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Wales Online
Wales Online
National
Sarah Arnold & Steve Houghton

Britain's most notorious prisoner saw lads' mag model in jail 'while writing love letters to ex'

Britain's most notorious ­convict was reportedly in a love triangle ­between his ex-wife and a mens' magazine model. According to the Sunday Mirror, Charles Bronson, 70, was having prison meetings with Gemma Fernandez, who is in her 30s and posed for FHM, while writing love letters to first wife Irene Dunroe.

The newspaper said it told in February how Gemma contacted him after seeing Tom Hardy star in the film about his life. She is campaigning to release the con, who has spent 47 years in jail, and has met him inside. She said: “It was his first visit in two years – a big, big day.

“It was lovely to see him. I gave him a massive hug. It was really, really nice. He was all excited.” But he has told 70-year-old Irene, a former Ann Summers sales person, that he and Gemma have split because “romance and prison don’t mix”.

Gemma Fernandez is reported to have visited prisoner Charles Bronson (The Mirror)

Irene said Bronson, now calling himself Charles Salvador, has reportedly pledged to take her on dates and to a hotel for the weekend if he ever gets parole. Irene said: “I had no idea I was in a love triangle with somebody called Gemma. I thought she ran his Free Charles Salvador web page. Well, there isn’t one now as he has told me he and Gemma aren’t together.”

Bronson, considered Britain’s most violent criminal, with offences including armed robbery and attacks on other inmates, has married twice in jail. In 2017 in Wakefield Prison, West Yorkshire, he wed third wife, ex-soap actress Paula Williamson, then 37. They divorced and in July 2019 she was found dead.

He is now at HMP Woodhill, Buckinghamshire, and is due for a parole hearing this summer, which Irene is expected to attend.

She and Bronson met aged 19, and their son Mike is now 49. Irene, who calls Bronson by his birth name, Mick Peterson, said: “The man I loved wasn’t the notorious Charles Bronson. He’s Mick, a great dad and loving husband. Jail created Bronson.”

The hardman kept his life of crime secret until 1974, when he was convicted of armed robbery and got seven years. Irene reportedly said: “He later told me every time he went to do a robbery, he always wore a pair of my knickers to bring him luck. He even joked: ‘I think I picked the wrong colour’.”

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