logo
New Liam Payne evidence laid bare - 'Drug texts' to 1D star on CCTV

New Liam Payne evidence laid bare - 'Drug texts' to 1D star on CCTV

Daily Mirrora day ago

Prosecutors have laid bare their evidence against two men told yesterday they would be put on trial over tragic musician Liam Payne's Buenos Aires hotel death.
Waiter Braian Nahuel Paiz and former hotel worker Ezequiel David Pereyra have been languishing in prison since the start of January after being charged with selling the former One Direction singer the cocaine he snorted and smoked before his fatal third-storey drug-fuelled balcony plunge.
Argentinian public prosecutors were known to have obtained incriminating phone messages and hotel CCTV footage which included images of Liam standing by the open door of a lift at the CasaSur Palermo Hotel and chatting with a man identified as Pereyra shortly before the singer died on October 16 last year.
During the brief encounter the 31-year-old Brit is said to have asked him for 'seven grams of the same drug he had handed him earlier.'
Overnight prosecutors went public with more details of their dossiers, revealing they had 'incriminating' witness statements from FIVE hotel employees against 24-year-old Pereyra, who like Paiz has been warned he faces up to 15 years in prison if convicted, and CCTV footage showing him handing Payne cocaine outside the artist's room around an hour and ten minutes before he died.
Pereyra has been accused of selling Liam cocaine twice, the second time "between 3.30 and 4pm on October 16." Argentina's public prosecution service said in a statement referencing Pereyra: 'One of the witnesses that compromised him the most was the hotel's head of general maintenance.
'He testified that around 9pm on 14 October he met Pereyra in a lift, saw that he had a $100 note in his hand and when he asked him if it was a tip and who had given it to him, said Pereyra replied that he had to 'run an errand for a guest' which he later explained was 'to bring drugs'.
'At 2:30 a.m. on 15 October, Payne asked the hotel receptionist for a taxi to an address - Pereyra's home at 2800 Homero Street in the Lomas de Zamora district of Buenos Aires - because 'someone had to bring him something'. 'Prosecutors determined, from the statement of the driver of the Cabify app car that made the trip, and from the images of the security cameras outside the hotel, that Pereyra arrived at the door of the hotel at 3.25am, met Liam Payne in the street outside and walked with towards the corner of Costa Rica and Dorrego Avenue, where a camera captured the accused man with 'some kind of wrapper in one of his hands.''
Lead prosecutor Andres Madrea revealed a computer technician who works for the CasaSur Hotel has also incriminated Pereyra. He said: 'The employee, who speaks English, shared a lift with Payne the afternoon of his death. He has testified that when they reached a hotel basement Liam began to talk while still inside the lift with Pereyra, who was arranging some chairs outside the lift, and he heard the musician say: 'Hey man I will need another seven grams more for today.''
Public prosecutors added in their statement: 'Mr Madrea detailed in his trial request that the drug transaction took place around 3.45pm on October 16, in a third-floor corridor where cameras captured Pereyra's arrival in the lift and the exchange.'
They said the indictment against Paiz, also accused of selling Liam Payne cocaine on two separate occasions in the run-up to his death, was based partly on messages the two men had exchanged discovered on the singer's phone after he plunged to his death.
Prosecutors revealed more detail about the conversations between the pair, who met at a restaurant the musician dined at in the upmarket Buenos Aires neighbourhood where Paiz was working as a waiter. They said: 'Lead prosecutor Andres Madrea reproduced in his trial request an exchange of messages in the early hours of October 14, where the singer asks the accused for five or five grams and the waiter replies an hour later that he had obtained three grams with the phrase in English: 'I think I got to three.
'Paiz then sent the musician several photographs related to narcotics, including one of a transparent plastic bag with a white powder, after which they agreed that the waiter would go to the CasaSur Hotel where the accused arrived at 3:24am according to the security camera records.
'This shows that the accused Paiz, at Payne's request, went to the hotel in question, stayed in his room, where he gave cocaine to Payne, until he left at around 8:15 am.'
They went on to detail the second "drug deal" later the same day when Liam Payne took a taxi to Paiz's flat to pick up cocaine - and reference another subsequent message exchange about a third "possible deal' which they said ended with the singer writing: 'I have DOLLARS US 100. Party.'
Three other men initially charged over Liam's death were told in February the case against them had been dropped.
Liam's close friend Rogelio Nores, hotel receptionist Esteban Grassi and hotel head of security Gilda Martin were accused of his manslaughter by a female lower court judge before reversing her decision on appeal. No date has yet been set for the Paiz and Pereyra trial although it is expected to kick off shortly.
Paiz, who has previously protested his innocence, spoke again from prison this week to repeat an earlier claim that he had shared drugs with the artist but hadn't committed the serious offence of selling him narcotics. The 25-year-old 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 video-clip 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.'
Pereyra handed himself in on January 6 after making himself a fugitive the previous week following failed police attempts to locate and arrest him so he could be remanded in pre-trial custody on the orders of an investigating judge. He has yet to make any public comment.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

For Women Scotland threaten SNP with fresh legal action
For Women Scotland threaten SNP with fresh legal action

The Herald Scotland

time8 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

For Women Scotland threaten SNP with fresh legal action

The judgment clarified that the terms 'man' and 'woman' in the legislation refer to biological sex, not acquired gender. While First Minister John Swinney welcomed the 'clarity' provided by the judgment, the Scottish Government has said it is waiting for guidance from the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC). READ MORE Aitken: Glasgow 'disempowered' by Spending Review as English regions gain more powers Bowie: Time for Tories to stop 'self-flagellating' over Truss and Johnson chaos 'Farcical:' Ross criticised for chairing Holyrood committee meeting from Caribbean The watchdog is due to publish an updated statutory Code of Practice — effectively an authoritative instruction manual on applying the Equality Act — later this year. Speaking at a fringe event at the Scottish Conservative conference, For Women Scotland's Marion Calder said people needed to challenge organisations failing to implement the law. 'We are possibly going to have to go back to court in order to get some of the government policies — especially policies in prison — changed. There are still at least four male murderers in the women's prison estate in Scotland, and that is a shocking fact. 'But we have [the Supreme Court judgment] now, and this is a fantastic basis to go forward.' Speaking to journalists later, she said: 'We have spoken to the Scottish Government and asked them to withdraw some of this guidance — just even say it is under review. They do not have to reissue anything at this point, but because it is clearly unlawful, we really do need some action. 'They are telling us they have to wait for the EHRC revised guidance. We do not believe this is true.' She pointed to comments from the EHRC stating that the judgment is effective immediately, and that those with duties under the Equality Act 2010 should already be complying with the law. Ms Calder said: 'And of course, the risk to the Scottish Government if they do not act is that, if a woman is assaulted in prison next week by one of these male convicts, their liability will have skyrocketed. 'In any case, the Scottish Government tells us that the Scottish Prison Service sets its own policy — that it is an arm's-length organisation — but any case would be taken against the Scottish ministers. 'So I think they need to start to step up and take a bit of responsibility, because these things are under their remit.' Ms Calder said she believed ministers were reluctant to act as they were 'worried about a legal challenge from the other side'. 'But my message to them would be — they should be more worried about a legal challenge from the people who have the law on their side,' she added. The Scottish Government has been approached for comment.

Video captures 'Bridgerton' actor thwarting would-be phone thief
Video captures 'Bridgerton' actor thwarting would-be phone thief

The Herald Scotland

time10 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Video captures 'Bridgerton' actor thwarting would-be phone thief

Security footage shows the English performer sitting on Feb. 8 as a man grabs her device from her table while she's looking away. As he walks away, she quickly notices and does not hesitate to stop him. With the help of a bystander, Chenneour kicks and pushes the man to the ground, takes her phone back and appears to strike him with it. "I had a bit of a sixth sense that something wasn't quite right. As a woman, you have that kind of intuition," Chenneour said in an interview on the "This Morning" talk show. "I could feel people moving around me in a different way, but I only became aware of it once the incident had happened." Chenneour she believes the man had spent time picking the perfect target, which she quickly proved wasn't her. She explained that she remembers kicking him back with her leg to create distance in case he had a weapon on him. Looking back she understands that not everyone would have fought back, but said she instinctually opted to because of her experiences as a boxer and growing up with three brothers. "I thought that was a normal reaction, and then I read all the comments and realized actually a lot of people would just let them take the phone," she said. "It was just a life changing, crazy moment." Chenneour said she felt scared to leave home after incident While Chenneour managed to leave the business with her phone, she said the experience impacted her anxiety, making her more fearful to leave her home. "As a woman, we already have our wits about us around strangers and random men. So to have this happen to me while dealing with that probably base level that a lot of women have just made me quite agoraphobic," she said. She added that the experience opened up many conversations that made her more aware of how many people are afraid of being out in public. London's Metropolitan Police Service arrested an 18-year-old man who is set to be sentenced over theft and assault charges on June 17, according to BBC. Who is Genevieve Chenneour? Chenneour is 27-year-old English actor best known for her role in Netflix's "Bridgerton." In Season 3 of the hit romance show she plays Clara Livingston, a debutante at the start of the 1815 season. She is a former professional athlete who grew up in a military family, according to her IMDb page. She has prior experiences in dance, swimming and gymnastics and said she is a carded member of the American Boxing Association.

Chilling last CCTV sighting of Brit before he vanished from holiday Airbnb
Chilling last CCTV sighting of Brit before he vanished from holiday Airbnb

Daily Mirror

time20 hours ago

  • Daily Mirror

Chilling last CCTV sighting of Brit before he vanished from holiday Airbnb

Denis Kopanev, 33, was wearing a dark-coloured baseball cap, a white shirt, and a matching beige jacket and trousers when he left his holiday let in Rio de Janeiro on Monday A British tourist who mysteriously vanished from his Airbnb while on holiday in Brazil was last seen leaving the property on CCTV. Denis Kopanev left his accommodation on Monday and hasn't been seen or heard from since. CCTV cameras filmed him leaving the home wearing beige jacket and trousers, a dark baseball cap, and a white shirt. He also appeared to carry a small bag. The last-known footage of the holidaymaker has been since shared on social media by Brazil media. The 33-year-old, who is Russian with British citizenship, was staying at a condominium in the trendy neighbourhood of Gávea in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Friends and family members have not heard from him since Monday. ‌ ‌ Denis, who works as a financial analyst in London, was supposed to travel to São Paulo the following day to meet an American friend. They were then planning to travel together to Fernando de Noronha, a volcanic archipelago about 215 miles off Brazil's north-eastern coast. The last location on his phone was at the Rodrigo de Freitas Lagoon near his accommodation in Rio. Denis never checked out of the property and his passport and belongings were left in the room. His disappearance was registered at the police station on Wednesday. According to his best friend Benone Moura, Denis loved Brazil and visited the country often, including as recently as six months ago. The friend said he never travelled without letting his friends and family know beforehand. Moura said he last spoke with him at around 5pm on Sunday. Family members contacted the British Embassy and filed a report, but have yet to receive any news. The case is being investigated by the Rio de Janeiro Whereabouts Discovery Unit (DDPA). Denis isn't the first Brit to go missing in Brazil in recent months. Journalist Charlotte Alice Peet, 32, was missing for four months, before she was found in a São Paulo hostel, when it was reported that she had admitted she didn't want to be in contact with her family, and the case was then closed by the local authorities. She is said to have told a pal she was in São Paulo on February 8, and planning to go to Rio de Janeiro, before her family stopped hearing from her, and quickly reported her missing. She was located by authorities using data from her phone.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store