The bar worker stabbed to death at an Irish pub in Queens over the weekend was a “kind, innocent girl” from Ireland whose boyfriend attacked her, law enforcement officials and witnesses told The Post on Sunday. Ta.
Police sources said Sarah McNally, 41, of Glendale, was left bleeding from a stab wound to her neck during the 6:30 p.m. assault on the floor of the Keili House pub on Grand Avenue in Maspeth. died in
It is not clear what prompted the killing.
But officials say Ms McNally’s boyfriend, who she had been living with for several months, barged into the bar, slashed her with a knife and tried to leave the hole-in-the-wall bar, a Gaelic term for a social gathering. That’s what it means.
“She was just standing there talking,” said a female customer who witnessed the chaos. “Her boyfriend came in, just walked in and stabbed her. Then he started trying to stab himself. It’s terrible. Just terrible!
When police arrived, the suspect had a knife in each hand and was bleeding from a self-inflicted knife wound, sources said.
Officials said officers told him to drop the knife and when he refused they taped him with a stun gun.
Authorities transported the unidentified stabber to New York City Health Hospital Elmhurst in critical condition, police said.
Officials said charges against him are pending.
Officials said there was no history of domestic violence between the couple that would suggest McNally’s tragic fate.
Homeowner Mike Lambe, 62, who has lived about two blocks away from the bar for 20 years, told the Sunday Post that McNally was a “kind and innocent man from Longford,” a county in the heart of the Emerald County. He said it was a girl. island.
She had only been working at the bar for less than a year.
“She was innocent!” he said.
The resident said the street has problems, including drug addicts and drug dealers.
“The situation is getting worse and worse,” he said.





