
Final two men charged over Liam Payne's death WILL stand trial after ‘selling tragic star drugs before his balcony fall'
TWO men accused of supplying Liam Payne with cocaine just hours before he fell to his death from a Buenos Aires hotel will face trial, Argentine prosecutors confirmed.
Waiter Braian Nahuel Paiz and ex-hotel worker Ezequiel David Pereyra have been behind bars since January, charged over the One Direction star's death last October.
3
3
The pair will be put on the stand and could face up to 15 years in prison if convicted of drugs offences.
Prosecutors also revealed Liam had snorted and smoked cocaine in his room at the CasaSur Palermo Hotel 'up to a few minutes before his death.'
In a lengthy statement, Argentina's public prosecution service said: 'At the request of the head of the National Criminal and Correctional Prosecutor's Office No. 14, Andres Esteban Madrea, the two defendants remanded in custody as part of the court investigation into the circumstances surrounding Liam James Payne's death, will go on trial accused of the crime of selling drugs.
"They are Braian Nahuel Paiz, 25, who met Payne while working as a waiter in a restaurant in Puerto Madero, and Ezequiel David Pereyra, 24, who was an employee at the Hotel CasaSur Palermo where the former One Direction member died eight months ago after falling from the balcony of room 310, in a proven state of intoxication with cocaine, alcohol and psychotropic drugs."
An autopsy confirmed Payne died from polytrauma and internal and external bleeding.
Toxicology results showed alcohol levels of 2.7 grams per litre and traces of cocaine, methylecgonine, benzoylecgonine, cocaethylene, and sertraline.
The statement added: "The forensic medical specialists who performed the autopsy indicated toxicology results showed the dead man consumed cocaine via his nose as well as inhaling it by smoking the drug.
"Consumption took place at least 72 hours prior to his death and up to a few minutes before his death."
Paiz and Pereyra are the only suspects heading to trial.
Charges were dropped in February against three others, including Payne's friend Rogelio Nores, hotel receptionist Esteban Grassi, and head of security Gilda Martin.
No trial date has been set, but proceedings are expected to begin soon.
Former waiter Paiz, who has previously protested his innocence after being accused of selling Liam cocaine on two separate occasions in the run-up to his death, repeated an earlier claim last night from prison that he had shared drugs with the artist but hadn't committed the serious offence of selling him narcotics.
The 25-year-old, who got chatting to Payne in a restaurant the former One Direction singer ate at and swapped contact details with him, whined in an interview with Argentinian media outlet Infobae from his jail cell at a Buenos Aires police station: 'I don't know what I'm doing here, I'm a good person.
'I shared drugs with Liam but I didn't sell them.'
Describing himself as a drug user who started smoking marihuana as a youngster, he added: 'All I want to do is start studying again and leave jail to work, like I was doing before.
'I regret now giving Liam my Instagram because it all spiralled from there.
'If I hadn't I'd probably be working today, I'd be studying, I'd be doing videos because before meeting Liam I'd participated in the filming of a videoclip for YouTube for a singer and other videos for TV.
'I miss the freedom I had, I miss work, I miss my family, my mum and my sisters.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
12 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Migrant deported by Trump appears back in US courthouse
Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the migrant who had been deported to El Salvador in March by the Trump administration, will remain in jail for now ahead of his trial on criminal charges of human smuggling . At the conclusion of a hearing on Friday in federal court in Nashville, U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara Holmes said she would rule at a later date on Abrego Garcia's bid to be released on bail pending trial. Robert McGuire, the U.S. attorney in Nashville, said Abrego would be placed into immigration detention even if Holmes orders his release. Garcia pleaded not guilty on Friday to the charges. His wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, was on hand along with a gaggle of protesters. The detention hearing was the first chance the Maryland construction worker has had in a U.S. courtroom to answer the Trump administration's allegations against him since he was mistakenly deported in March to a notorious prison in El Salvador. Facing court orders and mounting pressure to return Abrego Garcia, the Republican administration brought him back to the U.S. last week. But it was to face criminal charges related to what federal prosecutors said was a human smuggling operation that transported immigrants across the country. Abrego Garcia´s attorneys have characterized the smuggling case as a desperate attempt by the Trump administration to justify his mistaken deportation three months after the fact. The charges stem from a 2022 traffic stop in Tennessee during which Abrego Garcia was driving a vehicle with nine passengers. His lawyers have called the allegations 'preposterous.' In briefings before the hearing, U.S. attorneys described him as a danger to the community and a flight risk, while his public defenders said the charges aren´t serious enough for detention. The charges against Abrego Garcia are human smuggling. But in their request to keep Abrego Garcia in jail, U.S. attorneys also accused him of trafficking drugs and firearms and of abusing the women he transported, among other claims, although he is not charged with such crimes. Friday's proceeding included testimony from a Department of Homeland Security agent who quoted three unnamed witnesses who spoke to a grand jury about Abrego Garcia´s alleged actions. Special agent Peter Joseph said that the witnesses saw Abrego Garcia trafficking people, guns or drugs and that Abrego Garcia earned upwards of $100,000 a year. One man said he saw Abrego Garcia bothering underage girls in a sexual way, Joseph testified, while a woman said Abrego Garcia had solicited nude photos of her when she was 15 and believed he was in the MS-13 gang. During cross examination, Abrego Garcia´s attorneys raised questions about possible conflicts of interest. One man is a felon who´d been previously deported and was serving a 30-month sentence when investigators contacted him, Joseph acknowledged. That witness is now living in a halfway house and on his way to getting work authorization. The second man is a very close relative of the first witness and 'said he would help in return for his release from jail,' said Richard Tennent, an assistant federal public defender. The third witness had previously been compensated for her work with law enforcement. Tennent pointed out that one of the witnesses told investigators that Abrego Garcia would drive roundtrip between Maryland and Houston - nearly 24 hours each way - two or three times per week. The witness said that Abrego Garcia nearly always had two of his children and his wife with him. Tennent pointed out that Abrego Garcia has three children, two of whom are autistic. Abrego Garcia is a citizen of El Salvador who had been living in the United States for more than a decade before he was deported. The expulsion violated a 2019 U.S. immigration judge´s order that shielded him from deportation to his native country because he likely faced gang persecution there. While the Trump administration described the mistaken removal as 'an administrative error,' officials have continued to justify it by insisting Abrego Garcia was a member of the MS-13 gang . His wife and attorneys have denied the allegations, saying he's simply a construction worker and family man. Before Friday´s hearing began in Nashville, Abrego Garcia´s wife told a crowd outside a church that Thursday marked three months since the Trump administration 'abducted and disappeared my husband and separated him from our family.' Her voice choked with emotion, Sura said she saw her husband for the first time on Thursday. She said, 'Kilmar wants you to have faith,' and asked the people supporting him and his family '`to continue fighting, and I will be victorious because God is with us.´' During a Saturday phone interview with NBC News' Kristen Welker, Donald Trump was asked what went into his decision to bring Garcia back. 'Well, that wasn't my decision. The Department of Justice decided to do it that way, and that's fine, as far as -- there are two ways you could have done it, and they decided to do it that way,' Trump told Welker. 'I think for speed, and, you know, it should be a very easy case,' Trump continued. Welker then further pressed the Commander in Chief, asking, 'you think, you think he's going to be convicted-- you think it's going to be an easy case?' 'I think it should be. It should be. You have two different cases. This would go faster,' Trump replied. Welker then asked Trump what he thought of Democrats who advocated for Garcia's return, including Senator Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), who made a public case for Garcia being denied due process. 'He's a loser. The guy's a loser. They're going to lose because of that same thing. That's not what people want to hear,' Trump responded. 'He's trying to defend a man who's got a horrible record of abuse, abuse of women in particular. No, he's a total loser-- this guy,' Trump concluded. The decision to charge Abrego Garcia criminally prompted the resignation of Ben Schrader, who was chief of the criminal division at the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Middle District of Tennessee. He did not directly address the indictment and declined to comment when reached by The Associated Press.


The Sun
20 hours ago
- The Sun
Love Island star jailed for 14 years over role in ‘Amazon-style' drugs cartel which flooded UK with narcotics
A LOVE Island star has been jailed for 14 years for her crucial role in a multi-million pound "Amazon-style" drug smuggling operation. Magdalena Sadlo, nicknamed Barbie, helped transport hundreds of kilos of cocaine across the world for a major cartel based in the Middle East. 6 6 6 The 30-year-old, who appeared in the 2021 series of Love Island in her native Poland, was working in hospitality in Dubai whilst helping to flood UK streets with "eye-opening" amounts of drugs. Carlisle Crown Court heard that Sadlo, of Bracknell, Berkshire, was brought in as a financial director for the smuggling ring. Their operation was so slick that some investigators compared it to Amazon. She helped organise the shipment of cocaine, ketamine and cannabis to Holland and then on to Britain. Prosecuting, Tim Evans told how the international cartel could not have operated at the level it did without Sadlo's "efficiency". He said: "She not only manages the profits, costs and expenses but also manages the stock levels. "She updates who has taken what, at what cost, from what batch and the profit margins involved. "She is very much part of the inner circle… and is operating and seated at the very highest of tables. "She clearly knew the scale and seriousness of the trade she was engaging in. "No organised crime group working at this level could operate or function without Magdalena Sadlo, or an equivalent, performing this role." While based in the UK, she operated as a drugs courier, often collecting cocaine as it was imported into the port of Harwich in Essex. Drugs experts believe she moved 300kg of cocaine across seven trips, including 33kg of cocaine to Greater Manchester on one date alone. The drugs were stored in safe houses in the Manchester area before being distributed to dealers over several months using BMWs. She then helped launder the proceeds by investing in designer clothes and luxury watches including a £130,000 Patek Philippe and a £30,000 Rolex. Detectives held Sadlo when she landed at Heathrow Airport on February 13 last year, having flown Emirates first class from Dubai. She was caught carrying luxury watches, bracelets and rings, and a 'crime CV' boasting her business acumen and qualifications. Encrypted texts on her phones revealed her "Barbie" nickname. In one message, she quipped: 'The devil works hard, but Barbie works harder.' Sadlo was due to have been sentenced in April after admitting conspiring to supply drugs and to launder money. 6 6 But sentencing was adjourned after insisting she played only a minor role as a £1,000-a-month personal assistant. Finally sentencing her to 14 years yesterday, Judge Nicholas Barker said that Sadlo was "central" to the organisation. He added: "I conclude there was gain and reward and in some way considerable to you. "You are an intelligent woman and well understand risk and reward. "I find you acted with real enthusiasm and sought to impress those at top." Thirteen members of the gang have already been jailed for up to 20 years each. 6


BreakingNews.ie
21 hours ago
- BreakingNews.ie
Driver (20s) arrested after gardaí discover €170k worth of drugs in Co Kerry
A man in his 2os has been arrested after gardaí recovered €170,000 worth of drugs from a vehicle intercepted in Listowel, Co Kerry. Shortly after 10pm on Friday, gardaí intercepted the vehicle and recovered a substantial quantity of cannabis and cocaine. Advertisement The driver was arrested at the scene and is currently being detained under Section 2 of the Criminal Justice (Drug Trafficking) Act 1996 at a Garda station in Co Kerry. The drugs will be sent for analysis to Forensic Science Ireland (FSI). Gardaí said investigations are ongoing and further updates will follow.