Gary Glitter 'is planning to flee the UK after his release from jail'

Paedophile Gary Glitter ‘is planning to flee the UK after his release from jail and could join son in Spain’

  • Gary Glitter plans to join his love child son in Spain after his release from jail 
  • Reports say he knows the UK is ‘dangerous’ and wants to ‘keep a low profile’ 
  • The shamed pop star was released from prison early after child sex convictions 

Paedophile Gary Glitter has plans to flee to Spain and join his love child once he is released from jail, it has been revealed.

The shamed pop star, whose real name is Paul Gadd, was released from prison earlier this month – eight years after he was jailed over child sex offences committed against three schoolgirls. 

Glitter, 78, who was moved into a bail hostel in the south of England after his release, reportedly knows ‘Britain is dangerous’ for him and ‘wants to move as soon as he can.’

The musician informed his son he will be relocating to a place where he can ‘keep a low profile’, an insider told The Sun.

Paedophile Gary Glitter (pictured in his mugshot in 2015) has plans to flee to Spain and join his love child once he is released from jail, it has been revealed

Reports of his alleged plan to relocate to Spain comes just days after police were called out to a disturbance at the bail hostel where Glitter is currently staying (pictured)

Glitter is understood to have told his son Gary Pantoja Sosa, 21, that he will need to ‘stay out of the way’ after he leaves the bail hostel.

The disgraced rocker and Mr Sosa are reportedly in ‘regular contact’ and it is suspected Glitter may go to Spain to be near him. 

‘He’s in touch with him and he could go there,’ a source told the newspaper. ‘He’s told him that’s the plan.’

Glitter fathered Mr Sosa with Yudenia Sosa Martinez in 2001 while hiding in Cuba. 

Reports of his alleged plan to relocate to Spain comes just days after police were called out to a disturbance at the bail hostel where Glitter is currently staying.

A crowd of people is understood to have gathered outside the property in Hampshire on February 4 after the disgraced glam rock singer was freed the day before. Police are pictured outside the facility 


Vigilantes living near a bail hostel which is now housing notorious pop paedophile Gary Glitter had a heated exchange with police after attempting to storm the facility

A crowd of people is understood to have gathered outside the property in Hampshire on February 4 after the disgraced glam rock singer was freed the day before. 

The protesters outside the bail hostel, which is located in a residential area, reportedly shouted demands for him to be removed from their neighbourhood, with one man attempting to scale a fence. 

Glitter – who was one of the UK’s biggest glam rock stars of the 1970s and a familiar face on the BBC’s TV chart show Top of the Pops – was jailed in 2015 for sexually abusing three schoolgirls.

The 79-year-old served half of his 16-year sentence for sex crimes after being freed automatically halfway through his fixed-term determinate sentence. He will now be subject to licence conditions.  

He has been categorised as a ‘level 3’ offender. It means he is still seen as ‘dangerous’ and ‘capable of causing serious harm’ and will need senior probation staff to monitor him. 

Glitter (pictured) was one of the UK’s biggest glam rock stars of the 1970s and a familiar face on the BBC’s TV chart show Top of the Pops

Fuming parents living next to secret bail hostel where Gary Glitter is being held say they fear for their children’s safety after he was released from jail: READ MORE HERE 

Gary Glitter’s hostel is in an undisclosed location in the south of England 

Glitter’s fall from grace began in 1997 when he took a laptop into a Bristol branch of PC World for repair and an engineer found child abuse images on the hard drive.

Two years later the singer was jailed for four months after a total of 4,000 images were found by police in a subsequent investigation.

Glitter emigrated on release, before being kicked out of Cambodia in 2002 amid claims of sex crimes.

Four years later he was jailed in neighbouring Vietnam for molesting two girls, one aged just ten.

He escaped serious charges of child rape — which carried a death sentence — and returned to the UK in 2008.

He was forced to sign the sex offenders’ register, but he was arrested once again in 2012 at his multi-million-pound home in Westminster.

Police would later describe him as a ‘habitual sexual predator who took advantage of the star status afforded to him’.

And in 2015 he was convicted of attempted rape, four counts of indecent assault and one of having sex with a girl under 13 in the 1970s and 1980s.

In June 2021 it was revealed Glitter had been given the green light for freedom.

Glitter no longer owns the master rights to his songs — meaning he no longer receives any royalties.

In 2019, his song Rock and Roll Part 2 featured in hit movie The Joker, but rights holders insisted he would not receive any royalties.

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