What the papers say: Monday's front pages

Here are the biggest stories leading Monday’s front pages.
The Irish Times reports that regulators are set to send a team of “monitoring experts” into Fr Peter McVerry’s housing charity as part of efforts to impose order over its chaotic affairs.
Every student in Ireland using popular messaging app Snapchat has easy access to a personal “homework genie” powered by artificial intelligence that can do their assignments in a matter of seconds, according to the Irish Examiner.
The Irish Independent reveals that the main suspect in the murder of Cavan mother Annie Heyneman walked into a takeaway restaurant late on Saturday night and asked for gardaí and an ambulance to be called.
Cowboy builders face a crackdown through a new regulator, the Irish Daily Mail reports.
The Irish Daily Mirror publishes a photo of Cavan murder victim Annie Heyneman on its front page.
The Belfast Telegraph says the North's Education Minister has defended not granting Bangor Academy integrated status, saying he was bound by legislation brought forward by Alliance that the DUP had opposed.
A variety of politics stories vie for the top spot among the British front pages.
The Daily Telegraph says the British finance ministry has ordered ministers to be “ruthless” in identifying potential public spending cuts as the UK economy continues under strain.
Meanwhile, the Daily Express splashes on Conservative MP James Cleverly, who claims the UK is under “tax assault” from “inept Labour”.
The Times’ lead features comments by ex-MI6 chief Richard Dearlove. The former spy boss warns that in “courting Chinese investment for its renewable energy revolution,” the UK could be left “vulnerable to Beijing.”
The Guardian says artificial intelligence could be used for everything from spotting potholes to freeing up teachers amid an upcoming expansion of the technology across the public sector.
Hospitals in England left more than 500,000 patients languishing on trolleys for more than 12 hours last year in a crisis-level bed shortage, the Daily Mail reports.
The Daily Mirror leads on the stabbing of a nurse at an A&E department in Greater Manchester, with the woman in her 50s fighting for her life because one man allegedly became “angry about having to wait”.
An investigation by the i reveals four boys, including two under 13, were allegedly raped by men they met on the popular dating app Grindr.
Across the pond, Metro reports Los Angeles residents are bracing for another round of devastating fires as a backlash against “greedy” landlords grows.
Mark Zuckerberg’s content moderation overhaul has sparked concerns among some advertisers that it could lead to a surge of harmful content and misinformation, according to the Financial Times.
Lastly, the Daily Star says former Top Gear star Jeremy Clarkson says Britain should be sold in a “transfer window” after incoming US president Donald Trump said he wanted to buy Greenland.