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‘Drug texts' to CCTV: Liam Payne cops lay out bombshell evidence against final suspects facing trial over star's death
‘Drug texts' to CCTV: Liam Payne cops lay out bombshell evidence against final suspects facing trial over star's death

Scottish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

‘Drug texts' to CCTV: Liam Payne cops lay out bombshell evidence against final suspects facing trial over star's death

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) PROSECUTORS have revealed bombshell evidence against two men due to face trial over Liam Payne's death. Waiter Braian Nahuel Paiz and former hotel worker Ezequiel David Pereyra have been held in prison since the start of January after being charged with selling the former One Direction singer cocaine. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 7 Singer Liam at the world premiere of the film "I am Bolt" prior to his death 7 Argentinian waiter Paiz (r) is one of two men charged with supplying drugs to Liam Credit: Not known, clear with picture desk 7 The former One Direction star's hotel room was found littered with drug paraphenalia Credit: Twitter Liam, 31, took the cocaine before his fatal third-storey balcony plunge in Buenos Aires on October 16 last year. Argentinian prosecutors obtained phone messages and hotel CCTV footage which included images of Liam standing by the open door of a lift at the CasaSur Palermo Hotel. It showed him chatting with a man identified as Pereyra shortly before the singer died. During the brief encounter, the British star is said to have asked him for 'seven grams of the same drug he had handed him earlier.' Prosecutors have now gone public with more details of their dossiers, revealing they had 'incriminating' witness statements from five hotel employees against 24-year-old Pereyra. He and Paiz have been warned they face up to 15 years in prison if convicted. CCTV footage allegedly shows him handing Liam 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'. Liam Payne's girlfriend Kate Cassidy fights back tears in emotional new video as she sends heartfelt message to late star 'At 2:30a.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 cocaine on two separate occasions before his death, was based partly on messages the two men had exchanged. The messages were discovered on the singer's phone after he plunged to his death. 7 An aerial view of the poolside area of the hotel where British singer Liam Payne died Credit: AFP 7 Mourning fans around the world left floral tributes - this one was in Wolverhampton Credit: Alamy 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 marijuana 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. 7

‘Drug texts' to CCTV: Liam Payne cops lay out bombshell evidence against final suspects facing trial over star's death
‘Drug texts' to CCTV: Liam Payne cops lay out bombshell evidence against final suspects facing trial over star's death

The Irish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

‘Drug texts' to CCTV: Liam Payne cops lay out bombshell evidence against final suspects facing trial over star's death

PROSECUTORS have revealed bombshell evidence against two men due to face trial over Liam Payne's death. Waiter 7 Singer Liam at the world premiere of the film "I am Bolt" prior to his death 7 Argentinian waiter Paiz (r) is one of two men charged with supplying drugs to Liam Credit: Not known, clear with picture desk 7 The former One Direction star's hotel room was found littered with drug paraphenalia Credit: Twitter Liam, 31, took the cocaine before his Argentinian prosecutors obtained phone messages and hotel CCTV footage which included images of Liam standing by the open door of a lift at the CasaSur Palermo Hotel. It showed him chatting with a man identified as Pereyra shortly before the singer died. During the brief encounter, the British star is said to have asked him for 'seven grams of the same drug he had handed him earlier.' Read more on World News Prosecutors have now gone public with more details of their dossiers, revealing they had 'incriminating' witness statements from five hotel employees against 24-year-old Pereyra. He and Paiz have been warned they face up to 15 years in prison if convicted. CCTV footage allegedly shows him handing Liam 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." Most read in Showbiz 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'. Liam Payne's girlfriend Kate Cassidy fights back tears in emotional new video as she sends heartfelt message to late star 'At 2:30a.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 cocaine on two separate occasions before his death, was based partly on messages the two men had exchanged. The messages were discovered on the singer's phone after he plunged to his death. 7 An aerial view of the poolside area of the hotel where British singer Liam Payne died Credit: AFP 7 Mourning fans around the world left floral tributes - this one was in Wolverhampton Credit: Alamy 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 marijuana 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. 7 7 Liam Payne with girlfriend Kate Cassidy attend The Fashion Awards together in 2022 Credit: Getty

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 Mirror

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

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

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.

Brit tourist fighting for life after being mowed down by drug driver
Brit tourist fighting for life after being mowed down by drug driver

Daily Mirror

time21-05-2025

  • Daily Mirror

Brit tourist fighting for life after being mowed down by drug driver

A British tourist has been left fighting for his life after being run over by a drugged-up driver in Madrid. The 35-year-old holidaymaker was hit as he tried to cross the road near the Spanish capital's Atocha Railway Station. The man who knocked him down, a private hire vehicle driver believed to work for Uber or Cabify, tested positive for drugs at the scene and was arrested. He has not been named but has been identified as a 33-year-old from Venezuela. The victim, who suffered a severe head injury. He was rushed to Madrid's 12 de Octubre Hospital and reportedly admitted to intensive care. The incident unfolded in the early hours of Saturday morning. The unnamed British tourist is said to have been crossing the Paseo del Prado, a beautiful boulevard lined with hundred-year-old trees that connects the Carlos V roundabout and Cibeles Square and is home to some of Madrid's most renowned museums. It was named a World Heritage Site in July 2021 along with the nearby El Retiro Park. Police sources said the injured man had crossed the road 'improperly' at a spot where there are no traffic lights or pedestrian crossing.

Spain's PM accused of putting net-zero ideology first after blackout chaos
Spain's PM accused of putting net-zero ideology first after blackout chaos

Telegraph

time30-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Telegraph

Spain's PM accused of putting net-zero ideology first after blackout chaos

Spain's Socialist prime minister was accused of putting green ideology ahead of energy security after a massive blackout plunged the country into chaos on Monday. Alberto Núñez Feijóo, leader of the opposition People's Party, said Pedro Sánchez was covering up information about the cause of the power cut and prioritising green ideology in his energy policy. The prime minister was 'saddling our energy system with a massive ideological burden', Mr Feijóo said on Tuesday. 'What happened? Could it happen again? I'd like to be able to answer those questions but the official information we have at this time is not clear or reliable.' 'It will all come out in the end,' Mr Feijóo added in reference to an impending European Commission report on the power cuts. Red Eléctrica, Spain's public electricity provider, said its preliminary diagnosis showed that Monday's system collapse – which knocked out power across Spain, Portugal and parts of France – was caused by a drop in solar power generation. Earlier this year, it warned of blackouts due to the country's increasing reliance on renewable energy, saying 'generation disconnections' could be 'severe' because of how much the country relies on wind and solar sources. According to the Spanish press, the Popular Party asserted that Mr Sanchez knew about the Red Eléctrica warning and 'ignored it'. The prime minister told Red Eléctrica on Tuesday that 'there was not a problem of excessive renewables [generation] nor of demand being unmet'. Beatriz Corredor, the Socialist head of Red Eléctrica, claimed that Spain had 'the best [electricity] system in Europe', adding that the grid had shown great agility in recovering within 24 hours. Mr Sanchez plans to close Spain's five nuclear energy plants from 2027, and said those claiming nuclear energy could prevent future power cuts were 'either ignorant or liars'. He said the cause of Monday's dramatic power blackout, one of the largest in Europe's history, remained unclear. The Spanish government's consumer affairs ministry has opened a probe into reports that ride-hailing companies increased their fares during the hours after the blackout struck, in which all train and underground services ground to a halt. According to the radio station Cadena Ser, Cabify was the worst offender, raising its fares by as much as 300 per cent, while Uber and Bolt have also been accused of price gouging, albeit to a lesser degree. The radio station quoted sources from Cabify admitting that the company's fares rose after the start of the power cut, but they claimed that 'standard charges were reintroduced when we saw how serious the situation was'. All of Spain's nuclear reactors had to be shut down due to safety concerns when the grid went out, which led Mr Sanchez to claim that 'more than a solution, these plants have been a problem'. Spain is a leader in the use of renewable energy, generating 57 per cent of its energy in 2024 from green sources. The grid frequently runs entirely from renewable sources for hours at a time, but falls back on nuclear and combined-cycle gas power plants when there is less wind and sun. Fundación Renovables, a Spanish think tank in favour of transition to renewable sources, said that Monday's crash must have been a grid management problem, not an issue with green energy. 'The disconnection of renewable plants and other generation systems was not the cause of the blackout,' it said in a statement. The think tank argued that Spain's high percentage of renewable energy and the flexibility of technologies such as hydroelectric power actually enabled the grid operator to recover more quickly. 'If Spain did not have so much renewable capacity, the return to normal grid conditions would have taken longer,' the foundation said. Spain's grid was gradually brought up to strength on Monday evening and into Tuesday mainly with renewable sources.

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