Madeleine McCann’s sister has said her family’s alleged stalker sent “creepy” messages about “flashbacks” and edited images to try to show a family resemblance.
Amelie McCann told a court that Julia Wandelt was “desperate” to convince her she was missing Madeleine and had claimed her memories included playing ‘ring-a-ring-a-roses’ as a child.
The court heard Wandelt allegedly sent the 20-year-old numerous social media messages and letters. The first, in January 2024, allegedly read: “I know so many things. I don’t know if this is the real account for Amelie McCann but I can tell you my memories.”
Ms McCann told Leicester Crown Court it was “quite disturbing that she’s coming up with these supposed memories,” as she was clearly not her sister.
“It makes me feel quite uncomfortable because it is quite creepy she is giving those details and trying to play with my emotions,” she said.
Madeleine McCann disappeared from her bed in a holiday apartment in Praia da Luz, Portugal in May 2007. She has never been found.
Wandelt, 24, from Lubin in Poland, denies subsequently stalking the family.
Image: Julia Wandelt (left) and Karen Spragg at Leicester Crown
Pic: Elizabeth Cook/PA
However, Madeleine‘s sister told the trial Wandelt had sent “persistent” messages urging her and her mother to take a DNA test, as well as images that were “clearly altered or edited”.
In one instance, she allegedly printed pictures of herself and Amelie McCann and sent them to the family’s home address.
A separate online message is said to have shown an image of her and Wandelt side-by-side.
“She’d clearly edited the pictures to make me look more like her, which was disturbing,” Ms McCann told the court. “I didn’t look like that and I knew it had been changed.”
“She is Polish and has Polish family who are her parents. It didn’t make any sense to me,” she added.
She told the court she was scared by a message from Wandelt, which allegedly stated she would “do whatever to prove my identity” as Madeleine.
“It shows you the lengths she would go to, to try and get heard, which is a bit scary because you don’t know what she would do next,” said Ms McCann.
She said she had blocked the alleged stalker on multiple social media sites, but that Wandelt’s actions were hardest for her mother, Kate.
“It definitely took a toll on her and her wellbeing because all the time her phone would be going off and it would be Julia,” she said.
Following the alleged December visit by Wandelt and her co-defendant 61-year-old Cardiff woman Karen Spragg – who also denies stalking – Ms McCann said she returned home from university and her parents had strengthened security.
Image: Co-defendant Karen Spragg. Pic: PA
They told her there was “an alarm we could press and alert the police,” the court heard.
‘Upsetting and disrespectful’
Amelie’s twin, Sean McCann, also gave evidence via a written statement in which he said Wandelt had caused a “great deal of stress”.
He said her claim to be his sister was “upsetting and deeply disturbing” – but that he felt “guilty” for feeling that way as he believes she might be suffering with a mental health condition.
However, he added: “If she is fully aware she is not Madeleine, yet makes these claims she is, that will be very upsetting for me.”
Image: Kate and Gerry McCann, pictured in 2010, testified on Wednesday
Sean McCann, 20, told the court he had also received Instagram messages from Wandelt but immediately blocked her.
A friend of the McCanns, Ellie McQueen, was the final witness on Thursday morning and said Wandelt had sent her “relentless” messages online.
She told jurors the first was on Facebook in June 2024 from the profile “Julia Julia”.
Ms McQueen said Wandelt asked for help to contact the McCanns: “She seemed to know my mum was very close with Kate,” she told the court.
“She was trying to send me DNA evidence to say she is Maddie,” she told the court, adding that Wandelt seemed “upset and aggravated”.
One message allegedly sent by the defendant asks why Kate and Gerry McCann did not turn up to a vigil for Madeleine in their village, which she attended.
In other messages, Wandelt allegedly said she “remembered” a life with Kate and Gerry McCann and even claimed to have the same “spot in my right eye” and “lots of the same moles” as Madeleine.
Liam Gallagher, Tyson Fury and Wayne Rooney were among those who attended the funeral of boxing champion Ricky Hatton.
While famous faces and family gathered at Manchester cathedral for the private memorial service, thousands of people lined the streets on Friday morning to pay their respects as the procession passed.
The procession was led by a Reliant Regal – the yellow three-wheeler made famous on the show Only Fools And Horses – which Hatton famously owned and used to drive.
As the funeral cortege passed the site of the pub Hatton’s parents, Ray and Carol Hatton, used to own and where he used to train in the basement – known back then as The New Inn – doves were released.
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Cheers as Ricky Hatton’s coffin enters cathedrall
Outside the church a brass band played Winter Wonderland, synonymous with the chant “There’s Only One Ricky Hatton”, which rang round the many stadiums Hatton fought in.
The service was played to the crowds outside the cathedral, during which Hatton’s three children Campbell, Fearne and Millie, each paid tribute to their dad.
Image: The Reliant Regal owned by Hatton led the funeral procession. Pic: Action Images/Reuters
Image: Pic: Reuters
Campbell, who has followed his father to become a boxer, said: “I can’t explain how much I’m going to miss you, Dad, and that we won’t be making any new memories – but the ones we did I will cherish forever.”
A statement from Hatton’s mother was read on her behalf, in which she described her son as “our little champion from the day he was born”.
Image: Hatton’s parents Ray and Carol. Pic: PA
Image: Wayne and Coleen Rooney. Pic: PA
Also pictured attending the service included Happy Mondays’s Shaun Ryder and Mark ‘Bez’ Berry, reality TV personality Calum Best, comedian Paddy McGuinness, former cricket star Andrew ‘Freddie’ Flintoff and actor Dean Gaffney.
Image: Former cricketer Andrew ‘Freddie’ Flintoff. Pic: PA
Image: Mark Berry ‘Bez’. Pic: PA
Boxer Frazer Clarke and former boxers Frank Bruno, Amir Khan, Scott Welch and Anthony Crolla were also at the funeral, as was pundit and former footballer Chris Kamara.
Eyewitness: A send-off for not just a great fighter, but a great Mancunian
As Ricky Hatton’s hearse moved through the streets of Manchester, some of the greatest names in British boxing began to climb the steps of the cathedral.
From Tyson Fury to Frank Bruno, Amir Khan to Tony Bellew, a collection of champions arrived to pay their respects.
In a testament to how Hatton’s legacy went beyond boxing, Liam Gallagher of Oasis was also there, as well as Andy Burnham, the mayor of Greater Manchester.
But this wasn’t just a service in tribute to “Ricky the hitman”, who fought under the brightest lights.
This was a tribute to Richard Hatton, the people’s champion, who meant so much to this city, and died at 46.
As the service was played over a sound system, many of the people gathered wiped their eyes and bowed their heads as they heard tributes from Hatton’s loved ones.
Many of the people outside were wearing the sky blue of Manchester City, mourning one of their own.
Some had met him. Like the man whose son was a boxer and benefited from Hatton’s advice, or the two women who would grab a pint and a picture with him at City games.
For one of them, the night he won the world title in Manchester Arena remains a moment, she will never forget.
When the coffin was loaded back into the hearse for a final journey through Manchester to the Etihad, the crowd parted and applauded, before one last rendition of walking in a Hatton wonderland played by a band.
This was a send-off for not just a great fighter, but a great Mancunian, who brought so many people here on his journey to becoming a legend.
Following the service, the funeral procession made its way to the Etihad Stadium, the home of Hatton’s beloved Manchester City football club.
It was met by crowds applauding and singing.
Image: Nigel Benn. Pic: PA
Image: Tyson Fury. Pic: PA
Image: Former boxer Amir Khan. Pic: PA
‘I was in awe of him’
Tributes poured in across the world of sport and beyond after Hatton’s death aged 46 at his home in Hyde, Greater Manchester, on 14 September.
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Tony Bellew: Ricky Hatton ‘was the standard’
The former world champion – nicknamed “The Hitman” – had only announced in July that he planned to come out of retirement in December for his first professional fight in 13 years.
Speaking to Sky News outside the church, former boxer Tony Bellew said he “was in awe” of Hatton when he first watched him training.
Image: The funeral procession at the Etihad Stadium. Pic: PA
“I’ve watched thousands of fighters train over the years, hundreds of thousands. And after watching him… I was in awe of him. He was the standard – everything he did,” he said.
“There are thousands that have turned out today, not hundreds. That speaks volumes.”
A man who stabbed a 16-year-old Syrian refugee in the neck after he brushed past his girlfriend has been jailed for life with a minimum of 23 years.
Alfie Franco, 20, was convicted on Thursday of murdering Ahmad Al Ibrahim on a busy shopping street in Huddersfield earlier this year.
Ahmad, who fled war-torn Homs as an unaccompanied child refugee after being injured in a bombing, had only been living in the West Yorkshire town for a couple of weeks.
Image: Ahmad Al Ibrahim, 16, was stabbed to death. Pic: PA/West Yorkshire Police
Jurors at Leeds Crown Court heard that on 3 April, Ahmad, whose parents said he had dreamed of being a doctor, was walking around the town with a friend – while Franco was going to buy eyelash glue with his girlfriend after a Jobcentre appointment.
When they crossed paths, prosecutors said Franco took “some petty exception” to Ahmad “innocuously” walking past his girlfriend.
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CCTV shows moments before man stabs refugee
CCTV footage showed Franco saying something to Ahmad, before calling him over after a short verbal altercation.
As Ahmad walked over, Franco opened the blade on a flick knife he was carrying and drove it into the teenager’s neck.
The court heard Franco had used cannabis before the encounter.
Later tests also revealed he had recently used cocaine, diazepam, ketamine and codeine.
During the trial, Franco told the court he thought he had seen Ahmad reaching for a weapon in his waistband during the altercation and said he had only been aiming for the boy’s cheek, and wanted to “cut him and get away”.
‘You were under no threat whatsoever’
Handing sentence, Judge Howard Crowson said Franco’s claims of being in fear of Ahmad were “incredible” – as CCTV footage showed him calmly eating ice cream while preparing to stab the teenager.
He told Franco: “During this trial you tried to portray Ahmad as aggressive and threatening. The CCTV reveals you were under no threat whatsoever.
“Ahmad was unarmed as he walked peacefully about Huddersfield town centre that day.”
He then said Franco’s claim to have seen a weapon on Ahmad’s waistband was “a lie,” and added: “Before Ahmad made any movement towards you, you prepared your knife for use.
“You calmly and surreptitiously removed the knife from your waistband, opened it and concealed it in your pocket.”
The judge said he was satisfied that Franco intended to kill Ahmad and that he had “lured” the boy to within striking distance before lunging at him with the knife, deliberately aiming for his neck.
Prosecutor Richard Wright KC said during the trial that “to plunge that knife into someone’s neck who has done no more than walk towards you after you’ve engaged them in some verbal argy-bargy in the street… that’s not reasonable self-defence”.
He added: “This is a case of a young man with a cocky swagger, wandering around town with his girlfriend, on drugs, who doesn’t like the fact that Ahmad has spoken back to him.”
In a victim impact statement read in court, Ahmad’s uncle, Ghazwan Al Ibrahim, said the boy was “an intelligent and outstanding student” whose dream was to become a doctor.
He said his nephew had a “sociable and ambitious personality, loved helping people and was passionate about life”.
Mr Al Ibrahim added that Ahmad spent three months travelling to the UK and initially lived in a Home Office hotel in Swansea with other people his own age before being moved to Huddersfield to be near his uncle.
An Afghan migrant has been found guilty of threatening to kill Nigel Farage in a TikTok post.
Fayaz Khan, 26, chose not to give evidence in his trial, in which he was accused of threatening the Reform UK leader between 12 and 15 October last year in a video on the social media platform.
Jurors deliberated for 11 hours and 55 minutes before finding him guilty at Southwark Crown Court.
They had been told Khan had a “very large presence online”, with his TikTok videos amassing hundreds of thousands of views as he showed himself attempting to come to the UK by small boat last autumn.
The Afghan national, who has an AK-47 tattoo on his right cheek and arm, live-streamed his journey across the English Channel from France in a small boat and was arrested on 31 October after arriving in the UK.
He had been living in Stockholm, Sweden, since 2019.
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Image: Fayaz Khan posted a TikTok video of him appearing to threaten to kill Nigel Farage. Pic: PA
Jurors were told that on 12 October last year, Mr Farage uploaded a YouTube video titled “The journey of an illegal migrant”, which highlighted Khan and referenced “young males of fighting age coming into our country about whom we know very little”.
Khan responded with a video two days later in which he appeared to say: “Englishman Nigel, don’t talk s**t about me.
“You not know me. I come to England because I want to marry with your sister. You not know me.
“Don’t talk about me more. Delete the video.
“I’m coming to England. I’m going to pop, pop, pop.”
He made gun gestures with his hand and headbutted the camera during the video, while pointing to the AK-47 tattoo on his face to “emphasise he wasn’t joking”, Mr Ratliff said.
Mr Farage, who was at court for the trial, said the video was “pretty chilling”.
“Given his proximity to guns and love of guns, I was genuinely worried,” he said.
“He says he’s coming to England and he’s going to shoot me.”
A subsequent TikTok post by Khan read: “I mean what I say” on an image of a GB News report about the threat against Mr Farage.
Image: Nigel Farage outside Southwark Crown Court. Pic: PA
Other videos Khan posted on social media were shown to the jury in which he appeared to make “pop, pop, pop” noises and similar gun hand gestures.
After his arrest, Khan told police in November last year: “It was just a video, it was never an intention to threaten him.
“It was never my intention to kill him or anything – this is my character, this is how I act in my videos.
“In every video I make those sounds, I say ‘pop, pop pop’.”
Prosecutor Peter Ratliff said the threat to kill was “not some off-the-cuff comment” and the video was “sinister and menacing”.
He said Khan, who denied the charge, was a “dangerous man with an interest in firearms” and who had an AK-47 tattooed on his arm and face.
Defence lawyer Charles Royle said Khan was “remonstrating in his own idiosyncratic, moronic, comedic, eye-catching, attention-seeking way” rather than making a threat to kill in the TikTok video.
He told jurors the trial was “not about your views on illegal immigration, nor about your views on face tattoos, Brexit or Reform”.
Discussing Khan’s decision not to give evidence, Mr Royle said: “You shouldn’t hold any silence against him.”