
BRYONY GORDON: Khloe Kardashian's surgery admission is SO toxic... and here's why
It happened at the weekend, quietly, in a moment you might have missed if you weren't paying close attention to the social media feed of a random 'aesthetician' based near London 's Harley Street.

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BBC News
30 minutes ago
- BBC News
Sussex Police officers served notices in fatal stabbing probe
Gross misconduct notices have been served to two police officers as part of an investigation into their actions prior to the death of a man in West April an Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) investigation was launched following the fatal stabbing of Metodi Petrov Ivanov in Bognor watchdog said the notices had been issued to a police sergeant and police constable and all parties involved had been said the serving of conduct notices did not necessarily mean disciplinary proceedings would follow. The IOPC said: "Our investigation began following receipt of a complaint referral from the force in April 2025 and relates to previous reports made to Sussex Police from May 2024 onwards."Mr Ivanov was reportedly attacked near the pier on The Esplanade on 4 April and died the following day, Sussex Police previously Uzhyk, 31, from Bognor Regis, was charged with murder on 8 was also charged with two counts of possession of a bladed article and two counts of criminal damage. His trial is scheduled for 27 April 2026 and is expected to last four Police has been contacted for a comment.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Retired detective gave talk at charity lunch over how he caught Brink's-Mat villain Kenneth Noye - only to discover he was in the audience
A retired detective has revealed he once gave a talk at a charity lunch about how he caught Brink's-Mat villain Kenneth Noye - only to discover he was in the audience. Ian Brown, 86, played a key role in solving the infamous £26million heist in 1983 - which has been dramatised for BBC show The Gold over the last two years - in the months after it took place. The officer was tasked with tracking the 6,800 gold bars after they were transported to the US and Caribbean. Mr Brown did not personally arrest Noye but he established him as a suspect following his investigation into one of the UK's most expensive robberies. But years later, the former Detective Superintendent came face to face with his adversary once again while giving a seemingly innocuous lecture at a Kent golf club. Officials at the venue took him off stage after learning of Noye's appearance in the crowd. Mr Brown told Sky News: 'I go outside and they say "he's here" and I say "who's here" and they say "that table over there in the corner, that's Kenny Noye with a baseball cap pulled down over his head".' He added that there were deep discussion about how to respond to the presence of gangster, who stabbed an undercover policeman to death during the Brink's-Mat probe before using a knife to murder motorist Stephen Cameron 11 years later. 'I said "are you serving food? Well, just use plastic knives",' the ex-cop joked. Eventually, Mr Brown went over to Noye and asked why he had shown up to a discussion about how he had killed undercover officer DC John Fordham in 1985 after finding him hiding in the grounds of his 20-acre estate in West Kingsdown, Kent. The villain was acquitted of murder in this instance but was jailed for handling the gold stolen in the Brink's-Mat robbery, before later being jailed for the stabbing of Mr Cameron. The former policeman added: 'And he said "I want to make sure you don't say I've been dealing drugs" and I said 'I've never said that Kenny".' Mr Brown insisted he would not be adjusting his presentation just because Noye was in the crowd. The gangster said he completely understood, and even offered to make an appearance on the stage with the ex-cop. It wasn't the first time the pair had come face to face, with Noye famously conducting an ill-fated TV interview with Mr Brown years before. The officer was left frustrated following the discussion as the villain repeatedly insisted he was not involved in the Brink's-Mat heist. The segment was never broadcast as prison authorities said Noye had breached his parole, even threatening to send him back to jail. The Gold has recently returned to screens for a second season but Mr Brown added that he had been left less than impressed by the show. He argued that the already enthralling story had been unnecessarily dramatised and that some characters had been completely made up. Mr Brown was also frustrated that he could not work out who was supposed to be playing him in the series. Noye was convicted in 1986 of handling stolen gold after 11 bullion bars were recovered from his home. He was jailed for 14 years and fined £500,000 and ordered to pay £200,000 costs, and served eight years behind bars. After being released, Noye then stabbed 21-year-old Mr Cameron to death on an M25 slip road in 1996 and was sentenced to life with a minimum of 16 years behind bars, before being released in 2019. The former gangster is separated from his wife Brenda Tremain, with whom he has two adult sons, Kevin and Brett. Noye was arrested after Stephen's girlfriend Danielle Cable, who witnessed the killing, was secretly taken by British police to Spain and identified Noye from a distance in a restaurant. He was extradited back to Britain in May 1999 and Miss Cable bravely gave evidence against Noye at the Old Bailey the following year. He was found guilty of murder and jailed for life.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Ex-Asda manager caught at Manchester airport smuggling 30 kilos of cannabis into UK from Thailand for £10,000 is jailed
A former Asda manager who was caught smuggling 30 kilograms of cannabis into the UK from Thailand has been jailed. Louisa De Marco, 53, was promised £10,000 if she was able to bring the drugs successfully into the country at Manchester Airport. But her attempt failed and she was detained on her arrival back on home soil on May 8. Border Force officers grabbed two suitcases from the carousel which the mother denied were hers, Chloe Fordham, prosecuting, told Manchester Crown Court. De Marco also denied packing them, telling cops that she was convinced they had tobacco in them, the Manchester Evening News reports. They actually had 31.25kg of the class B drug and, after the defendant pleaded guilty to being concerned in the fraudulent evasion of a prohibition on the importation of a class B drug, Judge Sarah Griffin handed her a prison sentence of 20 months, adding she would spend half of it behind bars. During a police interview, De Marco admitted she had met someone who told her there was money to be made smuggling cannabis into Britain, while on a previous visit to Thailand. She was then put in contact with another person who paid for her and her friend's flights to the Asian country before being offered £10,000 to bring the drugs into the UK. But the former Asda manager never received the cash amid what her barrister Bradley Mather described as 'financial difficulties' after losing her £40,000-a-year job following the Covid pandemic. De Marco also refused to hand over her phone's PIN number to police. The court heard that the defendant had also been ruled unfit to work since the incident, thanks to physical and mental health difficulties. She has also been receiving benefits. Mr Mather also claimed there had been some 'intimidation' from the handlers who had organised De Marco's smuggling mission, threatening to cancel her flight back to the UK if she didn't go through with it. He asked for the judge to spare the mother jail time, arguing that she had strong mitigation while also pointing out the potential effect it might have on her adult daughter who relies on her to afford rent at their house. But Judge Griffin said that De Marco had headed out to Thailand with her 'eyes wide open', making the case particularly serious.