Gerard Hutch found not guilty in the Regency Hotel murder dominates the national front papers today.
The Irish Times leads with a picture of Mr Hutch walking away from the court, as they reveal gardai are still investigating him despite his acquittal.
The Irish Examiner also leads with the trial, alongside a piece reporting the HSE is refusing to cover the cost of patients treatment abroad.
The Irish Daily Star calls the end of yesterday's trial the 'trial of the century', with a picture of Mr Hutch after he left court.
The Irish Daily Mail leads with a warning from gardaí that Mr Hutch's life could be in danger in Ireland.
Finally, The Echo leads with calls from the Women of Honour who are calling for a public enquiry into allegations of sexual abuse in the Defence Forces.
In Britain, a recovering economy, an investigation into the British prime minister and a nationwide emergency text all lead the British newspapers.
The Telegraph says single-sex schools can refuse transgender pupils with teachers not having to call children by their chosen pronouns.
📰The front page of tomorrow's Daily Telegraph:
'Single-sex schools can refuse trans pupils'#TomorrowsPapersToday
Sign up for the Front Page newsletterhttps://t.co/x8AV4OoUh6 pic.twitter.com/5FFFgUfOE4— The Telegraph (@Telegraph) April 17, 2023
Savers withdraw nearly $60 billion from three banks in the US, the Financial Times reports.
Just published: front page of the Financial Times, international edition, for Tuesday 18 April pic.twitter.com/4BI41LAPxJ
— Financial Times (@FinancialTimes) April 17, 2023
The Daily Mail reports on the imminent test of the UK’s emergency alarm system.
Tuesday's Mail: “So which genius thought it was a good idea to terrify the whole country at 3pm on a Sunday?” #BBCPapers #TomorrowsPapersToday https://t.co/YXsBX7vZM4 pic.twitter.com/yFWKWcQhr3
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) April 17, 2023
The Daily Express reports the economy is on the mend with positive signs showing a quicker improvement than expected.
Tuesday's Daily Express front page - Reasons to be cheerful! Economy on mend#TomorrowsPapersToday https://t.co/fiyd4BVZ75 pic.twitter.com/uG524ZA0gN
— Daily Express (@Daily_Express) April 17, 2023
The UK security chief has issued an alert over the threat from China, suggesting Beijing “wants supremacy not parity”, according to The Times.
Tuesday's Times: “UK security chief's alert over threat from China” #BBCPapers #TomorrowsPapersToday https://t.co/AUbs5reYAh pic.twitter.com/0VtVoU2MoA
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) April 17, 2023
The i reports on the investigation into British prime minister Rishi Sunak by the UK ethics watchdog over his wife’s shares.
Tuesday's front page: Sunak under investigation by UK ethics watchdog over wife's shares#TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/D1HkBhxu1h
— i newspaper (@theipaper) April 17, 2023
The Daily Mirror leads with Neville Lawrence warning the people who murdered his son that he will not stop fighting for them to stay in jail until they admit guilt.
Tomorrow's Daily Mirror front page: Confess or never go free.#TomorrowsPapersToday https://t.co/LL4KDc9bgW pic.twitter.com/VCXpexmbLy
— The Mirror (@DailyMirror) April 17, 2023
Metro reports on Mr Sunak’s maths announcement and how he has been investigated over his failure to declare his wife’s shares.
Tomorrow's Paper Today 📰
SURELY SUM MISTAKE, PM?
🔴 Sunak announces plans to make all children learn maths until they are 18
🔴 Then he's investigated over 'failure to declare wife's shares in MPs' register'
#TomorrowsPapersToday pic.twitter.com/4BTxXZxCSV— Metro (@MetroUK) April 17, 2023
And the Daily Star says Nasa has warned space travel makes you “goggle-eyed”.
Tuesday's front page: To boldy go where no visually challenged man has gone before 🚀#TomorrowsPapersTodayhttps://t.co/h0NX1ySVJz pic.twitter.com/p9Riq6cfIb
— Daily Star (@dailystar) April 17, 2023