logo
French police 'arrest 22-year-old British man accused of trying to marry girl aged nine at Disneyland Paris'

French police 'arrest 22-year-old British man accused of trying to marry girl aged nine at Disneyland Paris'

Daily Mail​22-06-2025
French police have arrested a 22-year-old man believed to be British amid claims he tried to marry a nine-year-old girl at Disneyland Paris on Saturday.
Park staff were shocked to see the child, along with her family and around 100 guests, turn up for the event and quickly called the police.
Officers arrived on the scene and took the man into custody along with the girl's 41-year-old mother, who is believed to be Ukrainian.
A statement issued by the prosecutor's office in the nearby town of Meaux said: 'Four people were arrested and questioned: the groom, who was believed to be the organiser of the event and is presumed to be British and aged 22; the mother of the child, a 41-year-old Ukrainian woman; and two Latvian nationals aged 55 and 24.'
It added that the 'police custody of the British suspect and a Latvian national was also extended on charges of fraud and money laundering.'
The prosecutor's office also confirmed that a criminal investigation has opened.
The wedding ceremony was scheduled to take place at dawn as private events such as weddings at the theme park are organised outside public opening hours.
Disneyland Paris told French newspaper Le Parisien that the event was immediately shut down by its team and that guests were stopped from entering the premises.
The circumstances around the wedding remain unclear, but the prosecutor's office said that a medical examination of the young girl found that she had not suffered any violence.
They also said that they were not ruling out that the event may have been a prank, with the guests attending as possible 'extras'.
A police source later told Le Parisien that the groom had said that he was the director of a production company and that they were shooting a video.
A source who claimed to have been a wedding guest told the French newspaper: 'We all thought we were going to attend a wedding... Everyone was stunned, no one expected it. Disneyland did things very well.
'They canceled everything as soon as they realized the bride was a child. We were shocked to see that.'
'So it wasn't a wedding, but a staged wedding filmed with around a hundred extras. They privatized Disneyland Paris, pretending it was a real wedding,' the prosecutor's office later explained to AFP.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Zoe Kravitz wows in barely there lace slip dress as she joins co-star Austin Butler at Caught Stealing Paris premiere - as they continue to spark romance rumours
Zoe Kravitz wows in barely there lace slip dress as she joins co-star Austin Butler at Caught Stealing Paris premiere - as they continue to spark romance rumours

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Zoe Kravitz wows in barely there lace slip dress as she joins co-star Austin Butler at Caught Stealing Paris premiere - as they continue to spark romance rumours

Zoe Kravitz was a vision in a barely-there slip dress as she joined her co-star Austin Butler at the Caught Stealing premiere in Paris on Thursday. The daughter of Lenny Kravitz and Lisa Bonet, 36, and the American hunk, 34, were snapped gazing into one another's eyes after continuing to spark romance rumours recently. The Kimi actress looked ethereal showing off her toned legs in a cream laced mini dress teamed with just a pair of elegant open-toe stilettos. Elsewhere the Dune favourite cut a dapper figure in a brown shirt and smart leather trousers for the lavish occasion. The pair - who play each other's love interest in the film - were captured posing next to director Darren Aronofsky. Later on in the evening, both Zoe and Austin were seen arriving at the luxurious restaurant Dragon in the French capital. The High Infidelity sensation looked stunning in the lace number which she teamed with a billowing black jacket. The two actors previously sparked romance rumours following their respective splits, however a source poured cold water on the claims when speaking to TMZ. Back in April, a source revealed that the co-stars 'had been spending time together over the past few weeks and were 'getting on very well.' They told the Sun: 'Their chemistry is as good off-screen as it is on it. Austin and Zoe have been keeping it under the radar and aren't putting a label on anything yet. They are both very respectful of their ex-partners and are just seeing how things go.' However more recently, sources claimed they definitely aren't dating after rumours hit fever pitch when they were seen at an immersive show called Viola's Room in July. Insiders told the publication that they attended the show with Caught Stealing director Darren and are 'just friends'. The stellar cast also includes Hollywood legend Liev Schreiber as well as Doctor Who legend Matt Smith, Vincent D'Onofrio, Regina King and even Puertorican hitmaker Bad Bunny will make an appearance. Back in April, a source revealed that the co-stars 'had been spending time together over the past few weeks and were 'getting on very well' The crime/comedy film, which will hit UK theatres on August 29, began filming in September of last year, six months after Austin's casting was confirmed. As per Deadline, the film 'follows Hank Thompson (Butler), a burned-out former baseball player, as he's unwittingly plunged into a wild fight for survival in the downtown criminal underworld of '90s New York City.' Caught Stealing marks Austin's latest high-profile role after starring in Dune: Part Two, which remains the highest grossing film of 2024 thus far. The Dune sequel — which also starred Timothee Chalamet, Zendaya and Florence Pugh — has raked in $700million at the worldwide since it premiered in theaters in March. The American actor earned his first-ever Golden Globe and an Oscar nomination for Best Actor last year for his portrayal of the late music icon Elvis Presley in Baz Luhrmann's acclaimed 2022 musical biopic. Elvis catapulted him to A-list stardom — over two decades after he found fame in the early 2000s as a child star on Nickelodeon. The actor's latest film The Bikeriders starring Tom Hardy and Jodie Comer hits theaters in June and has an 80 percent 'fresh' rating on Rotten Tomatoes. As for Zoe, the daughter of Lenny Kravitz released her directorial debut film Blink Twice in late August after years of working in front of the camera. Her acting credits include starring in HBO's mini-series Big Little Lies, Hulu's now-canceled show High Fidelity and The Batman (2022) with Robert Pattinson and Colin Farrell. Blink Twice is about tech billionaire Slater King (played by Zoe's fiance Channing Tatum) who invites cocktail waitress Frida (Naomi Ackie) on a vacation on his private island. However, she begins questioning her reality following a series of strange events. While promoting the film, Channing dished that Zoe worked on the film's script for seven years before taking it to the big screen. Blink Twice reportedly made $68million at the worldwide box office on a $20million budget.

Lil Nas X arrested and hospitalized after altercation with police
Lil Nas X arrested and hospitalized after altercation with police

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Lil Nas X arrested and hospitalized after altercation with police

Lil Nas X has been arrested after an altercation with police, according to reports. Officials confirmed to NBC that the 26-year-old rapper and singer was booked on suspicion of misdemeanour battery after he was confronted while walking down the street in his underwear. The two-time Grammy winner, whose real name is Montero Lamar Hill, had been seen on Ventura Boulevard in the early hours of Thursday morning. TMZ has video footage where he claims he is going to a party. After officers arrived, he allegedly threw punches toward the officers and, according to an LAPD statement provided without naming him, the suspect was then 'taken to a nearby hospital to be treated for a 'possible overdose''. Once he is released he will be charged. No officers were injured. Lil Nas X gained fame after his track Old Town Road became a record-breaking No 1 hit, staying there for 19 weeks. He also had success with songs including Industry Baby and Montero (Call Me by Your Name). He is set to release his album Dreamboy later this year after releasing a number of singles this spring, and in the last week, returned to social media with a series of posts featuring snippets of new music. He also changed his Instagram name to Queen Madeleine and shared images of himself in a variety of costumes with the furniture in his apartment being rearranged. In April, he was hospitalised after experiencing sudden facial paralysis. In a video shared to Instagram, he said he 'lost control' of half his face. The Guardian has reached out to his representatives for comment.

My dad died suddenly while I was in Japan. A memory of him lives on in my fridge
My dad died suddenly while I was in Japan. A memory of him lives on in my fridge

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

My dad died suddenly while I was in Japan. A memory of him lives on in my fridge

My father died suddenly and I'm still working my way through the half block of cheese that I rescued from his fridge. After a hastily organised funeral where I delivered a eulogy too long for the warm afternoon, he was cremated. My brother collected his ashes and his favourite T-shirt. But his cheese lives on. Still in its torn packet, with one of Dad's trademark purple elastic bands keeping it sealed, it has evolved into something other than food, and I refuse to imagine the meal when I finish it. My logic being that if it exists then so, somehow, does my dad. I had barely arrived in Japan when a police officer phoned to tell me that he'd died. Before ringing, officers had turned up at my flat, then at my brother's house, to break the news gently. My children and I had just left a Buddhist temple dusted with snow, and they were busily negotiating our next destination. One wanted to visit Kyoto market for lunch. And the other more op shops to hunt for more sneakers. Neither of them seemed to be winning and they looked to me to cast the deciding vote. Walking from the gift shop through the imposing temple gates, I played mediator, ignoring the phone ringing in my pocket. But it kept ringing. Over and over until I pulled it out and, when I saw that it said no caller ID, I answered it. The man said his name quickly. All I remember now is the Tom part and that he was phoning from St Kilda police station. It was the location that gave it away. Dad lived down the road. I knew instantly what the call meant. I started sinking, knees buckling, until my son, 16 and almost grown, scooped me up so I didn't hit the ground. Tom didn't need to finish the sentence for me to understand. As he tried to explain what had happened, I began wailing and couldn't make any sense of it. My children crowded me and I realised, horrified, that they didn't know what had been said. And then I understood that I'd have to tell them. I'd have to tell everyone. I whispered to them both, Boppa's dead, using the name my daughter gave him all those years ago. They joined in the sobbing and we inched towards a park bench, huddled in a hug, as I listened for instructions. I had to find someone who would wait with Dad's body until the undertaker arrived. Tom told me to take his number just in case and I wrote it out on the only paper I could find. Unpacking days later in Melbourne, I found it scrawled on the back of the incense box I'd bought in the temple gift shop, when Dad was still alive in my world. That night, after we took the train back to Osaka, I drank whisky in sharp little gulps until everything numbed, and walked the winter streets looking for food and a tattoo parlour where I could cover my skin with something that hurt. Fortunately, we didn't find one, and instead filled our pockets with chocolate and chips from a 7-Eleven. Two days later we flew home. When we arrived in Melbourne, the phone rang endlessly, flowers appeared, meals were delivered and my brother and I shuffled through the days, unsure how to operate now there were no parents left. It was the third funeral I had organised in 12 years. The third eulogy I delivered. The third time grief sucked me under and spat me out. Sign up to Five Great Reads Each week our editors select five of the most interesting, entertaining and thoughtful reads published by Guardian Australia and our international colleagues. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Saturday morning after newsletter promotion But it was the first time someone had died when I hadn't been watching. After the funeral, my brother and I knew we had to turn our attention to Dad's house. Tackling the kitchen first, I opened the fridge. The same fridge that had served our family of four for all those years. With Dad living alone, it was under-utilised, so emptying it didn't take long. I binned the wilting carrots, the greying cabbage, the milk edging past its use-by date, the medicines that should have been tossed long ago and a jar of pickles I recognised as one I'd given him. There were soy sauce fish from a takeaway meal and two square packets of wasabi no longer bright chemical green. On its own shelf was the half block of cheddar. I called out to my brother to ask if he minded if I took it, saying it would save me buying some. He wandered out from whichever room he was lost in and shrugged. Take it, he said. Depending on how many toasties we make, the block might do us for another month or so. And then it'll be gone. Just like Dad. Nova Weetman is an award-winning children's author

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store