Cause of death Heart attack Nationality British Title Baron Moynihan Name Antony 3rd | Tenure 1965-1991 Role 3rd Baron Moynihan Children Maritoni Fernandez | |
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Born Antony Patrick Andrew Cairne Berkeley Moynihan2 February 1936 ( 1936-02-02 ) Parents Patrick Moynihan, 2nd Baron Moynihan, Irene Helen Candy Grandchildren Lexi Fernandez, Liam Moynihan Ex-spouse Ann Herbert, Editha Eduarda Ruben, Shirin Berry, Jinna Sabiaga, Luthgarda Fernandez Similar People Maritoni Fernandez, Lexi Fernandez, Jeremy Sims | ||
Other titles Baronet of Carr Manor |
Antony Patrick Andrew Cairne Berkeley Moynihan, 3rd Baron Moynihan, 3rd Baronet of Carr Manor (2 February 1936 – 24 November 1991) was a British hereditary peer.
Contents

Biography

Moynihan was born on the 2nd of February 1936 to Patrick Moynihan and his wife Ierne Helen Candy. Patrick Moynihan later that year became the 2nd Baron Moynihan. Patrick's father Berkeley Moynihan had been made a peer for his services to medicine in 1929. His mother was the daughter of Cairnes Candy, an Englishman who had immigrated to Western Australia. After attending Stowe School, Moynihan served in the Coldstream Guards.

In 1955 Moynihan married Ann Herbert, an actress and model. After a domestic dispute and an affair on Moynihan's part, he left for Australia where he intended working on his uncle's sheep farm. In Sydney he met Shirin Berry, a Malaysian who danced under the name Princess Amina. Returning to England in 1957 he reconciled with Ann, however this was short-lived. He married Shirin in 1958 after converting to Islam. He was soon on the move again, leaving for Ibiza with his wife. After the collapse of his nightclub business he returned to England.

In Tokyo in 1960 he challenged Al Ricketts, an American journalist, to a duel after he criticised Shirin's dancing. Moynihan defeated Rickets in the unusual duel that involved the two combatants attacking each other with their buttocks. In 1961 he and his wife converted to the Bahá'í Faith. At this time, Moynihan worked as a driver for Peter Rachman. After the death of his father in 1965 he became the 3rd Baron Moynihan, taking a seat in the House of Lords. In the Lords he took the Liberal Whip.

In 1970 after facing a series of fraud charges he left England for Spain, later moving to the Philippines. In the Philippines he operated a brothel and was linked to the drug trade. In 1980 he was named by the Woodward Royal Commission in Australia as an associate of a prominent Australian drug trafficking group operating between Manila and Sydney.

During the late 1980s Moynihan worked as an informant for the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, for which he was given immunity from prosecution. His testimony led to the conviction of Howard Marks, a Welsh drug smuggler. "He's a first-class bastard", Marks said.
Marriages and children

Moynihan was married five times.
Firstly, Moynihan married Ann Herbert on 25 May 1955. They were divorced in 1958 and had no children.
Secondly, he married Shirin Roshan Berry Quereshi in 1958. They were divorced in 1967, having had one daughter:
Thirdly, he married Luthgarda Maria Beltran del Rosa Fernandez in May 1968. They were divorced in 1980, having had three daughters:
Fourthly, he married Editha Eduarda in February 1981. In 1990, they went through a divorce declared invalid by the British Courts 31 July 1996. They had no children, although Andrew Antony Joseph Patrick Berkeley Moynihan (born 6 March 1989) was believed to be Moynihan's son until DNA testing proved he was not following a dispute about who would inherit the barony.
Finally, he bigamously married Jinna Sabiaga on 2 December 1990. They had one son:
In September, 2016, his daughter Aurora was killed in the Philippines. At the time of her death the Philippines was undergoing an intensive and controversial crackdown on drug dealers.
Death and legacy
On the death of the 3rd Baron in 1991 the Barony was declared dormant. In 1997 the House of Lords declared that the 3rd Baron's half-brother Colin was the rightful heir to the barony and baronetcy, finding against two other claimants.