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Married ex-prison officer jailed for filming sex with lag in cell shows off cryptic new tattoo as she enjoys freedom

Married ex-prison officer jailed for filming sex with lag in cell shows off cryptic new tattoo as she enjoys freedom

The Irish Sun22-06-2025
AN ex-prison officer who had sex with a lag in a cell smiles after being freed from jail — sporting a new 'love' tattoo.
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Smiling Linda de Sousa Abreu laps up the sun in shorts, sports bra and polka-dot bandana
Credit: Splash
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De Sousa Abreu showed off her new neck tattoo saying 'Amor', which is Spanish for 'love'
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De Sousa Abreu was filmed romping with lag Linton Weirich at Wandsworth jail
Credit: Central News
The married former guard — released after serving five months of a 15-month sentence — had a new neck inking saying 'Amor', which is Spanish for 'love'.
We revealed last year that she was filmed romping with lag Linton Weirich, while ignoring messages on her
radio
, at Wandsworth jail, South West London.
She was spotted on Saturday near her home in
London
.
A neighbour said: 'It doesn't look like what has happened has impacted her at all.
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Read more on Linda de Sousa
'She looks like she is loving life.
'She's smiling, enjoying the sun and got a new tattoo.
'I think she will try and launch a new career making the most of the fame she got.'
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Former guard De Sousa Abreu was released after serving five months of a 15-month sentence
Credit: Metropolitan Police
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De Sousa Abreu was spotted on Saturday near her home in Fulham, West London
Credit: Splash
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A neighbour believes De Sousa Abreu will try and 'launch a new career making the most of her fame'
In the
Most read in The Sun
A month earlier, the
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De Sousa Abreu was
She was
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Linda was jailed in January after admitting misconduct in public office
Credit: Splash
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De Sousa Abreu was arrested at Heathrow as she tried to board a flight to Madrid
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In the shocking video, De Sousa Abreu can be heard saying 'this is how we live at Wandsworth'
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A neighbour revealed how it 'doesn't look like what happened has impacted her at all'
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Why Irish people sing 'Ole Ole Ole' when they're happy
Why Irish people sing 'Ole Ole Ole' when they're happy

RTÉ News​

time5 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Why Irish people sing 'Ole Ole Ole' when they're happy

Analysis: we don't just break into a blast of 'Ole Ole Ole' at soccer matches, but also at gigs, homecomings and other celebrations It was the summer of 1990. The average price of a house in Ireland was €60,000 and the average worker travelled under 8km to work. Sinead O'Connor had turned Prince's Nothing Compares 2 U into a mega-hit, My Left Foot scooped two Oscars and Nelson Mandela had been released from prison after 27 years. Italia '90 fever was sweeping the nation and our love for a particularly fetching soccer chant was blossoming. Since then, we don't just break into a blast of Olé-Olé-Olé at matches, but at gigs, homecomings and other celebrations. It happened again last weekend at the sellout Oasis shows in Dublin's Croke Park. 80,000 people chanting Ole Ole Ole at @oasis #Oasis #OasisLive25 🇮🇪🍀☀️ — Doug Leddin ☘️ (@dougleddin) August 16, 2025 It's a chant with a really interesting history, says composer and musicologist Dr Seán Doherty, lecturer in DCU's School of Music. "Olé" is Spanish and goes "back to the bull fighting days, where it was a marker of approval from the spectators". The tune itself comes from a 1985 Belgian song called " Anderlecht Champion" in which the original "olé" was turned into the French "allez, allez, allez". The Spanish version (E Viva Mexico) was created in 1986 for the Mexico World Cup. It spread like wildfire and is now ubiquitous, says Doherty. But it was probably with Put 'Em Under Pressure, Ireland's anthem for the 1990 World Cup in Italy, that "it got inserted into every Irish person's brain". The song featured Clannad's Moya Brennan, Irish band Horslips and was produced by U2's Larry Mullen. It didn't just sample "olé, olé, olé", but also Scotland's 1978 anthem Ally's Tartan Army, which became "we're all part of Jackie's army". Jackie was of course Jack Charlton, the Ireland team's legendary manager and "put em under pressure" was a phrase coined by him to exemplify the playing style of his team. He led Ireland to the 1988 European Championship and the 1990 and 1994 World Cups. There were even calls for him to be canonised, to which he replied: "Canonisation? You couldn't have done that to me anyway, I'm a protestant." When Charlton died in July 2020, radio stations in Ireland played Put 'Em Under Pressure in tribute simultaneously at 12.30pm to coincide with his funeral and in scenes mirroring those after Ireland's winning penalty shootout against Romania in 1990, crowds erupted into chants of "olé, olé, olé" at the Walkinstown roundabout the day of the funeral. It's all kicking off now #Walkinstownroundabout #farewellJack RIP Jack — Tony O'Donoghue (@Corktod) July 21, 2020 "There's such a legacy of [Italia '90] in song, in nostalgia, in art and documentaries and sport. It's a moment where, if you weren't there you wish that you were," says Dr Siobhán Doyle, cultural historian and curator at National Museum of Ireland. "It's not only the nostalgia for the tournament and the players and the excitement, but it's a nostalgia for that time in the past." Ireland's run in the World Cup started with a 1-1 draw against England, followed by a game against Egypt that ended in 0-0, while the match against the Netherlands ended in a 1-1 draw. But the hype around Italia '90 hit fever pitch when Ireland won a penalty shootout against Romania (5-4), sending the team into the final eight. Much of Ireland's excitement could be personified by RTÉ broadcaster George Hamilton 's now famous line, uttered in the seconds before Ireland won the shootout: "The nation holds its breath". Crowd sings olé, olé, olé at a Loyle Carner gig in Vicar Street, Dublin on February 21, 2023 Our participation in the World Cup was an unprecedented situation in Ireland's sporting history. "It was an escape from everyday life, people were in such a bubble," says Doyle. Businesses closed and busses stopped running, "people just didn't go to work for a week — there's not a hope that would happen now." Italia '90 memorabilia and material culture is now hard to come by in Ireland because people are quite precious about it, she adds. Some fans also amassed debts to follow the team and attend games. "It's interesting that [the chant] has transferred to things like concerts, but a lot of people find it very cringe, particularly when it goes beyond the sporting environment," says Doyle. Already in 1990, the chant had moved beyond the pitch. Reporting for the Irish Times on Sinead O'Connor's appearance at The Point, three days before the quarter final when she dedicated her song "Jackie" to Jack Charlton, Dave Fanning said the crowd chorused "olé, olé, olé" to demand an encore. "It's only one to sing when we're winning, it's not one to bring out when our team is behind and needs the crowd to lift them, like the Fields of Athenry or Ireland's Call," says Doyle. "It's the type of song that only works when it really garners the entire crowd. It needs a particular moment in order for it to really take off, and when it works, it really works, and when it doesn't it bombs." But we do love a chant and they have a long history: Football chants go right back to association football, back to English composer Edward Elgar, who wrote the first "certifiable" football chant (He banged the leather for goal), says Doherty. "Since then people don't really write original football chants, they take other songs and they put new words to them." They come from everywhere: Advertising jingles, pop songs, nursery rhymes, national anthems. "People are so incredibly creative and inventive with them. They're really kind of the last traditional folk song that exist." And like all good folk songs, olé, olé, olé has taken on a life of its own. In fact, Doherty would "even go as far as to consider it a meme". "It's been passed on from one team to another. It's been completely de-localised from its original setting - so much so that no one can really remember or would be hard pushed to tell you where it comes from." At singer Lizzo 's recent concert at the 3Arena, she was treated to a four-minute standing ovation featuring several rounds of "olé, olé, olé" that had the American baffled. "If your only interaction with [the chant] is at a Lizzo concert, well, why would you [know where it came from]? In my mind, it's a musical meme," says Doherty. From RTÉ Brainstorm, why Irish people sing 'Ole Ole Ole' when they're happy Doherty reckons its staying power lies in a combination of the fact that it lives in the Irish national psyche and the chant itself: it's easy, musically predictable and memorable. "There's only five notes from the bottom to the top. It has a regular phrase pattern and we like things that are regular patterns, they're easy to remember," he explains. "The notes themselves outline predictable harmonies: it articulates exactly what we expect to hear, going from tonic harmony to dominant harmony, and that's the really important thing in tonal harmony." Interestingly, the notes themselves are also really common in pop music. "It goes between the 3rd and the 5th notes in the scale — it's in so many songs from the early 2000s to mid 2010s," says Doherty. "People have called that the millennial whoop."

Princess Andre brands mum Katie Price's Mucky Mansion ‘scary' saying ‘a lot went on there'
Princess Andre brands mum Katie Price's Mucky Mansion ‘scary' saying ‘a lot went on there'

The Irish Sun

time6 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Princess Andre brands mum Katie Price's Mucky Mansion ‘scary' saying ‘a lot went on there'

PRINCESS Andre has branded her mum Katie Price's Mucky Mansion as "scary", and said that "a lot went on there". Pricey's disrepair Sussex house has been the hot topic of conversation for many years, and now her daughter, 18, has revealed more about the family home. 5 Princess Andre has spilled the beans on how she REALLY feels about her mum's Mucky Mansion Credit: Getty 5 Katie's infamous Sussex home has been a hot topic of conversation Credit: Channel 4 Advertisement 5 Dubbed the 'Mucky Mansion' the house is known for being in disrepair Credit: Splash 5 It comes as Katie and Princess navigate a rift in their relationship Credit: Getty The Price family home was dubbed the "Mucky Mansion" after it fell into disrepair and was subjected to vandal attacks. Now Princess, who is trying to heal the ongoing rift with her famous mother, has spilled the beans on how she REALLY feels about the notorious country house. Advertisement Speaking to The Guardian, ITV's The Princess Diaries star, was asked if she liked living at the nine-bedroom property. 'No. It was a really scary house," Princess told the publication. Read More on Princess Andre PRICE IS WRONG The secret rift tearing Katie Price & Princess apart revealed "A lot went on there. So I didn't really like it.' Continuing she said: 'Dad's house is a lot quieter, a lot more peaceful, a lot more organised. Advertisement "Whereas my mum's house is much more just do what you want.' But Princess added: "I love the two different houses, because if I fancy a bit more chaotic and busy I'll go to Mum's and if I fancy more relaxed I'll go to Dad's.' THE MUCKY MANSION'S HISTORY Katie, 47, has no end of problems with her Mucky Mansion. She bought the house in 2014 and it was reported that it set her back £ 1.3million. In 2020, the mansion fell into disrepair after intruders ransacked the property and caused damage throughout the home. Advertisement In a bid to get the house in order she enlisted the help of a team of experts, and had her own TV show, aptly called, Mucky Mansion. However, last year it was revealed that the star's home had been repossessed following her bankruptcy battle. 5 It comes as Princess reunited with mum Katie yesterday Credit: Snapchat / Princess Andre REUNITING WITH MUM Meanwhile, just yesterday, Princess reunited with her mum for the first time since their 'rift' was uncovered. The duo shared a loved-up selfie together as Princess enjoyed a cosy night-in with her mum and Katie's boyfriend, JJ Slater. Advertisement The mother and daughter were understood to be locked in a secret feud after Katie revealed she had been banned from appearing in Princess' solo reality TV show, The Princess Diaries. Katie went on to allege that Princess' management team, the same as her dad's Peter Andre, had advised that it was best for Princess to not be seen with her mother publicly. But it seems as though they have put all the warring behind them for a bonding evening together. Princess and Katie looked happier than ever in a brand new selfie which was uploaded to Princess' Snapchat account. She simply captioned it "mumzy" as the pair beamed down the lens. Advertisement Amid the feud, Princess previously insisted that her mum was still "supportive" despite her public deceleration that she would not watch her daughter's ITV2 show.

Sky Sports presenter ‘sets off every possible alarm' as she shows off incredible abs on Ibiza holiday
Sky Sports presenter ‘sets off every possible alarm' as she shows off incredible abs on Ibiza holiday

The Irish Sun

time7 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Sky Sports presenter ‘sets off every possible alarm' as she shows off incredible abs on Ibiza holiday

SKY SPORTS host Kate Tracey left fans stunned while soaking up the sun on holiday. The glamorous presenter has spent the summer on the Spanish island of Mallorca and Ibiza. 8 Kate Tracey wowed while on holiday in Ibiza Credit: @katetraceyx 8 The Sky Sports presenter showed off her figure in a revealing outfit Credit: @katetraceyx 8 She stuck with the blue theme as she relaxed by the pool Credit: @katetraceyx 8 Fans have called her 'absolutely stunning' Credit: @katetraceyx Kate, 31, has been regularly posting snaps from her trip on social media in a treat for her 48,500 Instagram followers. The brunette beauty has caught the eye in a range of bold outfits. Kate first wowed in a figure-hugging colourful dress as she posed for a mirror selfie and on a balcony overlooking the sea. She then relaxed at the stunning Destino Five Hotel in a blue bikini and matching skirt. And Kate enjoyed her final night in Ibiza by visiting the upmarket Zazu restaurant. The popular host dazzled in a revealing dress and she showed off her incredible abs. Her gorgeous look was completed by high-heeled shoes, a small clutch bag and luxury bracelets. Her fans were left in awe, with one saying: "All eyes were on you I'm sure." Another added: "Setting off every possible alarm." A third commented: "Wow you look absolutely stunning in that dress simply beautiful." She is no stranger to looking glam in Spain, being dubbed "beautiful" after joining no bra club while on holiday in Marbella last year. Kate is a regular on Sky Sports' horse racing channel and is often tasked with covering the biggest events. And she also works for Aston Villa TV and was in the ground as they drew 0-0 with Newcastle in their Premier League opener. 8 Kate has been soaking up the sun in Mallorca and Ibiza Credit: @katetraceyx 8 She tucked into amazing look food as she soaked up the sun Credit: @katetraceyx 8 Kate is often seen on Sky Sports Racing Credit: @katetraceyx

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