Slider1
Slider2
Slider3
Slider4
previous arrow
next arrow

Archive May 14, 2025

James Argent warned he will be jailed if he attempts to contact girlfriend after attack

The ex-Towie star, 37, pleaded guilty to ‘mistreating’ former Miss Sweden Nicoline, 32, after being arrested last Monday and hauled before a judge

James Argent has been warned he will be put behind bars if he tries to contact Nicoline Artursson(Image: David Cummings)

James Argent has been warned he will be put behind bars if he tries to contact his model girlfriend ex Nicoline Artursson in the next two years after admitting a domestic violence offence at a Costa del Sol court.

The ex-Towie star, 37, pleaded guilty to ‘mistreating’ former Miss Sweden Nicoline, 32, after being arrested last Monday and hauled before a judge.

He was handed a six-month suspended prison sentence and a restraining order preventing him from contacting or approaching the Swedish beauty for the next 24 months.

Argent was spared jail after striking a plea bargain deal with public prosecutors ahead of his May 5 trial at Fuengirola’s Court of Violence Against Women following his arrest hours earlier.

Police and court officials have not offered any detailed information about Argent’s reported physical assault, although the Spanish Civil Guard whose officers took Argent to court in custody has confirmed local police employed by Mijas Town Hall arrested him on May 5.

James Argent pleaded guilty to ‘mistreating’ former Miss Sweden Nicoline, 32,
James Argent pleaded guilty to ‘mistreating’ former Miss Sweden Nicoline, 32,(Image: real_arg/Instagram)
Article continues below

But Andalucia’s High Court of Justice confirmed the suspended prison sentence and two-year restraining order as officials warned any violation of the strict conditions Argent agreed to abide by as part of his plea agreement would land him in jail.

The actor-turned-singer is understood to have taken the decision to admit his crime after being told he could face a more serious charge carrying a prison sentence of up to five years if he denied wrongdoing and forced a full trial which would have been held in open court and rescheduled for a later date.

Andalucia’s High Court of Justice said: “The matter was resolved in Fuengirola’s Court of Violence Against Women.

“There was a plea agreement on May 5 and a trial the same day.

“In trials of this kind it is the prosecutor who suggests a conviction after negotiating with the defence.

“It implies that the defendant acknowledges the facts and admits the penalty.

“The judgment is now final having been accepted.

James confirmed their relationship last September
James confirmed their relationship last September(Image: Dave Benett/Getty Images for Hyd)

“It consists of a sentence of six months in prison for the commission of a crime of mistreatment in the ambit of gender violence. It also implies a prohibition on approaching and communicating with the victim for a period of two years.

“The convicted person will not enter prison as he had no criminal record in Spain.

“For this reason, the sentence is suspended but on condition that, over a period of two years he does not approach or communicate with the victim and has to carry out a re-socialization course in the field of gender violence.

“The suspension would be revoked if it fails to comply with the measures imposed.

“The sentence will be sent to a criminal court that will be responsible for its execution and compliance with the measures implicit therein.”

Prison sentences of two years or less are normally suspended for first-time offenders in Spain.

It is not clear if Argent has been ordered to pay his victim any compensation.

Nicoline’s neighbours are said to have called police after hearing her screams. The Mirror understands Nicoline’s mother arrived at the scene to aid her daughter and police transported them both to a hospital.

The incident happened days after the couple were pictured sunbathing together on a nearby beach amid reports Argent was planning to propose nine months after their casual meeting outside a Costa del Sol supermarket. Nicoline looked stunning in a pair of figure-hugging coral shorts.

James, who performed at former Towie star Elliott Wright’s restaurant Olivia’s La Cala around the same time, confirmed their relationship last September.

 James Argent & Nicoline Artursson
Arg gushed about his girlfriend in November, hailing her as ‘beautiful’(Image: OK)

The pair told OK! magazine in their first interview together last November they were living together after Nicoline moved into her boyfriend’s home in Essex and were already looking ahead to starting a family together.

James, known as Arg, gushed at the time: “Nicoline is absolutely beautiful. She’s a combination of Julia Roberts and Claudia Schiffer.”

Nicoline said of the former Towie star-turned-singer: “James is so kind, funny and handsome.”

“He’s a gentleman.”

Reliving the moment they met for the first time as James walked to a gig at Olivia’s La Cala, he told OK! Magazine: “All of a sudden I see this woman coming towards me. I was like, ‘Wow, she’s beautiful.’

“She was just in her gym clothes, wearing no make-up. She’d actually just fed a stray cat.

“We both smiled and kind of giggled at each other. And Nicoline carried on walking. Then I thought, ‘What have I got to lose?’ So I turned around and said, ‘Hey’.

“Someone as beautiful as Nicoline, sometimes these sort of people are used to guys trying to talk to them and they’re not interested. But she was so friendly and made me comfortable.”

Article continues below

Makhachev vacates title; Topuria-Oliveira lightweight clash at UFC 317

Ilia Topuria will look to add a second Ultimate Fighting Championship belt to his collection when he headlines UFC 317 on June 28 – it just won’t be against Islam Makhachev.

After weeks of heightened anticipation for a potential blockbuster face-off between the superstar pair, Topuria, a former undisputed featherweight champ, will now fight former champion Charles Oliveira for the vacant lightweight title, UFC CEO Dana White announced on Tuesday.

Makhachev, a four-time defending champion, will vacate the lightweight belt to move up to welterweight to face newly crowned Jack Della Maddalena, who defeated Belal Muhammad last Saturday at UFC 315 to become the new title holder in the weight class. The date for that fight has yet to be announced.

Topuria has a perfect UFC record of 16-0. The Spaniard relinquished his 145-pound (66kg) featherweight title earlier this year in anticipation of a lightweight title showdown against Makhachev and took to social media to voice his displeasure at the Russian vacating his title belt.

“On June 29, another dream will come true,” Topuria wrote. “I’ll be the champion of the lightweight division. Charles [Oliveira], my apologies in advance… I’m just fighting for my dreams. It’s unfortunate that Makhachev ran away.”

Makhachev, who sports a 27-1 UFC record, is ranked by ESPN as the best pound-for-pound UFC fighter in the world; Topuria is ranked number two.

UFC 317 is scheduled to take place at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas.

Islam Makhachev’s next fight will be against Jack Della Maddalena in the welterweight class, rather than IIia Topuria in the lightweight class, after the Russian vacated his lightweight title to move up a weight class [File: Kamran Jebreili/AP]

Peter Sullivan weeps as UK court overturns murder conviction after 38 years

A man who spent nearly four decades in a British prison for the killing of a barmaid said he was not angry or bitter as his murder conviction was overturned and he was released after being exonerated by DNA evidence.

Peter Sullivan, 68, was freed after the court in London determined on Tuesday that new evidence found on the victim’s body showed that he “was not the defendant” of the murder.

“This is an unprecedented and historic moment. Our client Peter Sullivan is the longest-serving victim of a miscarriage of justice in the UK,” his lawyer told reporters outside the court on Tuesday following the decision issued by an appeals court.

Sullivan, who wept as the judges dismissed his conviction, said, in a statement read outside the court by his lawyer, that despite spending years in jail he was “not angry” or “bitter”.

“I lost my liberty four decades ago over a crime I did not commit,” he said.

Sullivan was arrested in 1986, a month after Diane Sindall, 21, was found dead in Bebington, near Liverpool in northwest England.

Sindall had been on the way home from work when she was attacked, sexually assaulted and beaten to death in a killing which shocked the area.

Sullivan was just 30 when he was convicted in 1987, and his two past attempts to appeal against his sentence failed.

In 2021, he applied to the Criminal Cases Review Commission – an independent body that investigates potential miscarriages of justice, raising concerns about his police interviews, bite-mark evidence presented in his trial, and what was said to be the murder weapon, the commission said in a statement.

The commission then obtained DNA information from samples taken at the time of the offence and found that the profile did not match that of Sullivan. His case was then sent to London’s Court of Appeal.

Lawyers for the Crown Prosecution Service, which brought the case against Sullivan, said the new evidence meant there was “no credible basis on which the appeal can be opposed”.

It was “sufficient fundamentally to cast doubt on the safety of the conviction”, they added.

Wisconsin judge indicted on allegations she helped man evade ICE agents

A judge in the United States has been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of concealing a person from arrest and obstruction of proceedings after she was accused of helping an undocumented migrant evade authorities.

Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan, 66, was arrested last month after prosecutors said she hindered the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents who showed up to arrest the man without a judicial warrant outside her courtroom.

Prosecutors alleged she tried to help Eduardo Flores-Ruiz and his lawyer leave the courtroom from the back jury door before his arrest outside the building.

Dugan faces up to six years in prison if she’s convicted on both counts. Craig Mastantuono, one of Dugan’s lawyers, said in a statement that Dugan “asserts her innocence and looks forward to being vindicated in court”.

Dugan, who was elected in 2016, is expected to plead not guilty at the next hearing scheduled for Thursday.

Demonstrators protest in front of the federal court where Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan appeared after being arrested by the FBI as she arrived for work at the Milwaukee County Courthouse on April 25, 2025, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin [File: Scott Olson/Getty Images via AFP]

According to court documents, ​​Flores-Ruiz had illegally re-entered the US after being deported in 2013.

According to online state court records, he was charged with three counts of misdemeanour domestic abuse in Milwaukee County in March, to which he was in court in April for a hearing.

Court documents suggest Dugan was alerted that the immigration agents appeared in the court’s hallway by her clerk.

In an affidavit, Dugan was described as visibly angry over their arrival and called the situation “absurd” before leaving the bench and returning to her chambers.

She and another judge later approached the ICE agents in the court with what witnesses described as a “confrontational, angry demeanour”.

After a back-and-forth over the warrant for Flores-Ruiz, Dugan demanded they speak with the chief judge and led them away from the courtroom, according to the affidavit.

When she returned to the courtroom, she was heard telling Flores-Ruiz and his lawyer to come with her, and they were ushered out through a back jury door.

Flores-Ruiz was later captured by federal agents outside the court after a foot chase.

The indictment is the latest incident in President Donald Trump’s crackdown on immigration and local authorities.

CBN Launches Non-Resident BVN For Nigerians In Diaspora

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), in collaboration with the Nigeria Inter-Bank Settlement System (NIBSS), has launched the Non-Resident Bank Verification Number (NRBVN) platform for Nigerians in diaspora.

Launched on Tuesday, the innovative digital gateway, which is projected to actualise the CBN’s $1 billion monthly diaspora remittances target and about $12 billion annually, allows Nigerians in the diaspora to obtain a BVN remotely without the need for a physical presence in the country.

Speaking at the launch attended by stakeholders in the financial ecosystem, including the chief executives of commercial banks in Abuja, CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, hailed the initiative as a milestone in the country’s financial inclusion journey and a critical bridge connecting the country to its global citizens.

The CBN governor also hinted that the initiative could reduce the high cost of remittances in Sub-Saharan Africa and ensure continued engagement with stakeholders to optimise the platform.

He said the CBN remained committed to reducing the cost of remittances, currently averaging over seven per cent in Sub-Saharan Africa, adding that lowering these costs would enhance the safety and appeal of formal channels while amplifying the socioeconomic impact of diaspora remittances on Nigerian households and the broader economy.

Cardoso said, “For too long, many Nigerians abroad have faced difficulties accessing financial services at home due to physical verification requirements.

“The NRBVN changes that. Through secure digital verification and robust Know Your Customer (KYC) processes, Nigerians worldwide should now be able to access financial services more easily and affordably.”

He said, though not the final destination, the NRBVN represented the “beginning of a broader journey.”

The NRBVN is part of a broader framework that includes the Non-Resident Ordinary Account (NROA) and Non-Resident Nigerian Investment Account (NRNIA).

Together, these enable access to savings, mortgages, insurance, pensions, and investment opportunities in Nigeria’s capital markets.

Under current regulations, Nigerians in the diaspora will retain the flexibility to repatriate the proceeds of their investments.

Essentially, the NRBVN system has been built with global standards in mind, incorporating stringent Anti-Money Laundering (AML) and KYC compliance protocols to ensure the integrity, transparency, and security of Nigeria’s financial system.

Every NRBVN enrollment undergoes comprehensive verification checks to safeguard against illicit financial activity, bolstering international confidence in the platform and the broader financial ecosystem.

Remittance flows through formal channels increased from $3.3 billion in 2023 to $4.73 billion in 2024, due to recent reforms and policy shifts, including the introduction of the willing buyer, willing seller FX regime.

With the NRBVN in place, the CBN is optimistic about reaching its monthly remittance target.

READ ALSO: Oil Retreats As Traders Await High US Crude Stockpiles

Cardoso added, “We are building a secure, efficient, and inclusive financial ecosystem for Nigerians globally. This platform is not just about financial access, it’s about national inclusion, innovation, and shared prosperity.

“With the introduction of NRBVN and complementary policy measures, we are optimistic about achieving our ambitious target of $1 billion in monthly remittance flows, a goal we believe is entirely achievable given the growing trust and convenience in formal remittance channels.

“To meet these targets, collaboration and compliance with established regulatory frameworks remain essential. All stakeholders must adhere strictly to the FX Code and other relevant regulatory guidelines.”

He said, “This is critical to ensuring market stability, integrity, and overall confidence in Nigeria’s financial system.

“We also invite IMTOs to integrate with the NRBVN platform as part of our shared vision to build a secure, efficient, and inclusive financial ecosystem for Nigerians globally.

“A fully connected system will ensure that every Nigerian in the diaspora can confidently contribute to national development through trusted and cost-effective channels.”

Chairman/Chief Executive, Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), Abike Dabiri-Erewa, described NRBVN as a game changer.

Scudetto to Serie C – where did it go wrong for Sampdoria?

Getty Images
  • 233 Comments

Italy has more than its fair share of iconic football clubs. AC Milan. Inter Milan. Juventus. Napoli. Lazio. Roma. These institutions roll off the tongue.

For many English fans of Italian football, particularly those whose love of calcio can be traced back to Channel 4’s ‘Football Italia’, Sampdoria belong on that list.

In the decade between 1984 and 1994 Sampdoria won six major titles, while modern greats Trevor Francis, Roberto Mancini, Gianluca Vialli, Ruud Gullit and David Platt all wore the club’s iconic strip.

The Blucerchiati of that period acquired a cultural cachet that was hard to match.

Yet after years of turbulence Sampdoria, Serie A winners in 1991, have experienced the unthinkable – relegation to the Italian third tier for the first time in the club’s history.

Humble beginnings

Unusually for a club with such a large cult following, Sampdoria are relative newcomers to the Italian football landscape.

The northern Italian port city of Genoa has a proud footballing heritage -Sampdoria’s city rivals Genoa Cricket and Football Club were founded in 1893 and are the oldest active team in Italy.

The most recent of Genoa’s nine top-flight titles came 21 years before Sampdoria were formed in 1946, following a merger of middling Genoese clubs Sampierdarenese and Andrea Doria.

That unification produced their iconic home shirts – the blue represents Andrea Doria while the white, red and black mid-section came from Sampierdarenese.

Sampdoria have always shared a ground – the Stadio Luigi Ferraris – with neighbours Genoa, but for 38 years did not enjoy the kind of success befitting of one of Italy’s grandest arenas.

‘Goal twins’ and golden years

Roberto Mancini and Gianluca VialliGetty Images

Before the 1984-85 season, Sampdoria’s only honour was the 1966-67 second division title.

Yet over the next decade the club won the Coppa Italia four times – more than any other side during that period – were crowned Serie A champions, won the European Cup Winners’ Cup and played in a European Cup final.

After assuming the club presidency in 1979, Paolo Mantovani was the man who turned an unfashionable mid-table team into serial winners.

Having made his money in the oil business, Mantovani spent heavily but smartly to propel Sampdoria to unprecedented heights.

Big names like Francis, Graeme Souness and Liam Brady were signed, but it was the recruitment of some of the best young Italian talents that really paid off.

A 17-year-old Mancini arrived from Bologna in 1982, followed two years later by a 19-year-old Vialli from Cremonese.

Nicknamed the ‘goal twins’ because of their prolific attacking partnership, both scored in the second leg of the 1984-95 Coppa Italia final, the first major title in Sampdoria’s history.

Mancini and Vialli first met at 16 playing for Italy’s youth teams and formed a close friendship that characterised the unity in the Sampdoria squad.

“We have a relationship that goes way beyond friendship,” Mancini said before Vialli’s death from pancreatic cancer in 2023. “He’s almost like a brother to me.”

Along with goalkeeper Gianluca Pagliuca, defender Pietro Vierchowod, attacking right-back Moreno Mannini, midfield anchor Fausto Pari and electric winger Attilio Lombardo, the duo formed the backbone of a team that won three more Coppa Italia titles – and the club’s first and only Scudetto in 1990-91 under legendary manager Vujadin Boskov.

“Mantovani cultivated a remarkable camaraderie among a uniquely talented group,” says Italian football writer Stephen Kasiewicz.

“Despite more lucrative offers the core of the team stayed together.”

Boskov’s side won the European Cup Winners’ Cup in 1990, and lost to Johan Cruyff’s Barcelona ‘dream team’ in the European Cup final two years later.

The Sampdoria team line upGetty Images

‘The club ceased to function’

Mantovani’s death in 1993 was “the beginning of the end at Sampdoria”, according to Italian football journalist David Ferrini.

He added: “Mantovani’s reign attracted talent and kept them happy in Genoa, but his passing – combined with the hangover of the Scudetto success – meant that Sampdoria’s best players became prime transfer targets.”

In 1992 they had lost Vialli to Juventus for a then world record £12m, while Inter Milan paid £7m for Pagliuca in 1994, a record for a goalkeeper at the time.

Vierchowod joined Juventus 12 months later before Mancini followed Sven Goran Eriksson – who had replaced Boskov as manager in 1992 – to Lazio in 1997.

Experienced stars Gullit and Platt joined for brief spells, but Sampdoria no longer had the same appeal they once did.

Enrico Mantovani took over as president but failed to replicate his father’s success – and a steady decline followed the Coppa Italia triumph of 1993-94. In 1999 the club were relegated to Serie B.

Things improved under the presidency of local entrepreneur Riccardo Garrone, who guided them back to Serie A in 2003 and signed future cult heroes Fabio Quagliarella and Antonio Cassano.

Yet the highlights of the 21st Century have been losing the Coppa Italia final in 2008-09 and a fourth-place league finish the following year.

Outspoken film producer Massimo Ferrero bought the club in 2014 – taking on its growing debts – but what followed was seven years of selling their best players, spending little on replacements and flirting with relegation on a regular basis.

“He seemed more concerned with bolstering his own image, as the bizarre star of his own one-man reality football show, than making sure Samp prospered,” says Kasiewicz.

In December 2021 Ferrero was arrested and jailed as part of an investigation into corporate crimes and bankruptcy, unrelated to the club. He resigned as president.

“The club effectively ceased to function. It’s been like a house of cards,” says Nima Tavallaey, Italian football journalist and co-host of the Italian Football Podcast.

With no funds available and Ferrero refusing to relinquish control, Sampdoria narrowly avoided relegation from Serie A in 2022. But in 2023 they did go down, amid reports of unpaid player wages.

With the club staring down the barrel of bankruptcy and demotion to the fourth tier, a consortium led by former Leeds United owner Andrea Radrizzani and London-based financier Matteo Manfredi – and his company Gestio Capital – bought the club, although Radrizzani has since divested his shares.

Gestio Capital and its investors control 99.96% of the club, with investment vehicle Kickoff Ventures owning 58% of those shares.

Matteo ManfrediGetty Images

‘They’re a sleeping beauty’

Italian World Cup winner Andrea Pirlo was hired as coach in 2023-24.

After a dismal start to the campaign his side won seven of their final 11 games to secure a seventh-place finish in Serie B and a spot in the promotion play-offs, where they lost 2-0 to Palermo in the preliminary round.

Gestio invested about £45m during their first season, but things have not gone according to plan this term.

The month before Sampdoria’s play-off exit Manfredi had described Pirlo as “a key part of the project” – yet three games into the current campaign he was dismissed following two defeats and a draw.

Andrea Sottil replaced him and, although he oversaw a Coppa Italia penalty shootout victory against Genoa in the first Derby della Lanterna in two years, he was jettisoned too after just four wins in 14 games.

Leonardo Semplici arrived in December but, with the club in the drop zone, a 3-0 home defeat by Frosinone at the end of March was the tipping point for the fans as patience with Semplici ran out.

The team bus carrying Semplici and his Sampdoria players was pelted by stones and flares by angry supporters after the match at the Luigi Ferraris Stadium.

Semplici was relieved of his duties in April with Alberico Evani – the club’s fourth coach of the season – tasked with keeping them up.

Things began promisingly for Evani with club legend Attilio Lombardo in as assistant and another Sampdoria icon in Roberto Mancini helping in an unofficial capacity.

Evani began with a 1-0 win over fellow strugglers Cittadella, but three draws, a defeat and just one win since then have not been enough to keep them up.

For Tavallaey, Sampdoria must now start again with a “proper project” in place to return the club to its former glories..

“They have to build a proper project with a proper sporting directorship and a proper manager to help them back to Serie A. They’re a sleeping beauty.”

Related topics

  • Italian Serie A
  • European Football
  • Football