
Brit & daughter-in-law he ‘tried to drown' insist they aren't in romantic relationship after son hit him with Porsche
Family sources claim Mark Gibbon, 62, has secretly been dating Jasmine Wyld - the mother of his grandchildren - for years.
6
6
He was arrested last week and charged with attempted murder after allegedly forcing her head underwater at a Florida resort pool during a row over his will.
But despite reports of a love affair, both Gibbon and Wyld, 33, denied to cops they were a couple.
Polk County Sheriff's Office told The Sun the pair had been quizzed on the status of their relationship.
A detective asked Gibbon and mum-of-two Wyld "about their relationship to determine if the incident would be classified as domestic violence".
They both denied being in a romantic relationship, however.
It comes after a family source told the Daily Mail how the pair had grown close after Gibbon split from his partner and Wyld split from his son Alex.
The insider claimed: "Mark and Jasmine have been seeing each other for a few years, but they've never admitted it.
"[The couple] do an awful lot together and they go away on holiday with the children a couple of times every year."
Gibbon is divorced from his wife and lives alone at a £800,000 semi-detached home in Beaconsfield he purchased in 2023.
Wyld - a hairdresser - separated from Gibbon's son Alex, 34, back in 2021.
Moment drunk Brit pensioner, 66, is left with broken arm after getting into fight with Thai bar girl & being thrown to ground
They share two young children together.
Just two years after they separated, Alex, 34, was jailed for trying to run over his dad in a £80,000 Porsche Cayenne in Beaconsfield, Bucks.
As well as assaulting his father, Alex also pleaded guilty to harassing ex-wife Wyld.
Alex was sentenced at Aylesbury Crown Court to 25 months in jail, a 36-month disqualification from driving, a five-year restraining order, plus a surcharge.
The dad was released from jail around six months ago and went to move in with his mum, who had divorced Gibbon some years earlier.
Alex and his father also became embroiled in a public row in 2023 after Alex left his dad's business for an unknown reason.
The family source confirmed that Alex and Gibbon no longer speak.
They added: "He feels an awful betrayal at how his dad has struck up a relationship with the mother of his two children."
6
6
6
Gibbon - a lighting technician, who runs his own firm called MRG Lighting - is now being held in Polk County Jail and is due in court next week over the attempted murder charge levelled against him.
He and Wyld were on holiday at the Solterra Resort in Devenport, near Disney World, Florida with Wyld's two children - Gibbon's grandkids.
The reported couple started arguing over the "stipulations of his wilL" while by the pool, according to US police.
Gibbon then pushed Wyld's head "under the water and held her down multiple times", the arrest affidavit claims.
The mum told cops she "could not breathe and believed that she was going to drown".
Police say Wyld was forced to "fight Mark in order to get away from him and from under the water but he kept pushing her back under".
Her nine-year-old daughter then leapt to her mother's defence but was pushed away by Gibbon, it is claimed.
Wyld is reported to have called out to two women in the distance and screamed at them to call 911.
Gibbon now faces one count of attempted murder and two counts of battery.
When questioned, Gibbon allegedly admitted to pushing Jasmine underwater, but insisted he hadn't been trying to drown her.
The grandad is due in court on Monday.
Hashtags

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


Telegraph
41 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Watch: Olympic gold medallist ‘attacks' sprinter boyfriend at airport
Footage has emerged of Olympic gold medallist sprinter Sha'Carri Richardson allegedly attacking her Christian Coleman boyfriend at an airport. Richardson was detained last week in Seattle and a police report said footage appeared to show Coleman being shoved into a wall before an item was thrown at him. The 25-year-old was released following the incident after her boyfriend 'declined to be a victim,' the police report read. CCTV images, first obtained by TMZ, appear to show Richardson slamming Coleman into a wall and bumping into him after the first altercation. The argument continues as the pair bump into each other as he walks towards a checkpoint at Seattle-Tacoma International Airport. Port of Seattle Police said Richardson claimed the argument was started over a pair of headphones. 'Richardson advised she did not assault him in any way and the dispute was only a verbal argument,' police documents said. The 2024 silver medallist in the 100m and a gold medal winner in the 4x100m relay was arrested and charged with fourth-degree assault before she was released without further action. Coleman later said: 'For me personally, I feel like it was a sucky situation all round. I don't feel like she should have been arrested. 'I'm the type of guy who's in the business of extending grace, and mercy and love. She's just had a lot of things going on, lot of emotions and forces going on inside of her that not only I can't understand, but nobody can. 'She's one-of-one. I know it's been a tough journey for her this year. But she's gonna bounce back because she's the best female athlete in the world. I see it every day. She's gonna be just fine. She's gonna be good, and I'm gonna be good too.' Richardson will run in the 100m at the World Championships next month but missed out on qualifying for the 200m by one-hundredth of a second. She finished fourth in her heat in Oregon last week and declined to speak to reporters afterwards.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Irate WNBA coach lashes out over 'dumb' and 'dangerous' sex toy pranks as two more are thrown in Chicago
Amid the disturbing trend of sex toys being thrown onto the court at WNBA games, a head coach is now calling on fans - and the purported crypto traders behind the 'pranks' - to knock it off. Beginning last week, a series of incidents at women's basketball games across the league saw green dildos being thrown onto the court. But the incidents continued, and now appear to be tied to a cryptocurrency 'meme coin' scheme. Regardless of the motivation or those behind it, Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve spoke to reporters about the incidents - saying that those responsible should be held accountable. 'I just want to comment on... this has been going on for centuries. The sexualization of women, this is the latest version of that. It's not funny,' said Reeve. She continued: 'It should not be a butt of jokes on any radio show, or in print, or in any comments. — Shelby Swanson (she/they) (@shelbymswanson) August 7, 2025 Minnesota Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said the league needs to hold fans accountable who have begun to throw sex toys onto the court at WNBA games in recent days Purple dildo — John Armstrong (@msmcb02) August 8, 2025 'The sexualization of women is what's used to hold women down and this is no different. 'This is just the latest story, and we should write about it in that way. These people that are doing this should be held accountable. 'We're not the butt of the joke. They're the problem, and we need to take action.' Hours after Reeve made her comments, yet another incident saw two sex toys thrown on a court at WinTrust Arena in Illinois for a game between the Chicago Sky and the Atlanta Dream. According to FrontOfficeSports' Colin Salao, one object was thrown and fell behind the dream bench. While security rushed to find that perpetrator, another sex toy - which wasn't green - was then thrown onto the court. Video showed the two suspects were surrounded by security after the incident and they were questioned. Security told Salao that they were released and 'free to go' because there was not proof they were responsible. After two dildos were thrown at the Chicago Sky game, two people were surrounded by security by the doors at Wintrust Arena. They were questioned about the incident. They appeared to be in good spirits, even taking selfies at one point while apprehended. They walked out of the… — Colin Salao (@colincsalao) August 8, 2025 Reeve, who coached Team USA to Olympic gold in Paris in 2024, is just the latest in the league to speak out about these incidents. Players - like Indiana Fever star Sophie Cunningham - demanded that the action stop out of fear for the safety of the athletes. Cunningham posted on X back on August 1, 'stop throwing dildos on the court... you're going to hurt one of us.' Five days later, Cunningham was then hit with a flying dildo. She re-tweeted her post, saying, 'this did NOT age well.' She's not the only player to have spoken out against this. 'It's super disrespectful,' Sky center Elizabeth Williams told reporters last Friday. 'I don't really get the point of it. It's really immature. Whoever is doing it needs to grow up.' One arrest has been made in connection to these incidents. 18-year-old Kaden Lopez was booked into jail in Arizona on suspicion of disorderly conduct, assault and public display of explicit sexual material following the game between the Phoenix Mercury and the Connecticut Sun. Lopez allegedly apologized for the act, saying it was 'stupid prank that was trending on social media.' It is also alleged in court documents that he bought the toy on Monday - just one day before the game.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Soldiers given medals for tackling gunman who shot five at Georgia base
Half a dozen soldiers at a Georgia army base have been awarded medals for tackling an armed assailant accused of shooting five people and then giving aid to their wounded colleagues, three of whom have now been released from hospital. Sgt Quornelius Radford, 28, who was assigned to Fort Stewart, is accused of using a personal handgun to shoot five of his fellow soldiers on Wednesday before he was quickly tackled by other troops. Army officials would not speculate about a motive. 'The fast action of these soldiers under stress and under trauma and under fire absolutely saved lives from being lost,' the army secretary, Dan Driscoll, said at a news briefing on Thursday morning. 'One of the soldiers tackled the person, so just think about this – they were unarmed and ran at and tackled an armed person who they knew was actively shooting their buddies, their colleagues, their fellow soldiers. 'Another soldier jumped on top of the person to subdue them until federal law enforcement was able to arrive.' According to CNN, the soldier who was the first to subdue the suspect has been named by the army as Staff Sgt Aaron Turner, with Master Sgt Justin Thomas helping to keep him restrained. Four other soldiers tended to the wounded, according to Driscoll. One of them, Staff Sgt Melissa Taylor, said she was in her office when she heard a fellow soldier 'yelling that a gunshot went off'. After peering into the hallway and seeing smoke, she noticed a soldier lying on the ground. 'I immediately sprinted over to the soldier and started rendering aid. He had been shot. And so I was rendering aid to him, while the first sergeant started calling medics,' she told reporters. The six soldiers were awarded the meritorious service medal for 'outstanding non-combat meritorious achievement or service' on Thursday. The shooting occurred in the 2nd armored brigade combat team area, where Radford worked. Brig Gen John Lubas, commander of the third infantry division and Fort Stewart-Hunter army airfield, said two of the five soldiers who were shot remain hospitalized, said in comments reported by CNN. 'One solider remains as an in-patient at Winn Army [community hospital] right here on Fort Stewart. She's doing very well, in high spirits,' Lubas said. 'Of course, she's got a little bit of a road to recovery. We're hopeful she may be released as early as this weekend but that will just depend on how things heal up over the next couple of days.' Another solider who was more seriously injured is recovering at Savannah Memorial community hospital, about 45 miles from the base, the general said. 'She's got a little bit longer road to recovery. The doctors are very positive, but I think it's going to take her a big longer to recover. They're very hopeful she's going to make a complete recovery.' The other three shooting survivors were released yesterday, according to Lubas. The Army has not identified them nor the nature of their injuries. According to the New York Times, Radford sent a text message to his aunt on Wednesday morning which said that he 'loved everybody, and that he'll be in a better place because he was about to go and do something'. Radford's father told the Times he hadn't noticed anything unusual about his son's behavior recently, and didn't know what might have led him to attack his fellow soldiers. Radford remains in custody.