A TV star has been arrested over the death of beauty therapist Alive Webb following her death after undergoing a liquid Brazilian butt lift.
Self-styled “Lip King” Jordan Parke was seen leaving his home last night as the police investigation into the 33-year-old’s death continues.
Parke, who also describes himself as ‘The Plastic Surgery Advocate’, has appeared on Bodyshockers and This Morning due to his love of cosmetic procedures.
His obsession has seen him spend more than £130,000 on plastic surgery and he has now spoken out on social media about his involvement in the death probe.
Taking to Instagram last night, he told followers: “I can’t talk to anybody. I was arrested.” He later drove away from his Dudley home in a Mercedes G Wagon, complete with a personalised number plate which reads ‘POUT’.
The Mirror reports Parke, who has no known medical qualifications, offers cosmetic procedures from various premises across the UK, including in Gloucester.
On the same Instagram account, he previously made a wild plastic surgery sex claim. The 34-year-old Kardashian fanatic shared: “Plastic surgery is like sex. You can’t have it once. You have to have it over and over.”
This week, the Mirror reported how 33-year-old beauty therapist Alice Webb died after undergoing the dangerous procedure, which involves a person’s buttocks being injected with hyaluronic acid and dermal fillers.
The mum-of-five, who ran her own beauty business in the West Country, was allegedly treated by an unqualified practitioner without medical training. Similar procedures advertised online cost around £2,500 a time and can be performed in just 60 minutes.
The celeb-endorsed procedure involves being injected with hyaluronic acid and dermal fillers – and can be very dangerous. Since 2022, some 479 patients have reported BBL-related complications to Save Face.
More than 50 per cent of reported cases resulted in severe and life-threatening complications including infections, sepsis, and abscesses requiring hospital admission and often surgical intervention.
Alarmingly, it was found that 100 per cent of these treatments had been carried out by non-healthcare practitioners. Alice passed away at Gloucestershire Royal Hospital in the early hours of Tuesday, September 24.
She became the first Brit to die after a liquid BBL. Gloucestershire Police detectives arrested two people in relation to her death, and have since confirmed that two people have been released on police bail.
Paying tribute to Alice in a heartbreaking Facebook post, devastated partner Dane Knight wrote: “Want to say a heartfelt thank you to all family and friends that were here for us at our time of need, including all of the kind messages sent to my children and myself.
“There was some very beautiful messages sent by some of your children that formed a start of a smile from the corner of my kids mouth. Be extremely careful on what you say – my children are extremely vulnerable!”
Alice was mum to five young daughters – Delsie, 15, Preete, 13, Gracie 12, Nylie, 10 and Clarie, seven. As of yesterday, the Studio 23 clinic – located just a few miles from Alice’s family home in Wotton-under-Edge – had apparently removed its logo from its premises.
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