Liam Payne accused waiter speaks out about prison assault from behind bars

The waiter accused of selling cocaine to Liam Payne has spoken out about his treatment from other prisoners where he’s being held while a trial date goes unset

The waiter accused of selling drugs to Liam Payne before his death has spoken out from behind bars. Braian Paiz, 25, claimed he has been assaulted, burned and threatened by the other inmates while he waits to see if a trial date has been set.

Liam Payne died a year ago today, after falling from a hotel balcony in Argentina. The cause of death was ruled as ‘polytrauma’, which is where death occurs from multiple injuries. But a toxicology report showed traces of cocaine, and Paiz was arrested for selling it to the singer, which he denies.

The waiter has been in prison since January, after police raided his home. Most prisoners only spend a few weeks in the holding facility, and are then transferred to formal prisons, but Paiz has been there more than eight months.

From behind bars, Paiz has now done an interview where he alleges he has suffered multiple injuries inflicted by the other inmates. He has claimed that his fellow prisoners, who nicknamed him “Killer”, have assaulted him, hit him with a canister, burned him with boiling water and threatened to electrocute him.

READ MORE: Liam Payne CCTV mystery as police STILL trawling 800hrs of footage one year onREAD MORE: Liam Payne seen hours before death in new photos as cleaner claims ‘biggest mistake’

Paiz spoke about his experience in a 30-minute interview with Gente Magazine, an Argentinian magazine. “I live with 15 people in a cell and they treat me like a rat.”

He was not more specific about how badly he had been hurt, but his lawyer, Juan Pablo Madeo Facente, told the Daily Mail that Paiz has been beaten, denied urgent medical care after contracting a urinary tract infection and now relies on anti-depressants.

He has been charged with selling cocaine to the One Direction star, but has yet to face a trial, as the authorities are still working through 800 hours of footage from CCTV and mobile phones. In Argentina, a judge must be presented with evidence to decide if a trial should go ahead before a date can be set. If a trial does go ahead, Paiz could face up to 15 years in prison.

He has admitted to giving drugs to Payne, but has denied taking money for them, which is the offence he’s been charged with. Paiz, who was arrested alongside hotel cleaner Ezequiel David Pereyra, 22, told The Sun that he wished the singer hadn’t died but did not regret meeting him.

He said: “I wish [Payne] hadn’t died and things were different. I used to feel regret about what happened, but actually I don’t regret meeting him as he was my idol and I was a big fan.”

Pereyra also spoke to The Sun and claimed the bosses of the hotel, Casa Sur Palermo, turned a blind eye to Payne’s drug use. He told the publication that the hotel had the singer in “an isolated bunker” and “let him do anything he wanted” because “he was making them too much money”.

“But I think the biggest mistake was not calling an ambulance when Payne passed out in the lobby,” he added. “If the hotel had acted differently, Liam could have been saved.”

Pereyra claimed Liam was moved from the lobby “because that day they had many foreign guests checking in”. Detailing the tragic moments that followed, the cleaner said the bosses called police instead of an ambulance after leaving Liam in his room alone.

He claimed by the time they made the call, “it was already too late.” Pereyra claimed Liam’s death could have been prevented and was “very sad”.

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The police investigation has contradicted this and revealed that the hotel receptionist called the ambulance at 5pm, once Liam had been taken to his room.

The Mirror reached out to Casa Sur Palermo when Pereyra’s allegations were published.

VIDEO: INEC Chairman-Designate Amupitan Seeks Nigerian Elections Where Loser Will Congratulate Winner

The Chairman-designate of the Independent National Electoral Commission, Joash Amupitan, has pushed for electoral reforms, saying that Nigeria deserves elections where the loser will congratulate the winner.

READ ALSO: I Never Represented Tinubu At 2023 Presidential Election Petitions Court — Amupitan

Amupitan, who stated this on Thursday during his screening by the Senate, shortly before his confirmation, said he would examine the Electoral Act to strengthen the credibility of Nigerian elections.

Joash Amupitan (fourth-right), a professor of Law, was confirmed by the upper chamber after his screening on Thursday.

According to him, there are inconsistencies in the timeline of elections in Nigeria, a situation he says can be improved.

He stated that credible elections would restore voters’ confidence.

“So, we’re going to see how an election is credible, so that the loser will come and congratulate the winner and say, ‘You won fairly and well’.

“So if we can do that, it’s just like a judge convicting a person, sentencing him to death, and he (convict) says, ‘Well done, because I believe I’ve gotten justice,’” the professor said.

Amupitan was confirmed by the Senate after over two hours of questioning on October 16, 2025.

On whether INEC should take over the conduct of council elections, he said it was an issue the commission would look at.

Amupitan said voter education could be introduced at the primary school level to promote patriotism.

On the challenges associated with the Bimodal Voter Accreditation System (BVAS), the chairman-designate said he would audit the system to identify the problem and give Nigerians a technology everybody will be proud of.

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Bradford bounce-back heralds new Super League era

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Love them or hate them, Bradford Bulls are a club that certainly generates opinion in rugby league circles.

They also have a rare quality, a pull beyond the usual horizons, a brand that even laypeople can associate however faded the memory.

After 11 years away from Super League, time in which the club were liquidated, reborn, revived and finally returned, the Bulls will run with the elite again in 2026.

For a support starved of the top table it will feel special; a club that once posted a 24,000-plus attendance for a derby with Leeds – that is another factor to savour – can again sing its name proudly under the spotlight.

Yet this was not the triumphant routing of their foes on route to the Championship, a bombastic bounce-back before a packed out Odsal crowd.

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Rebuilding after rock-bottom

SWPIX

The sheer drop from one of the game’s major players to a side rebuilt in the bottom tier has taken some of the edge away from Bradford’s claim to be a powerhouse.

It had an effect on the fanbase, the type of player they were able to recruit, and their sway with investors.

However, any fears of the Bulls sliding back into their prior demise have been allayed thanks to the investment of a passionate board, and the club-at-heart mentality of chief executive and hometown fan Jason Hirst.

Their Foundation carries the important role of spreading the sport to a new audience, while partnerships with amateur clubs in the area is also a vital way of establishing links with the community.

Off the field, Bulls have consistently turned a profit in recent seasons, while on it there has been careful rebuilding by a string of coaches starting with John Kear who brought them back from the League One doldrums and restored pride at Odsal, and Mark Dunning also maintained the upward curve.

Up until the end of this season, Brian Noble was brought in, after highly-rated Eamon O’Carroll was snared by St Helens to join their staff, and his legacy as a Bradford legend has helped restore some of the DNA, that passion and professionalism.

Now the reins are to be entrusted to another excellent young coach in Kurt Haggerty, who served his apprenticeship at Toronto, Leigh and Salford before taking this top job.

Odsal grumbles remain

Players from Castleford and Bradford walk out of the tunnel at Odsal, across a shale motorsport track with wooden boards laid down to help avoid slipping, on to the grass pitch while the Challenge Cup stands on a plinth. Fireworks and smoke billow out as fans clap the players out of the dressing rooms.SWPIX

Most fans, even begrudgingly, cannot fail to be impressed by Bradford’s rebirth and the progress made.

That said, while Odsal Stadium has a history as rich and storied as any of Bradford’s legendary players, the venue which opened in 1934 is showing its age.

For large parts it is a huge, open-air bowl with vast concrete terracing cascading down to the pitch, which unusually for a rugby league stadium is lined by a shale motorsport track for stock car racing.

It is this track which has caused much consternation in recent seasons. The pitch corners are somewhat infringed by the track. However, it meets the regulation dimensions.

There is a covered stand which in isolation would stand up to most in Super League, and a building which houses hospitality areas at one end of the stadium.

Bradford have been proactive is installing a big screen, LED advertising hoardings, and extending the TV gantry, amongst other developments, which contributed to their stadium points improvement.

Time to rediscover past glories

When captain Jamie Peacock thrust the Super League trophy into the air at a packed Old Trafford in October 2005, it proved a turning point for Bradford Bulls.

Their fourth title in just nine years was to be their last to date, as stars such as Peacock, Robbie Hunter-Paul and Leon Pryce all departed and the key components of ‘Bullmania’ began to slip away.

By the time the Bulls were relegated in 2014 under the coaching of talismanic former hooker Jimmy Lowes, the aura had faded drastically.

How does this new-look Bradford seek to re-establish themselves amongst the top dogs in the competition?

Well they have that brand, which will help in terms of selling the club to overseas stars and top talent here at home.

Andy Ackers has signed from Leeds, while a host of further arrivals are expected now the floodgates are open and their place is confirmed.

Players such as Shontayne Hape, Lesley Vainakolo, Daniel Gartner, Joe Vagana and the Paul brothers spread the word of Bradford in the southern hemisphere during their time in the game.

Bradford players Jamie Peacock and Lesley Vainakolo embrace at Old Trafford in the Grand Final against Leeds with a hug. Lee Radford and Ian Henderson also come together in jubilation as the Bulls edge closer to winning the title.SWPIX

Not that much has changed since they went away, after all, Hull KR’s 2025 triumph made them only the fifth team to win the competition, and the last time that had been challenged was 2004 when Bulls lost to allow Leeds to join the title-winning club.

Yet it is Hull KR that Bradford can gain heart from. They too had to rebuild and regroup back in 2016 when they were relegated via the Million Pound Game and were promoted a year later.

The Robins have shifted from perennial strugglers to champions, doing so by establishing a core of hungry players initially to set the culture, and appointing a shrewd, driving force coach in Willie Peters.

Now that core in Elliot Minchella – coincidentally a Bradford lad signed from the Bulls – Jez Litten and Dean Hadley provide the heart, lifeblood and spirit of the team, while Mikey Lewis has grown from young talent to world class star in that environment.

Rovers have given heart to everyone, and smashed the big-four ceiling.

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Yemen’s Houthis say military chief killed as Israel claims responsibility

Yemen’s Houthis say that their Chief of Staff Mohammed Abdulkarim al-Ghamari, one of the most senior military officials of the group, has been killed “while fulfilling his duties”.

Shortly after the Houthi announcement on Thursday, Israel claimed responsibility for the killing, with Defence Minister Israel Katz saying al-Ghamari was attacked in an Israeli strike.

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The Houthis said in a statement that the conflict with Israel had not ended. Israel will “receive its deterrent punishment for the crimes it has committed”, it said.

In August, Israel said it targeted senior figures from the group, including al-Ghamari, in air strikes on the capital Sanaa, killing the prime minister of Yemen’s Houthi-run government and several other ministers.

In a social media post on Thursday, Katz said that al-Ghamari was attacked in an Israeli strike.

“We will do the same against any threat in the future as well”, he added.

Al-Ghamari’s death was announced six days into a fragile US-backed ceasefire between Israel and Hamas in Gaza. The truce has halted Israel’s two-year war on Gaza, which has killed nearly 68,000 Palestinians and triggered a dire humanitarian crisis. Israel has been accused by rights groups and a United Nations Commission of Inquiry of carrying out a genocide in Gaza.

Since Israel launched the war on Gaza in October 2023, the Houthis have carried out drone and missile attacks against Israel, saying that they have been conducted in solidarity with Palestinians under fire. The group has also targeted vessels in the Red Sea.

In response to the Houthi attacks on shipping lanes, the United States and the United Kingdom have attacked Houthi sites in Yemen.

‘Brutal’ attacks

In its statement announcing al-Ghamari’s death, the group condemned repeated “brutal” attacks by Israel against the Yemeni people, residential neighbourhoods, economic facilities and other civilian infrastructure, which have been faced “with patience, strength, steadfastness and resilience”.

Operations carried out by Yemen’s armed and naval forces were “great victories” that would not have happened without the “support, guidance, and sacrifice” of fighters like al-Ghamari, the statement added.

Their statement said the Houthis had carried out 758 military operations deploying 1,835 munitions, including drones and missiles, during their campaign.

Israeli strikes on war-torn Yemen happen regularly and are often devastating, targeting vital infrastructure including the main international airport, while killing dozens at a time.

The Houthis’ leader, Abdel-Malik al-Houthi, praised al-Ghamari’s major role in Yemen’s military operations in support of Gaza.

In a televised address on Thursday, he said the armed forces had offered their leaders as a “sacrifice to God” as part of what he described as a sincere and steadfast stance of resistance.

Al-Houthi said Yemen had acted despite US attempts at “isolating” the Palestinian people. He added that since al-Ghamari’s death, others in leadership and the military will “continue the path”.

Healy hammers another ton as Australia reach semis

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ICC Women’s World Cup, Visakhapatnam

Bangladesh 198-9 (50 overs): Sobhana 66* (80); King 2-18

Australia 202-0 (24.5 overs): Healy 113* (77), Litchfield 84 (72); Shorna Akter 0-19

Australia won by 10 wickets

Captain Alyssa Healy struck her second consecutive century as Australia thrashed Bangladesh by 10 wickets to secure their place in the World Cup semi-finals.

Healy scored 113 in an unbroken opening partnership of 202 with Phoebe Litchfield as the defending champions raced to their target inside 25 overs in Visakhapatnam.

Litchfield scored 84 from 72 balls, while Healy’s innings came from 77 deliveries as she followed up her superb 142 in Australia’s record chase against India on this ground on Sunday.

Chasing 199, the pair struck 33 boundaries between them, as Australia qualified for the knockout stages with two games to spare.

Having chosen to bat, Bangladesh opener Rubya Haider lived a charmed life, surviving numerous edges and drops before finally falling for 44.

She was the second wicket to fall as Bangladesh slid from 73-1 to 165-9.

Champions move into domination mode

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Australia may be unbeaten but did not start this tournament in the smoothest fashion, with individual performances digging their batting line-up out of trouble in their opening matches.

They slipped to 128-5 in their first game against New Zealand before Ash Gardner scored 115 from number six to drag them to a total their opponents couldn’t chase.

Rain saw their encounter with Sri Lanka washed out without a ball bowled, before Beth Mooney took the saviour role against Pakistan, smashing 109 to take Australia from 76-7 to 221-9.

When India scored 330 on Sunday, the seven-time world champions were up against it again – only for Healy to anchor a record chase, with three other batters recording scores over 40 as Australia slotted into their familiar position as a dominant force.

Their bowlers have looked strong throughout the competition and they overpowered Bangladesh’s batters in this match, with Alana King’s 2-18 the pick as four of the attack took a pair of wickets.

Healy then stepped up, scoring consecutive centuries for the second time in World Cups after achieving the feat against England and the West Indies in 2022.

The 35-year-old, who may be playing her final year of international cricket, has taken her side into yet another tournament semi-final, and will be keen to continue building momentum in their final group stage games.

Their next opponents? England on Wednesday.

‘We will be up for England’ – what they said

Australia captain Alyssa Healy: “Bangladesh have proven that they are hard to remove at times. I was a little bit poor behind the stumps but we take the two points and move on.

“It is so hard to juggle everything sometimes but I deal with it as I go. I really enjoy the challenge of it. We go to a different venue after this and we will be up for England next.”

Bangladesh captain Nigar Sultana Joty: “We started well and we didn’t lose a wicket in the powerplay. After that, we kept losing wickets and could not build a partnership.

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