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Andy Carroll and Lou Teasdale completely smitten at Glasto after holiday bust-up

Andy Carroll and Lou Teasdale completely smitten at Glasto after holiday bust-up

Daily Mirror4 days ago

EXCLUSIVE: Professional footballer Andy Carroll and his girlfriend Lou Teasdale have been seen looking 'loved up' at Glastonbury after rumours of a bust up during a holiday in Greece
Smitten couple Andy Carroll and Lou Teasdale have been spotted strolling around Glastonbury on the second day of the festival.
The couple looked relaxed in some classic Glastonbury ensembles as they walked through the VIP area of the festival. Professional footballer Andy, 36, wore his long locks down while Lou, 41, opted for a relax outfit consisting of a lose t-shirt and some baggy denim shorts.

A source told The Mirror: "Lou and Andy appeared to put their holiday spat behind them. They were very touchy feely and he couldn't stop popping his arm around here".

It comes after the couple admitted they were spoken to by police following a row between the couple on the Greek island of Mykonos. The pair, who have been dating since last year following the footballer's split with the mum of his three kids, Billi Mucklow, revealed they'd had a "heated discussion" while on the party island, but that things had been "blown out of proportion".
Andy was reportedly questioned about a bust-up he'd had with Lou at a packed beachside restaurant and then at their hotel. One worker at the Nikolus Tavern said of the first argument: 'We recognised him as the footballer Andy Carroll immediately. He seemed very drunk and furious with his partner. He was using very bad words. It was improper behaviour. The woman looked very upset.'
Reports claimed that police arrived and took the former West Ham ace, who was "very calm" to one side for a chat. He was later allowed to return to Lou, who is a well-known celebrity hairstylist.
However, hours later police were reportedly called again by staff after reports of damage to the couple's room at a £500-a-night boutique hotel.
Officers are said to have escorted Andy to a local station for questioning but no arrests were made. Another source claimed Lou did not stay with her boyfriend that night.

They said: "After the restaurant episode, there was another incident at the hotel. This time, the footballer went to the police station. We know the woman stayed somewhere else that night.'
Meanwhile, a British holidaymaker who reportedly spotted the pair while out for a stroll accused Andy of being "very drunk" adding that he shouted at Lou: "I'm done with us!"

Responding to the reports, Andy and Lou admitted that the police were called following their "heated discussion", however they insisted things had been "blown out of proportion", issuing a joint statement which read: "Whilst having a private dinner in a restaurant on a quiet holiday in Mykonos, we had a heated discussion of the sort that most couples have had on occasion. It quickly became apparent to the police that there was no reason for them to be there.
'We went outside the restaurant with them together as they insisted they wanted to 'look after' us.

'As far as we are concerned, the situation has been blown out of all proportion by an interested member of the public. No one was arrested, and no one was charged with anything.
"We are very happy, in love and looking forward to our future together, and we are disappointed that a private disagreement has become a public matter.'

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What to wear to Wimbledon this year - and what to avoid at Centre Court
What to wear to Wimbledon this year - and what to avoid at Centre Court

Metro

time42 minutes ago

  • Metro

What to wear to Wimbledon this year - and what to avoid at Centre Court

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Louisa Dunne: the story of the 58-year quest to find her killer
Louisa Dunne: the story of the 58-year quest to find her killer

Channel 4

time44 minutes ago

  • Channel 4

Louisa Dunne: the story of the 58-year quest to find her killer

By Andy Davies and Marcus Edwards Mary Dainton remembers the moment vividly. It was November 14, 2024. She was on a bus heading into Bristol when her husband called. 'The police are here,' he says. Mary, a 78-year-old former art teacher, is met at the next bus stop by two officers and driven home. 'This is about your grandmother,' one of them says. 'We have a suspect.' It is a stunning development. They think they've identified the man who raped and murdered Mary's grandmother nearly 58 years ago. And – to the astonishment of all involved in this 'coldest' of cases – he is still alive. Five days later, nine officers from Avon & Somerset Police gather outside a house in Suffolk belonging to a 92-year-old man. How often had he wondered if this day might come? Ryland Headley had outlived nearly all who'd tried to track him down. Yet confronted in his kitchen by officers from Bristol, almost six decades of deception were suddenly unravelling. 'You're under arrest on suspicion of the rape and murder of Louisa Dunne,' he is told. What's thought to be the longest crime-to-prosecution cold case murder inquiry in British history, finally had its suspect. Tony Allen knows all about the murder of Louisa Dunne . As a teenager he lived opposite 'Mrs Dunne', as he still calls her, on Britannia Road in Bristol. It was his mother, Vi Allen, who discovered Louisa's body on June 28, 1967. Neighbours had become concerned when they hadn't seen Louisa that morning. 'Mum clambered up on the windowsill and could see her [Louisa Dunne's] body on the floor… she climbed in through the open window. Initially she thought it was a heart attack. Obviously it turned out differently.' Vi Allen felt Louisa's hand. She later told police it was 'as cold as ice'. Louisa Dunne was found flat on her back in her living room. There were cuts around her chin, bruising to her neck and inner thigh and haemorrhaging in her eyes. She had been raped. A pathologist concluded that she'd likely died from asphyxiation – strangled with a scarf and having had a hand forcibly pressed against her mouth. 'It affected everybody,' Tony says, 'because it was such a horrible crime.' Louisa, whose life had once been immersed in the socialist politics of her trade unionist husband, Teddy Parker, had been widowed twice by 1967. She had two daughters, but alcoholism had left her estranged from them. Mary Dainton, her only surviving grandchild, last saw her grandmother seven years before her death: 'She was tiny. She was extremely skinny and small. So, you know, it must have been absolutely terrifying.' The murder sent shockwaves throughout Bristol. Dozens of officers were mobilised, including Dirk Aldous – one of the very few still alive who was involved in the original Louisa Dunne murder inquiry. 'I remember the intensity of it all,' Dirk says. 'It had quite an effect on Bristol at the time, and there was a real desire to get to the bottom of it.' Dirk Aldous and other detectives poured into the Easton area of Bristol. The biggest lead they had was to be found 'lifted' from the dusted powder of a window frame at the back of Louisa Dunne's house: the residual trace of a palm print. It triggered the biggest finger and palm print operation in the history of the force. The constabulary's annual report from 1967 records 91 officers were involved in the initial inquiry, 8,000 people were interviewed, and 1317 statements taken. But any hint of progress proved stubbornly elusive. Despite the vast manhunt, not a single print matched the configuration of the murderer's palm. By the time of the inquest into Louisa Dunne's death the following year, a staggering 19,286 prints had been checked against that of the suspect. By March 1970, a team of 91 officers had dwindled to just one man 'solely engaged' on the murder. The case had effectively gone 'cold'. Louisa Dunne's killer had slipped the net. And so it remained for another 57 years. 'I accepted it,' Mary tells us. 'I accepted that some murders just never get solved, and some people just have to live with that emptiness and that sadness.' She says 'the family sort of fell to pieces after the murder'. The tectonic moment which would utterly transform this story came 57 years, two months and seven days after Louisa Dunne's body was found. There had been previous work done on the case in 2009 and 2014, but it was limited in scope. A new cold case team led by DI Dave Marchant and colleague Joanne Smith decided to send some of the exhibits for forensic testing, for the first time ever. This included the knickers and skirt Louisa had been wearing that night. A swab of semen recovered at the time had subsequently been lost or destroyed. But, crucially, the fact that it had been collected in the first place offered hope. Could any traces still be found after all these years? One of the force's forensic specialists, Heidi Miller, liaised with Andy Parry, a scientist at Cellmark Forensic Services. They decided to 'semen screen' a number of items, beginning with Louisa Dunne's blue skirt. Parry's initial acid phosphatase test came back negative. He decided to try again. This time he cut out sections of the skirt for individual testing and used a chemical washing process to detect sperm cells . The front sections again proved negative. But then, on September 3, 2024, came a seismic moment: the patches from the back of the skirt, boxed away for more than half a century, revealed traces of semen. And those traces, in turn, yielded a full DNA profile. 'It was just goosebumps – and I still get those now, you know, from September last year when I remember that call,' says Heidi Miller. She was at home when Andy Parry rang her with the news. The following day, the DNA profile found on the skirt was loaded onto the UK National DNA Database. It matched a name on the system. 'That's when I first heard the name Ryland Headley,' Miller says – and then almost whispers: 'It just makes me go cold.' Soon enough, they discovered that Ryland Headley was still alive, aged 92, and living in Ipswich. Dave Marchant says that from that moment on it was 'game on…let's do this'. Operation 'Beatle' was put in motion. A 57-year search for a suspect had finally thrown up a name. But even before the case got to court, there was more to come. Ryland Headley said little in the police custody suite and offered 'no comment' answers to the questions asked about Louisa Dunne. The 92-year-old first came to Britain from Jamaica in 1956. In Bristol he found work on the railways. It's where he also met his wife, Maggie (now deceased), a hospital nurse from Barbados. They had three children together. 'He is very quiet,' an old family friend in Ipswich told us. 'You wouldn't notice him.' Heidi Miller says Headley's DNA was first added to the database in 2012, linked to an unrelated offence where no further action was taken. But as Dave Marchant's team delved deeper into his background, a startling revelation emerged. And a whole new light was about to be shed on another major crime story lost in the passage of time. It involved a huge manhunt for a rapist in Ipswich in 1977. 'Ipswich Rapist Could Kill – psychiatrist warns,' a headline in the East Anglian Daily Times read at the time. He had already raped two elderly widows, aged 79 and 84. 'It was a massive case for the force,' Trevor Mason, then a detective sergeant with Suffolk Police, recalls. He remembers officers being drafted in from Special Branch, intelligence units, the drug and fraud squads, all to assist the manhunt. 'We just about dropped everything and came in to help.' As in Bristol ten years earlier, a huge fingerprinting operation swung into action. Five thousand local men had their prints taken. 'If necessary we will fingerprint every man in Ipswich,' CID Chief Bert Jenkins told the press at the time. But they didn't have to. Officers eventually took the fingerprints of Ryland Headley, then a 45-year-old night shift machinist living in Ipswich. Analysts would later match his prints to those found at one of the scenes. The reaction was one of 'elation', according to Mason. 'We were really, really over the moon. What those poor women suffered was absolutely horrendous.' Five months later, Headley pleaded guilty at Ipswich Crown Court to multiple burglaries and two counts of rape. The harrowing accounts of his victims detail how he broke in to their homes and, in the darkness, threatened to kill them before raping them. One of them tried to bite him, but her false teeth weren't in, prompting her to plead with him: 'Haven't you got a mother?' Jailing Headley, the judge told him 'the sentence of this court must reflect the horror' of his conduct, concluding: 'I am passing a sentence on each count of life imprisonment.' But Headley's legal team appealed the life sentence, on the grounds that it was 'excessive' for a man previously of 'good character and reputation'. His barrister claimed the rapes were 'so far out of character that it is most difficult if not impossible to explain them'. The Appeal Court lent heavily on the account of an independent psychiatrist who argued that Headley had 'acted impulsively whilst he was in a state of sexual frustration and in the act of trying to financially appease his wife by petty burglary'. The appeal was successful. A decade after Louisa Dunne's still unsolved rape and murder, Ryland Headley's life sentence was reduced to just seven years. He walked out of prison in 1980. The decades of deceit eventually imploded in courtroom 1 of Bristol Crown Court on June 30, 2025. Aptly, just two days after the 58th anniversary of Louisa Dunne's murder. If Ryland Headley had 'conned the justice system' (in the words of Trevor Mason) in Ipswich in 1979, his attempt to do so again was utterly exposed. Wearing a red jumper, both hands grasping a hearing loop, he showed little sign of emotion throughout his trial. His 'not guilty' plea to the rape and murder of Louisa Dunne was roundly rejected by the jury. It took them nine hours and 53 minutes to return their guilty verdicts. He will be sentenced on Tuesday. The trial in itself was extraordinary. As the prosecution barrister Anna Vigars KC pointed out to the jury, it was examining – in 2025 – the murder of a woman born in the reign of Queen Victoria. And the evidence was overwhelming. From the DNA match to the palm print. Four fingerprint analysts told the jury that the ridge characteristics of Headley's hypothenar (the part of the palm beneath the little finger) matched the mark found on the window at Louisa Dunne's house in 1967. In fact, it also emerged that when Headley was arrested in 2012 for a separate offence and had his DNA taken, they might have been able to link him to the murder then. He'd been asked to give his palm print then (potentially triggering a match on the system), but he declined apparently after claiming 'arthritis' prevented his wrists from flexing enough to do so. 'I think he's a coward,' forensic coordinator Heidi Miller tells us. 'I think he would have gone to his death bed not ever telling anyone what he had done. There would have been no closure for anyone.' Yet as one question – who killed Louisa Dunne? – is finally answered, another leaves a deeply unsettling postscript: what else may 92-year-old Ryland Headley have buried in his past? Dave Marchant says he 'cannot rule out' other crimes. His team are currently liaising with other English forces and colleagues in the National Crime Agency to see 'if there is an opportunity to identify further offences'. During the trial, Mary Dainton and her husband sat a few metres away from Headley. For Mary, Louisa's only surviving grandchild, this is a moment which will take time to absorb. She is now trying to piece together more information about a grandmother she was mostly prevented from knowing. 'I still feel days when this isn't real. I do feel connected to her, and I've got no idea why, except DNA. The thing that caught him [Headley] has caught me. I do feel deeply linked to her.' After her murder, a close friend said Louisa Dunne spoke always of the past and never of the present. Now the present has righted a wrong from the past. 58 years on, the murder of Louisa Dunne has finally been solved. Watch more here: 92-year-old man pleads not guilty to rape and murder cold case from 1967

Glastonbury Festival 2027: Who are the rumoured names to headline the event next?
Glastonbury Festival 2027: Who are the rumoured names to headline the event next?

Scotsman

timean hour ago

  • Scotsman

Glastonbury Festival 2027: Who are the rumoured names to headline the event next?

Who do people already think will headline Glastonbury Festival 2027? Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... As many make their way home from Worthy Farm today, there is no rest for the rumour mill. Several names have been speculated as to who 'could' headline the next Glastonbury Festival after the event's fallow year in 2026. William Hill have revealed their odds who could headline, including the favourite being a beloved UK performer. The dust and clean-up operation hasn't even settled nor begun just yet at Worthy Farm after Glastonbury 2025 , but that's not stopped the rumour mill suggesting your 2027 headliners. The festival, set to undertake a well-earned fallow year in 2026, saw surprise sets from Pulp, Lewis Capaldi, Lorde and Haim, but as many revellers look to make their return after last week's festival - and the controversy surrounding Bob Vylan's set - bookmakers have already starting publish odds who 'could' perform when the event returns in 2027. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Not 24 hours after the festival's climax, bookmakers are already giving odds who could headline 2027's event after Glastonbury's fallow year in 2026. | Getty Images William Hill have released their latest odds of who could be your headline acts on the Pyramid Stage in 2027, with some usual suspects being predicted alongside a host of fantastic British names that could fly the flag when the event returns in two years time. So, who do the bookies think will join the likes of this year's acts Neil Young, The 1975 and Olivia Rodrigo as headliners at Glastonbury 2027? Who do bookies think will headline Glastonbury Festival 2027? According to William Hill, Sam Fender is currently the frontrunner to headline the iconic Pyramid Stage, with odds of 2/1. Close behind, sharing joint second place at 3/1, are global superstars Ed Sheeran and Taylor Swift . A host of other massive names are also in contention at 4/1, including Beyoncé , Rihanna , Miley Cyrus , and Eminem . Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Interestingly, rock legends Oasis , ahead of their highly anticipated reunion tour, are also tipped at 4/1 to headline Glastonbury in 2027, a prospect many fans would undoubtedly be thrilled to see. "The mammoth Glastonbury clear up might just be getting underway after this year's festival, but there's already speculation about who could be the next headliners," said Lee Phelps, spokesperson for William Hill . "We make Geordie singer Sam Fender a narrow 2/1 favourite... This week's hugely anticipated Oasis return could well set them up for major festivals in the coming years and we also make the Gallagher brothers 4/1 to headline Glastonbury in 2027." Who do you think could headline the next Glastonbury Festival, or who do you want to see headline the Pyramid Stage in 2027? Make your choices by leaving a comment down below and let's speculate together.

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