Connect with us
DAPA Banner
DAPA Coin
DAPA
COIN PAYMENT ASSET
PRIVACY · BLOCKDAG · HOMOMORPHIC ENCRYPTION · RUST
ElGamal Encrypted MINE DAPA
🚫 GENESIS SOLD OUT
DAPAPAY COMING

NewsBeat

British widow ‘forced to bury her husband in an unmarked grave’ in Cape Verde after he fell ill and died there on holiday

Published

on

Retired forklift driver Colin Timson, 74, started to feel unwell on the second day of his holiday in Cape Verde, and died the following evening

A widow has revealed she was forced to bury her husband in an unmarked grave in Cape Verde after he fell ill on holiday.

His sudden death – and that of another tourist – takes the number of Britons who have died on all-inclusive trips there since 2023 to at least 10.

Retired forklift driver Colin Timson, 74, was on holiday on the African island with his wife Jacqueline when he started suffering with sickness and diarrhoea. 

The next morning she returned from breakfast to find him collapsed. Mr Timson was taken to hospital but died the same evening, in July 2024.

Advertisement

Cape Verde authorities said the cause of his death was acute gastroenteritis and digestive bleeding. This, they said, had led to dehydration, severe anaemia and septic shock.

Ms Timson, 69, who also fell ill with stomach cramps, said she had to bury her husband just three days later in an unmarked grave, as she believed her travel insurance would not cover the costs of flying his body home.

‘I was told there wasn’t an option to have a cremation in Cape Verde,’ she said. 

‘I couldn’t even bring his ashes home. Instead, he’s buried in an unmarked grave, alone, thousands of miles away from his family.’

Advertisement

Retired forklift driver Colin Timson, 74, started to feel unwell on the second day of his holiday in Cape Verde, and died the following evening

Jacqueline Timson was forced to bury her husband in an unmarked grave, as she did not believe her travel insurance would cover the costs of repatriating his body

Jacqueline Timson was forced to bury her husband in an unmarked grave, as she did not believe her travel insurance would cover the costs of repatriating his body

The couple, from Heighington, near Lincoln, had been to Cape Verde before, and forked out £2,000 for a second trip with the travel firm TUI.

Advertisement

However, Ms Timson, a retired factory worker, said their all-inclusive hotel, the Riu Funana, did not seem to be of the ‘same standard’.

‘Some of the food appeared to be undercooked and was lukewarm,’ she said. ‘The toilets round the pool were full of dead cockroaches and we didn’t go in because the water looked yellow.

‘When [Colin] left the clinic to go to hospital I went back to the hotel as I was told he would be in safe hands and to visit him the following day.

‘I didn’t even know he’d died until I arrived at the hospital. When I heard the news my world fell apart. Everything was a blur.’

Advertisement

The family of another British tourist who died during a TUI package trip have also spoken out today.

Laurence Brownlie, 67, a retired IT engineer from West Lothian, was on holiday only a month before the Timsons.

He became unwell on June 5, while staying at the five-star Melia Llana Beach Resort and Spa in Cape Verde with his wife, Glenna Brownlie, 66.

A few days later, he stood up from the dinner table and collapsed. Flight crew dining nearby attempted CPR, but they were unable to revive him.

Advertisement

According to a death certificate issued by the local authorities, he had suffered a suspected heart attack.

Laurence Brownlie, 67, a retired IT engineer from West Lothian, and his wife Glenna, were on holiday only a month before the Timsons

Laurence Brownlie, 67, a retired IT engineer from West Lothian, and his wife Glenna, were on holiday only a month before the Timsons

Laurence, pictured, died three days after falling unwell in Cape Verde

Laurence, pictured, died three days after falling unwell in Cape Verde

Mr Brownlie’s wife and three daughters – who flew out after his death – said they were unable to see his body before he was returned to the UK.

Advertisement

They reported flies in the food at the hotel and said there was no defibrillator available.

One of his daughters, Erin, 34, said: ‘Dad should have been coming home at the end of their holiday. Instead, our family was left trying to come to terms with losing him in such traumatic circumstances.

‘I can’t imagine how harrowing it must have been for my mum seeing her soulmate pass away in front of her.

‘We’re hearing too many stories of people suffering serious illness or even dying on holidays. The least we now owe Dad is to honour his memory by establishing answers he deserves.’

Advertisement

More than 2,500 people who have visited Cape Verde since 2022 are taking legal action against TUI after they contracted the likes of salmonella, E. Coli and shigella.

This includes around 600 who have come forward in the past four months, after media reports raised the alarm in January.

Jatinder Paul, from the law firm Irwin Mitchell which is representing those affected, said: ‘It’s staggering that we continue to be contacted by hundreds more people reporting how their holidays have been ruined by serious illness.

‘The first-hand accounts from those who have lost loved ones are harrowing.’

Advertisement

Other British holidaymakers who have died include part-time nurse and mother-of-one Elena Walsh, 64, from Birmingham, who died last August, Jane Pressley, 62, from Gainsborough, who died in January 2023, and Mark Ashley, 55, from Houghton Regis, Bedfordshire, who died last November.

Karen Pooley, 64, from Lydney, Gloucestershire, died last October after she fell ill at the Riu Funana resort – the same hotel where Mr Timson stayed.

Under UK law, package holiday providers bear legal responsibility for the standards of all services provided, including food, hygiene, and accommodation, even if they are delivered by a third-party hotel abroad.

A spokesman for TUI said: ‘Our thoughts remain with the families affected. TUI provided support in both cases, including assistance to family members and those directly impacted.’

Advertisement

‘Our records do not contain reports of diarrhoea and vomiting being made to TUI at the time, and notes recorded by our team indicate that Mrs Timson reported her husband had been feeling unwell during the flight to Cape Verde.

‘Mrs Timson thanked TUI reps for their support when our customer care team was in contact on her return to the UK.’

The travel firm added that the first it had heard of the Timsons’ and the Brownlies’ legal claims was yesterday, and that for legal reasons, ‘it would not be appropriate for us to comment further on the specifics of either case’.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Click to comment

You must be logged in to post a comment Login

Leave a Reply

NewsBeat

Man charged after mosque replica placed on loyalist bonfire in Co Tyrone

Published

on

Belfast Live

A 56-year-old man has been charged with incitement to hatred after a replica of a mosque was placed on top of a loyalist bonfire pyre in Moygashel, Co Tyrone

A man faces charges following the placement of a replica mosque atop a loyalist bonfire in Co Tyrone.

The model structure was spotted on the pyre in Moygashel on Thursday. Placards reading “Secure our borders” and “End the threat of radical Islam” were also affixed to the bonfire, which had been scheduled for ignition on Friday night.

Advertisement

The Police Service of Northern Ireland reported that the bonfire was actually set ablaze on Thursday night, complicating efforts to dismantle the hate-related display.

A force spokesperson explained: “Had the bonfire not been lit police would have secured the site and removed the offending material and seized it as evidence.

“The Police Service of Northern Ireland’s investigation into this hate motivated crime is ongoing.”

Advertisement

A 56-year-old man has been charged with incitement to hatred and will appear at court on Friday, 10 July.

Chief Superintendent Norman Haslett stated: “Hate crime has no place in our society and will not be tolerated.

“That is why tonight we commenced a proactive policing operation to take action and remove the hate display from Moygashel Bonfire. In advance of police arrival the bonfire was set alight a day in advance to prevent removal of the criminal material.

“Where there is evidence that offences have been committed, we will take robust action.

Advertisement

“As part of our ongoing investigation, a 56-year-old man has been charged with incitement to hatred. He is due to appear before Dungannon Magistrates’ Court on Friday 10 July. As is normal procedure, all charges are reviewed by the Public Prosecution Service.”

This particular bonfire has sparked outrage in past years. Last year saw widespread condemnation after effigies depicting migrants in a boat were set ablaze at the Moygashel fire.

Eleventh night bonfires are scheduled to be lit throughout Northern Ireland on Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights in advance of the Orange Order’s 12 July parades on Monday. While the majority of these bonfires proceed without incident, a number have become the centre of controversy with flags, effigies and election posters positioned on the pyres before they are set alight.

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Can You Keep Kids Off School When It’s Hot? What A Lawyer Says

Published

on

Can You Keep Kids Off School When It's Hot? What A Lawyer Says

This week has been toasty (yet again) across the UK – with the evenings not offering much respite either.

It’s meant children’s bedtimes and sleep have been hugely disrupted which is, in turn, impacting their mood. You might be seeing more meltdowns on the playground during drop-offs, with young kids seeming more lethargic, tearful and clingy than usual.

Add that to the fact plenty of older school buildings do not having air conditioning installed, and you’ve got yourself a recipe for hot, bothered and exhausted children.

Some parents might be tempted to let them stay at home for the odd day, where it’s cooler and they can rest, but Samantha Hale, an education solicitor at HCB Widdows Mason, warns they could face fines for doing so.

Advertisement

“Parents cannot take their child out of school unless it closes and, if they do, it will count towards their unauthorised absences, risking fines,” she explained.

When should schools close in the heat?

The solicitor said it’s “unclear” when schools can close.

Guidance from the Department for Education, which was issued during the most recent heatwave, states that schools can close temporarily if conditions become ‘unsafe’, she explained.

Advertisement

“Therefore, it would be up to the individual school to determine whether conditions are unsafe for pupils and staff to attend due to the heat and, if so, they can temporarily close.”

During the recent heatwave where a red health alert was issued for much of southern England and Wales, a number of schools closed – or opted to send pupils home early – to keep everyone safe.

But again, it’s at the school’s discretion. Usually senior staff will take a number of factors into account before they choose to shut.

The National Education Union (NEU) has said that “because of the nature of the way in which education staff work, and the presence of children, a maximum indoor working temperature of 26°C is appropriate”. On 22 June, it called for urgent funding to make schools safe in the hot weather.

Advertisement

The month before that, the Climate Change Committee (CCC) also published a report urging the UK government to improve infrastructure for “better cooling” – including air con in schools – as the climate heats up.

Heat health risks for kids

Children are more vulnerable to the effects of heat stress as they “sweat less per kilogram than adults and have a higher metabolism, which means they get hot quicker”, according to Unicef.

They’re also outdoors a lot more – playing, running around and engaging in sports – which puts them more at risk for heat exposure.

Advertisement

Young children are also at risk of dehydration as they won’t always remember to drink lots of water, which can be dangerous to health.

“Schools have a duty to keep pupils safe during a heatwave and, if they cannot, the school should temporarily close,” added Hale.

“However, if parents feel that the school conditions are unsafe for their child, they should raise their concerns with the school and see what their response is.”

This echoes government guidance which suggests if a child has a specific health condition that makes them vulnerable in the heat, they should speak to the school directly “so staff can make any additional adjustments needed”.

Advertisement

If schools stay open, students should attend

The lawyer added that if a school deems it safe to open, “pupils should attend and, if not, parents could face a non-attendance fine or prosecution”.

Parents might face a fine if a child’s absence is classed as ‘unauthorised’.

All schools are “required to consider a fine when a child has missed 10 or more sessions (5 days) for unauthorised reasons”, reads government guidance. A full day at school – morning and afternoon – is considered two sessions.

Advertisement

A child’s previous attendance counts, too. So, if they’ve had unauthorised absences in the past, these also count towards the five-day tipping point where a fine would be considered.

Hale added that parents who receive a non-attendance fine for keeping kids at home when it’s hot can appeal it, “but there is no guarantee it would be successful, as the school would argue in these cases that it was safe for children to attend”.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Firms improving design of products and services under Consumer Duty, FCA finds

Published

on

Firms improving design of products and services under Consumer Duty, FCA finds

“The good practice we’ve found really matters because where products are poorly targeted, or firms lose sight of what’s happening across their distribution chains, consumers can lose out – whether that’s poorly performing products, slow complaint resolution, or paying for services that don’t meet their needs.”

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Taylor Swift’s new sister-in-law Kylie Kelce gives one word review of pop icon’s massive MSG wedding

Published

on

Taylor Swift's sister-in-law Kylie Kelce has opened up about her wedding to Travis Kelce, held at Madison Square Garden last Friday; pictured in May

Taylor Swift‘s new sister-in-law Kylie Kelce has opened up about the pop superstar’s wedding to Travis Kelce, held at Madison Square Garden last Friday.

The 34-year-old Not Gonna Lie podcast host, who is married to Travis’ brother Jason Kelce, gushed that the extravagant ceremony was ‘incredible,’ per People.

She joined husband Jason, 38, at the American Century Championship in Lake Tahoe on Thursday, where the former NFL star also gave his thoughts on the nuptials.

According to the New York Post, Jason said the wedding was both ‘a good time,’ and ‘great’. 

Advertisement

It was also reported that the former Philadelphia Eagles star was asked if he had more or less than 15 beers at the event, to which he replied that he had ‘way over’ that number.

It comes one day after the famous brothers released the season four finale episode of their New Heights podcast.

Taylor Swift’s sister-in-law Kylie Kelce has opened up about her wedding to Travis Kelce, held at Madison Square Garden last Friday; pictured in May

Advertisement
The 34-year-old Not Gonna Lie podcast host gushed that Swift and Travis's extravagant ceremony was 'incredible'; the couple pictured in September 2024

The 34-year-old Not Gonna Lie podcast host gushed that Swift and Travis’s extravagant ceremony was ‘incredible’; the couple pictured in September 2024

Travis reminisced on his elaborate proposal plan on the latest show, which came out on Wednesday, days after he and Swift tied the knot.

Travis, 36, named Swift’s, also 36, appearance on the show in August 2025 as one of his favorite memories from the season.

‘Ending this season with Tom Brady. Pretty epic. Starting it with Taylor. Pretty epic,’ he said at one point.

Advertisement

The Kansas City Chiefs tight end also reflected on the day he proposed to the Love Story singer, which he said occurred after her podcast taping. 

‘During that recording, the entire time I’m planning like, I’m gonna ask this woman to marry me after this,’ he recalled.

It’s unclear when exactly the podcast was filmed, but People reported that the episode took place before their July 3 wedding. 

As Travis kept Swift busy in August 2025, a team descended on his home garden to stage the setting for his proposal, according to Page Six.

Advertisement

He hired the crew to set up while they were filming, so that he could ask the songstress for her hand in marriage immediately after.

Kylie is married to Travis's brother Jason Kelce; pictured in September 2023

Kylie is married to Travis’s brother Jason Kelce; pictured in September 2023

Swift and Kylie pictured at a Kansas City Chiefs game

Swift and Kylie pictured at a Kansas City Chiefs game

Swift and Travis pictured sharing a kiss at game three of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals between the New York Knicks and the Cleveland Cavaliers in May 2026

Swift and Travis pictured sharing a kiss at game three of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals between the New York Knicks and the Cleveland Cavaliers in May 2026

Advertisement

Join the discussion

Do you think celebrity weddings have become too extravagant and out of touch with reality?

Swift and Travis announced their engagement news in a joint Instagram post shared in August 2025.

The caption of the iconic post, which has over 37 million likes, read: ‘Your English teacher and your gym teacher are getting married.’

Advertisement

The bride and groom invited 1,000 guests to their over-the-top ceremony, which reportedly cost $50 million to execute.

Attendees were treated to a raffle, which resulted in some guests leaving with Cartier watches and Chanel handbags.   

On their wedding night, the bride and groom reportedly ordered more than 100 pizzas from one of New York City’s Mama’s TOO restaurants.

According to Us Weekly, the huge order included a spread of nearly every pizza offered by the eatery, which sells pies ranging from $29.50 to $50.

Advertisement

Per the outlet, owner Frank Tuttolomondo made it a point to personally deliver the tens of pies.

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Coastguard agency responds to criticism of ‘cruel’ Yorkshire cuts

Published

on

Coastguard agency responds to criticism of ‘cruel’ Yorkshire cuts

​​More than half of the coastguards in Yorkshire and Humberside would be forced to reduce their hours or stop volunteering altogether over plans to strip coastguard officers of their hourly pay, the GMB Union has said.

​​The Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) plans to make coastguards volunteers rather than paid workers from later in the year.

​A Maritime and Coastguard Agency spokesperson said: “The decision to move the Coastguard Rescue Service to a revised volunteer model follows a legal judgment, which meant we needed to change how the service operates.”

​Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS), they said: “We deeply value and recognise the significant service Coastguard Rescue Officers provide along our coastline and we will continue to work towards a model that supports our Coastguards and helps to keep the public safe.”

Advertisement

​The scheme to change the status of coastguards follows a court of appeal ruling, which confirmed that people who had been serving as coastguard rescue officers (CROs) have been doing so as workers, rather than volunteers.

​Subsequently, the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) decided to stop the payments from September, in order to start legally classing CROs as volunteers.

​The MCA has said its current model did account for CROs having worker status and that it had a legal requirement to make changes.

​However, a cross-party group of coastal MPs and senior employment lawyers have cast doubt on that assertion.

Advertisement

​Joe Robertson, the Conservative MP for Isle of Wight East, said: “The government and MCA must stop peddling this line… It is simply not true.

“The court found that CROs are already workers, which is hardly surprising considering they get hourly pay and payslips.

​“The very fact the MCA is working through backdated tax liabilities and backdated pay is an admission that CROs have been workers for some time and the MCA has been in breach of certain obligations. It is the MCA which has now decided to change the CRO’s worker status since the court’s judgement.”

​Speaking to The Guardian, leading employment lawyer Nigel Mackay said the MCA would have been able to preserve coastguards’ worker status and flexibility.

Advertisement

​Alison Hume, the Labour MP for Scarborough and Whitby, said the plan “needs to be stopped, paused and re-evaluated”.

​She highlighted that CROs currently receive payments of just over £11 per hour for emergency call-outs and training commitments.

​“Stripping away their worker status risks sending entirely the wrong message to those who put themselves on the line to protect others,” the MP added.

​Almost 100 coastguards from Yorkshire and Humberside recently responded to a survey carried out by the MCA, the results of which were leaked to the GMB.

Advertisement

​The survey demonstrated that 52 per cent would be forced to reduce their hours or be unable to continue if the cuts went ahead.

​Responding to the leaked survey results, the MCA said that surveys conducted among CROs did not ask them to choose between models.

​It added that survey questions explored how differing models might affect availability, and the survey findings were considered alongside a range of operational, legal, and practical factors.

(Image: Newsquest)

Advertisement

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Conor McGregor SLAPS Max Holloway during heated face-off

Published

on

Daily Mirror

Conor McGregor brought the energy to his first face-off with Max Holloway as the Irishman lashed out at his rival ahead of their rematch

Conor McGregor threw a punch at Max Holloway as the rivals faced off for the first time.

Advertisement

McGregor will return to the UFC this weekend when he takes on Holloway in a rematch of their 2013 clash which the Irishman won on points. The Dubliner has not fought since broke his leg at the end of the first round of his trilogy fight with Dustin Poirier five years ago.

McGregor is convinced he can recapture his glory days which saw him capture featherweight and lightweight titles. But he has won just one fight in a decade and has never been far from controversial headlines during his time on the sidelines. There was, however, a glimmer of the old version as he vowed to KO Holloway.

And after their press conference, McGregor raced to the centre of the stage for the face-off, throwing a punch at Holloway before the two locked heads. Earlier, McGregor had said: “I predict destruction. I’m going to destroy Max; I’m going to eliminate Max. The final opponent of mine still within the UFC ranks. All of my other opponents are gone. Max is the last one left, and on Saturday night, he gets eliminated for good.

“I can destroy Max inside 10 seconds. I have knockouts inside three seconds on my fighting record. I have Hall of Fame fighters, multiple Hall of Fame UFC fighters defeated and destroyed both together and under a minute. And I can add Max to that. However, don’t get it twisted. If we go into these deep waters, Max is going to be in a lot of trouble, badly concussed.”

Advertisement

Watch UFC 329: McGregor vs Holloway 2 exclusively live on TNT Sports Box Office via HBO Max, EE TV, Virgin Media TV, Prime Video and Sky. For more information go to tntsports.co.uk/boxoffice

Source link

Continue Reading

NewsBeat

DWP PIP review finds PIP ‘not fit for purpose’

Published

on

Cambridgeshire Live

The DWP has published the interim Timms Review report on Personal Independence Payment (PIP) – and it finds the disability benefit is failing claimants and is ‘not fit for purpose’

The disability benefit Personal Independence Payment ( PIP ) is no longer fit for purpose, according to findings from a new review. The Timms Review has concluded that PIP has failed to adapt to changes in disability, health and employment over the last decade.

PIP is a disability benefit administered by the DWP, designed to assist with some of the additional costs arising from long-term disability, ill-health or when individuals are nearing the end of their life due to a progressive disease.

The benefit, received by over four million people as of April 2026, assists those requiring help with daily living activities, particularly individuals of State Pension age who wish to remain independent at home.

Advertisement

However, a review drawing on responses from more than 38,000 people has concluded that the disability benefit is no longer suitable. The evidence collected by the Timms Review will inform Government recommendations on reforming the system – a change expected later this year, reports the Manchester Evening News.

The interim report released on Thursday (July 9) forms part of the first thorough review of PIP since the benefit was launched in 2013.

Alongside the 38,000 claimant responses, the review conducted workshops and engagement sessions with disabled people, their organisations and specialists, making it one of the largest co-produced reviews undertaken by the government, according to the DWP. The report has concluded that, while PIP is widely regarded as a valuable cash benefit, it is failing to function as intended for disabled people and wider society.

Although many disabled people report that PIP is essential in helping them meet the additional costs of living with a disability and engaging in everyday life, others indicated that PIP creates obstacles to full participation in work, social and community life — particularly for those with fluctuating conditions, less visible conditions or multiple conditions.

Advertisement

The claims process was viewed negatively by 90 per cent of respondents, and was described on occasion as “dehumanising”, “degrading” and “stressful”, with the use of supporting evidence deemed too frequently inconsistent. Just 5 per cent of responses regarding the process were positive.

The report further highlighted a significant lack of trust in the system, underlining the urgent need to rebuild confidence amongst disabled people, those with long-term conditions, and taxpayers alike.

PIP was introduced in 2013 to help offset the additional costs associated with disability and to support independent living, yet has not undergone a full review since its inception. The Timms Review was launched last October with the objective of ensuring PIP remains fair and fit for purpose in an ever-changing world, and that it effectively supports disabled people in achieving better health, higher living standards and greater independence, including through employment.

Sharon Brennan, co-chair of the Review, said: “Improving trust in the system – both from the public and those going through the system – is vital if PIP is to be fit and fair for the future. Of those that responded to the steering group’s Call for Evidence, over 90 per cent described negative experiences of the process of claiming PIP, with concerns raised around all aspects of the process from application through to assessment and appeals.

Advertisement

“We are immensely grateful to the tens of thousands of people who have taken the time to share their lived experience and make a valuable contribution to this Review. We’ve heard loud and clear: PIP is highly valued as a benefit but is not fit for purpose. We are committed to making changes so that PIP can fulfil its purpose.”

Dr Clenton Farquharson CBE, co-chair of the Review, said: “PIP should contribute to disabled people meeting the extra costs of disability and participate in everyday life. What we have heard through this Review is that, while PIP is a lifeline for many people, the system too often fails to understand the reality of people’s lives.

“Disabled people have told us about a process that can feel stressful, dehumanising and hard to navigate, especially for people with fluctuating conditions, less visible or multiple conditions. That matters, because a system that does not feel fair or humane will not command trust from disabled people or from the wider public.

“This Review is significant because disabled people, Disabled People’s Organisations and experts are helping and supporting to shape the work from the inside, not simply being consulted from the outside. As we move towards final recommendations, we need to be bold in our ambition, practical in our proposals, and focused on making PIP fair, trusted and fit for the future.”

Advertisement

Sir Stephen Timms, Minister for Social Security and Disability and co-chair of the Review, said: “This interim report delivers a clear message: while PIP is widely valued as a benefit, it is not working as intended and needs fundamental change.

“Our work so far has been informed by a wide range of evidence, expertise, and insight to ensure we hear from as many disabled people as possible across the country, including through workshops, engagement and a call for evidence which attracted more than 38,000 responses.

“I’m grateful to my fellow co-chairs and the steering group for their intensive work and look forward to the Review’s final report being delivered in the autumn.”

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Margaret Qualley and Jack Antonoff’s gigantic recently-renovated summer beach house lies empty as actress disappears after shock separation

Published

on

Margaret Qualley, 31, and Jack Antonoff's, 42, recently-renovated summer beach house appears to lie empty following the pair's shock separation; seen in 2024 in L.A.

Margaret Qualley and Jack Antonoff’s recently-renovated summer beach house appears to lie empty following the pair’s shock separation. 

It was announced on Wednesday that the 31-year-old actress and the Grammy-winning musician, 42, reportedly have split after nearly three years of marriage.

The three-story abode is located in Long Beach Township, New Jersey and sits near public beach access. However, despite extensive work, the residence is now seemingly not in use.

The estranged couple’s house offers scenic ocean views and contains brickwork on the front. White-paned windows as well as a white-painted front and garage door stand out against the muted brick color. 

Advertisement

A gray-stoned driveway leads up to the beach house which also has green bushes and flowers at the front. 

The back of the property contains a number of large windows as well as spacious balconies and a rooftop area. 

Margaret Qualley, 31, and Jack Antonoff’s, 42, recently-renovated summer beach house appears to lie empty following the pair’s shock separation; seen in 2024 in L.A. 

Advertisement
The three-story abode is located in Long Beach Township, New Jersey and sits near public beach access. However, despite extensive work, the residence is now seemingly not in use

The three-story abode is located in Long Beach Township, New Jersey and sits near public beach access. However, despite extensive work, the residence is now seemingly not in use

The home was built on a vacant lot and construction was in high gear a few years back in 2022. 

Earlier this week on Wednesday, a source confirmed to People that Qualley and Antonoff are no longer living together and have a ‘rocky’ relationship. 

A separate insider additionally told the outlet that the two stars are in the midst of ‘figuring things out.’

Advertisement

Another source also told gossip site DeuxMoi that ‘there were many factors that allegedly contributed to the split, with those close to the situation also alleging Jack had long been difficult to live with.’

The Daily Mail has reached out to Antonoff and Qualley’s reps, but has yet to hear back. 

The Substance actress has also deleted photos of the music producer from her Instagram page, including their wedding photos from 2023

Her recent social media activity in regards to Antonoff occurred back in late March when she paid tribute to him for his birthday on her Instagram stories, which expired just 24 hours later.   

Advertisement

Qualley had uploaded a snap as the musician casually draped his arm around her shoulders. She added text over the image which read: ‘Happy birthday sweetheart.’

The estranged couple's house offers scenic ocean views and contains brickwork on the front

The estranged couple’s house offers scenic ocean views and contains brickwork on the front

White-paned windows as well as a white-painted front and garage door stand out against the muted brick color
A gray-stoned driveway leads up the beach house which also has green bushes and flowers at the front

White-paned windows as well as a white-painted front and garage door stand out against the muted brick color

The back of the property contains a number of large windows as well as spacious balconies and a rooftop area

The back of the property contains a number of large windows as well as spacious balconies and a rooftop area

Advertisement
The home was built on a vacant lot and construction was in high gear a few years back in 2022

The home was built on a vacant lot and construction was in high gear a few years back in 2022

The house is surrounded by other beachfront homes nearby

The house is surrounded by other beachfront homes nearby

Colorful flowers and other plants line each side of the large driveway on the quiet street

Colorful flowers and other plants line each side of the large driveway on the quiet street 

Earlier this week on Wednesday, a source confirmed to People that Qualley and Antonoff are no longer living together and have a 'rocky' relationship; seen in 2022 in L.A.

Earlier this week on Wednesday, a source confirmed to People that Qualley and Antonoff are no longer living together and have a ‘rocky’ relationship; seen in 2022 in L.A. 

Advertisement

Join the discussion

What do you think causes celebrity marriages like Margaret and Jack’s to fall apart so quickly?

The actress also changed her Instagram handle back to her full name Sarah Margaret Qualley after using other usernames such as @isimolady and @isimostar, which appeared to reference Antonoff’s 2024 track Isimo. 

Antonoff was one of the 1,000 guests who attended longtime collaborator Taylor Swift’s wedding last week in NYC

Advertisement

However, he was notably accompanied by his sister while Qualley had been nowhere to be seen. 

The pair were last publicly pictured together months earlier in February as they made an appearance at the 2026 Grammy Awards. 

Just weeks before the separation came to light, the music producer had an awkward response when asked about his marriage to Qualley. 

During an appearance on the Today show, he was asked to detail a favorite moment from their 2023 wedding. 

Advertisement

‘Oh that would be impossible to think of,’ he said, before quickly adding, ‘Next question.’ 

Another moment showed Antonoff being asked by co-anchor Craig Melvin about Swift’s nuptials to NFL player Travis Kelce, which resulted in another awkward reply. 

The Substance actress has also deleted photos of the music producer from her Instagram page, including their wedding photos from 2023; seen in Janaury in Paris

The Substance actress has also deleted photos of the music producer from her Instagram page, including their wedding photos from 2023; seen in Janaury in Paris 

The pair were last publicly pictured together months earlier in February as they made an appearance at the 2026 Grammy Awards (seen above)

The pair were last publicly pictured together months earlier in February as they made an appearance at the 2026 Grammy Awards (seen above)

Advertisement

‘No, no, no, no. Umm, yeah. I love being married, man. I’m happy you love being [married] too. Did we just have a moment? Are our partners gonna see that?’ 

Antonoff and Qualley were first romantically linked back in August 2021, and later attended the Critics’ Choice Awards together in March 2022, which seemingly confirmed their relationship. 

Just two months later in May, the actress sparked engagement rumors when she was seen wearing an eye-catching, diamond ring while at the Cannes Film Festival. 

Later that same month, it was confirmed Antonoff had popped the big question.

Advertisement

The two stars tied the knot in August 2023 at Parker’s Garage in Long Beach, New Jersey in front of close family and celebrity friends. 

A number of A-listers had whisked themselves away to the East Coast to celebrate the nuptials, such as model Cara Delevingne, Lana Del Rey and Swift. 

The daughter of actress Andie MacDowell had been the epitome of elegance in a white, halter-styled wedding gown with a plunging neckline at the time. 

Antonoff had donned a classic, black suit along with a crisp white dress shirt and black tie.

Advertisement
Just weeks before the separation came to light, the music producer had an awkward response when asked about his marriage to Qualley; seen in April in NYC

Just weeks before the separation came to light, the music producer had an awkward response when asked about his marriage to Qualley; seen in April in NYC 

The two stars tied the knot in August 2023 at Parker's Garage in Long Beach, New Jersey in front of close family and celebrity friends; seen in 2025 in L.A.

The two stars tied the knot in August 2023 at Parker’s Garage in Long Beach, New Jersey in front of close family and celebrity friends; seen in 2025 in L.A. 

A source told People at the time of the nuptials that Long Beach Island was ‘overrun with celebs this weekend’ due to the nuptials.

The pair as well as the various guests all ‘looked like they were having an amazing time,’ a separate insider also told the outlet.

Advertisement

Only two hours before the shock news of their split became public, Antonoff was spotted stepping out in Brooklyn, New York on Wednesday. 

The music producer notably sported his gold wedding band on his left hand as well as a Knicks champions shirt.  

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

Loyal and royal: How the future King became a football superfan

Published

on

A designed image of Prince William cheering with his arms up over a green background.

In the early hours of Monday morning, like millions of other football fans, the Prince of Wales stayed up in Windsor to watch England’s memorable victory over Mexico.

At Forest Lodge, his family home on the Windsor estate, he endured the delayed start, the intense atmosphere of the Azteca Stadium and the nerve-jangling end to the second half when a 10-man England agonisingly clung on to their lead.

He’d watched every other England match too as you’d expect from the Patron of the Football Association. He knows the England set-up well and has been in direct contact with players and staff during the tournament – several England footballers have Prince William’s personal phone number.

If England make it to the World Cup final in New Jersey on 19 July, Prince William will fly over as an official representative of the FA and the royal family’s most ardent football fan.

Advertisement

No royal has ever shown their love for football quite like Prince William.

And his passion for the game has often been at its most raw on the royal family’s social media platforms.

Royal posts can be tame affairs. The usual pattern is a reminder of the day’s engagements, a clip of a speech delivered, sometimes an official comment around an event alongside the day’s best pictures.

But on 20 May this year, Prince William’s official accounts loosened up just a bit.

Advertisement

“UTV! VTID” they screamed alongside a red love heart and the muscular arm emoji. For those not in the know, that translates as “Up the Villa” and “Villa Till I Die.” Not your typical royal social post.

They were published with a “W” meaning they had come personally from William and were up just minutes after his beloved Aston Villa had won the Europa League final with a convincing 3-0 victory over German side, Freiburg. It was Aston Villa’s first European title in 44 years – they won the European Cup in 1982, the year Prince William was born.

He’d been at this year’s final in Istanbul with a group of close friends, many from his childhood who share his love for Aston Villa – Ben Dawes, Thomas van Straubenzee and Edward van Cutsem. They have all been regulars at Villa games over the years. It was a family friend who persuaded him to support Aston Villa when he was a teenager.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

NewsBeat

My grandmother Ruth Ellis was the last woman to be hanged in Britain – she doesn’t belong with serial killers and sex offenders in Madame Tussauds’ ‘Chamber of Horrors’

Published

on

Ruth Ellis (pictured) was the last woman to be hanged for murder in the United Kingdom

She will, forever, be known as the last woman in England to be hanged for murder. But this week, some 70 years on, there has been redemption of sorts for former nightclub hostess Ruth Ellis.

Ellis was executed at the age of 28 at north London‘s Holloway Prison in July 1955, having shot dead her lover David Blakely, 25, outside the Magdala pub in nearby Hampstead.

Amid public fury over her execution, the former glamour model appeared serene about her fate, as revealed in unseen letters that came to light when her family called for her to be posthumously given a reprieve last October.

In one letter, written on prison paper with her name and prisoner number, Ellis said, ‘I am quite well’ the day before she was hanged by Albert Pierrepoint, Britain’s most prolific executioner.

Advertisement

A single mother of two at the time of her death, Ellis was portrayed as a ‘cold-blooded killer’. But her family have long denied this depiction, arguing she was physically and emotionally abused by her partner before killing him.

She shot Blakely dead following a tumultuous relationship involving infidelity on both sides, an aborted pregnancy, and violence including a punch in the stomach during an argument that led to a miscarriage.

Fighting for a posthumous pardon, four of her grandchildren said Ellis would today be able to plead the defence of diminished responsibility due to his treatment of her.

Now, 71 years later that wish has now been granted by the King, announced in the House of Commons on Wednesday by Justice Secretary David Lammy.

Advertisement

Ruth Ellis (pictured) was the last woman to be hanged for murder in the United Kingdom

Ruth Ellis shot David Blakely dead outside the Magdala pub in South Hill Park, Hampstead

Ruth Ellis shot David Blakely dead outside the Magdala pub in South Hill Park, Hampstead

Ruth Ellis featured at Madame Tussauds' 'Chamber of Horrors' alongside serial killers

Ruth Ellis featured at Madame Tussauds’ ‘Chamber of Horrors’ alongside serial killers

Advertisement

Today, in an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, Ellis’s granddaughter Laura Enston, 47, lays bare the family’s fight for justice and their everlasting grief.

‘Her trial was a disgrace,’ she said. ‘She was made an example of.’ 

Ms Enston hailed the pardon as ‘significant’, adding: ‘Changing her sentence doesn’t bring her back, but it sends out a very clear message that they got things wrong.

‘She wasn’t just on a trial for murder – she was on trial for morality.’

Advertisement

Ellis, a single mother from a modest background, showed no emotion during her Old Bailey trial in June 1955.

The judge told the jury to disregard the fact she had been ‘badly treated by her lover’ as a defence.

Under cross-examination, Ellis admitted she intended to kill Blakely and the jury took just 20 minutes to convict her of murder, a charge that carried a mandatory death sentence.

Ms Enston also acknowledged how her grandmother had come across as ‘cold’ when giving evidence in court.

Advertisement

She said: ‘She inadvertently played up to that sort of cold-blooded killer persona that she’d been portrayed to be, but knowing what we know now about trauma and slow-burn provocation, Ruth was traumatised and typical of domestic abuse victims.

‘I don’t think many people at the time understood what women suffered.’

Sitting in the House of Commons yesterday, Ms Enston said she suddenly realised just how important the family’s campaign has been.

That said, she is not done fighting just yet.

Advertisement

She has now urged the Madame Tussauds museum in central London to remove a figure of her grandmother from its ‘Chamber of Horrors’ exhibition.

To her dismay, Ellis is featured alongside serial killer ‘Jack The Ripper’, necrophile Nilsen, Acid Bath Murderer John Haigh and the notorious Kray Twins.

‘I recognise why she’s in there, but she shouldn’t be next to serial killers and sex offenders,’ she said, adding that she has contacted Madame Tussauds but has not received a response. Madame Tussauds has been approached for comment.

Ellis’s execution came just after Styllou Christofi, 54, was sentenced to death for murdering her daughter-in-law.

Advertisement

By chilling coincidence, both Christofi and Ellis carried out their killings in the very same street in the 1950s – South Hill Park in Hampstead.

They were both buried in unmarked graves at Holloway, then exhumed in 1971 along with three other female murderers of the 20th century.

These included Edith Thompson, 29, who was executed in 1923 for the murder of her husband Percy.

David Blakley and Ruth Ellis are pictured together at a social event

David Blakley and Ruth Ellis are pictured together at a social event

Advertisement
The Daily Mail's report of Ruth Ellis's execution in July 1955

The Daily Mail’s report of Ruth Ellis’s execution in July 1955

A stoic letter by Ruth Ellis saying, 'I am quite well' the day before she became the last woman to be executed in Britain

A stoic letter by Ruth Ellis saying, ‘I am quite well’ the day before she became the last woman to be executed in Britain 

Also disinterred at the same time were ‘baby farmers’ Amelia Sach, 29, and Annie Walters, 54, who had been hanged at the jail in February 1903 after being found guilty of murdering infants in East Finchley, north London.

All were transferred to Brookwood Cemetery in Surrey in 1971 except for Ellis, whose remains were returned to her family.

Advertisement

Thompson was exhumed in 2018 and buried in her family plot beside her mother.

It has been Ruth Ellis’s case that has drawn the most attention, not only in headlines at the time but in subsequent film and TV recreations.

These have included the 1985 movie Dance With A Stranger, starring Miranda Richardson and Rupert Everett, and last year’s ITV docudrama series A Cruel Love with Bohemian Rhapsody star Lucy Boynton in the leading role.

Ellis’s granddaughter Ms Enston said she first learned about the case when her mother showed her the 1985 film when she was just seven years old.

Advertisement

‘[It was] completely unsuitable for children’s eyes. That was my first experience of Ruth Ellis. That was the start of me wanting to discover for myself the story, though at first I didn’t want to be part of it.’

She prefers last year’s series as it was more sympathetic towards her late grandmother.

Mr Lammy told MPs on Wednesday that the King had granted a conditional pardon on the advice of the Government.

Ms Enston said justice had ‘finally been done’ for Ellis and the family she left behind.

Advertisement

She said: ‘Ruth was a victim of sustained and brutal abuse. Her children – our mother and uncle – never recovered. The shadow of Ruth’s execution has fallen across two generations.

‘This pardon does not undo what happened 71 years ago. It does not restore the lives that were broken – the children left behind, the years lost.

‘But it says, formally and finally, that Ruth should not have been executed; that the justice system failed her.’

Ms Enston admits that despite what her grandmother went through, she should never have killed Mr Blakely.

Advertisement
The Magdala in north London closed in 2016 but reopened in 2021 as a pub and restaurant

The Magdala in north London closed in 2016 but reopened in 2021 as a pub and restaurant

Ruth Ellis was the last woman in the UK executed for murder

Ruth Ellis was the last woman in the UK executed for murder

The shooting of David Blakely happened near a pub in Hampstead, north London

The shooting of David Blakely happened near a pub in Hampstead, north London

‘Did he deserve to die? I don’t think he did. But he was obviously a troubled individual.’

Advertisement

Ms Enston said domestic abuse was poorly understood at the time and that her grandmother would now have been considered a victim of battered woman syndrome and treated differently by the justice system.

James Libson, of law firm Mishcon de Reya which represented Ellis’s family, said Ellis ‘suffered considerably’ at the hands of her ‘abusive, violent partner’.

Following a number of other controversial executions and a series of miscarriages of justice, the death penalty was permanently abolished for murder in 1969.

Two years after Ellis’s execution, the law was also changed to introduce diminished responsibility as a defence for murder.

Advertisement
Police lined nearby streets ahead of Ruth Ellis' execution at Holloway prison in north London

Police lined nearby streets ahead of Ruth Ellis’ execution at Holloway prison in north London

Ruth Ellis was hanged by executioner Albert Pierrepoint on July 15, 1955

Ruth Ellis was hanged by executioner Albert Pierrepoint on July 15, 1955

Ruth Ellis is thought here to be posing at a club over her flat on Brompton Road in 1955

Ruth Ellis is thought here to be posing at a club over her flat on Brompton Road in 1955

Miranda Richardson portrayed Ruth Ellis in the 1985 movie Dance With A Stranger

Miranda Richardson portrayed Ruth Ellis in the 1985 movie Dance With A Stranger

Advertisement
The convicted killer was also played by Lucy Boynton in a drama series last year

The convicted killer was also played by Lucy Boynton in a drama series last year

Ruth Ellis’s grandchildren applied to the Department for Justice last year, seeking a conditional pardon.

Unlike court appeals, pardons can consider broader factors such as social developments which could render a conviction or its resulting punishment inappropriate or unfair.

Speaking in the Commons, the Justice Secretary said: ‘I have the honour to say that His Majesty the King has accepted our advice to grant Ruth Ellis a conditional pardon, the last woman to be hanged in the United Kingdom.

Advertisement

‘While the pardon does not claim she was innocent of killing David Blakely, it replaces the death penalty with a sentence of life imprisonment to recognise a profound injustice in this exceptional case.’

The Ministry of Justice said the move reflected ‘evidence of domestic abuse and coercive and controlling behaviour that may have been understood differently today’.

Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2025