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Singer Sinead O’Connor found ‘safe’ after police missing person search

When she still hadn’t returned after several hours, a friend called police and reported her missing, causing officers to release an alert classifying Sinead, 49, as a “missing suicidal”.

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Police had cited a concerned caller who told them the singer apparently had failed to return from a bicycle ride in the suburb of Wilmette.

It is unclear where Sinead was found, or what prompted her disappearance. The lawsuit calls O’Connor’s accusations “despicable, fabricated lies” and adds that “O’Connor is now known perhaps as much for her weird, unhinged Internet rants as for her music”.

The singer recently feuded with former talk show host Arsenio Hall after the death of Prince when O’Connor claimed that Hall provided drugs to the late singer, according to “Entertainment Tonight.”

Many fans are asking for jokes surrounding the singer to stop, with many making light of her reported past struggles with mental illness.

O’Connor, 49, soared to fame in 1990 when she released the global hit “Nothing Compares 2 U”, a cover of a Prince ballad.

O’Connor was found safe Monday afternoon after reportedly disappearing from the Chicago suburbs Sunday morning.

“All you did is accuse me falsely”, she wrote.

Her last Facebook post was an odd message to her family.

After scoring an global hit with her rendition of Prince’s ballad, “Nothing Compares 2 U”, O’Connor has been known as much for her fierce and expressive voice as for her blunt criticism of the Catholic Church and other institutions. The lengthy note was for his 28-year-old son, Jake, to take her 12-year-old brother, Shane Lunny from the child care, Tusla.

Prince, who died on April 21, wrote O’Connor’s best known song, the ballad Nothing Compares 2 U. “What you have done to your brother and your mother is LITERALLY criminal”. She also cut ties with her family in November after sharing news she had suffered an overdose in a hotel room. I have lost last year’s income and this year’s.

“Do not abandon your brother or any other of my babies again”.

O’Connor is now being sued by former late night host Arsenio Hall for comments she made about him in the wake of Prince’s death.

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But perhaps the controversial singer became more infamous when she tore up a picture of Pope John Paul II on “Saturday Night Live” back in 1992.

Sinead's 1990 hit *Nothing Compares To You* turned her into an international success