be the final cruelty.”

The Nation Watches in Silence

As the purple-themed cortege moves through the streets of Limerick, the city is uncharacteristically quiet. Business owners have pulled down their shutters, and thousands stand in silence, honoring the family’s request.

The “Peace for Scarlett” movement has taken a new form—one of quiet, dignified solidarity. But beneath the surface, the demand for justice hasn’t faded; it has simply been suppressed for the day. Once the last spade of earth is turned and the family returns home, the focus will shift back to the Nenagh District Court, where the “Warrior Mother’s” killers wait to face the music.

For today, however, Limerick honors a family’s broken-hearted wish. There is no trouble. There is only the memory of a “lovely” mum and the sound of the Shannon River flowing toward the sea.