Karen Danczuk accuses women of stealing her famous selfies and using them to create fake dating profiles

  • Selfie Queen Karen said she was getting 'irritated' by women stealing her photos
  • Former Labour councillor shot to fame after posting a series of revealing selfies
  • She was formerly married to disgraced Labour MP for Rochdale Simon Danczuk

Karen Danczuk has accused women of stealing her cleavage-flaunting selfies and using them on dating sites.

Danczuk, 33, fumed on Twitter that she was getting 'irritated' by people pinching her photos for profiles on sites like Tinder and Plenty of Fish.

She wrote: 'Starting to get little irritated now by people (I assume women) using my pictures for FB, Twitter, dating sites etc to create profiles.'

Pictured, Karen Danczuk
Pictured, Karen Danczuk

Karen Danczuk has accused women of stealing her cleavage-flaunting selfies and using them on dating sites

The former Labour councillor shot to fame after causing a frenzy on social media with her revealing selfies.

She later courted even more publicity after her divorce from disgraced Labour MP for Rochdale Simon Danczuk became a public soap opera.

Danczuk left her husband but still works for him in his constituency office.

The 50-year-old MP is currently suspended from the Labour Party over texts about spanking he sent to a 17-year-old girl.

In February, Danczuk vowed that she wanted to turn her back on sharing selfies to her 72,000 Twitter followers.

She said that taking the pictures could have been linked to the trauma of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of her stepbrother Michael Burke.

Burke was jailed for 15 years in December last year, for sexually abusing and raping Danczuk from when she was six or seven for an 18-year period.

Pictured, Simon and Karen Danczuk
Pictured, Karen Danczuk

Karen (right) shot to fame after causing a frenzy on social media with her revealing selfies and courted more publicity after her divorce from Labour MP for Rochdale Simon Danczuk (left, both pictured)

Speaking to BBC Radio 5 live, she said: 'I think I wanted to be normal. I wanted people to look at me in a way that I probably hadn't been looked at before.

'It was a mental thing, it was a confidence thing.

'I feel quite embarrassed. It was a massive cry for help.

'Now when I look back I think, goodness me, I really was ill, and I really feel sorry for me back then.'

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