logo
Sydney cops plead guilty to assault after naked woman bashed, pepper-sprayed during welfare check

Sydney cops plead guilty to assault after naked woman bashed, pepper-sprayed during welfare check

7NEWS10-07-2025
A naked woman suffering a mental health episode was punched, kicked, dragged by her hair and pepper-sprayed by two police officers who have admitted using unlawful force.
'You have to do what you have to do,' one of the officers, senior constable Nathan Black, told medical staff later when the schizophrenic woman was taken to Nepean Hospital in western Sydney.
Black and constable Timothy John Trautsch were in plain clothes when they made a welfare check on the 48-year-old woman in an industrial area at Emu Plains on January 22, 2023.
'If you touch me, you are f***ed and I mean f***ed. They're up there watching,' she told the two officers while sitting naked on a grassy kerb.
'You don't know about the aliens, do you?'
Court documents reveal the woman had been prescribed an antipsychotic but was not taking the medication at the time.
Black, 28, and Trautsch, 30, first talked to the woman — who cannot be named for legal reasons — and tried to get her into an ambulance and off to the hospital.
'Done for no other purpose than the infliction of pain'
Video footage played at a sentence hearing at Penrith District Court on Thursday showed the pair's violence escalating during an 18-minute assault against the woman.
She was pushed onto the road, kicked twice in the head, dragged along by her hair and punched.
At one stage, the two officers struggled trying to handcuff her on the ground as she lashed out with her arms.
She was also sprayed six times with pepper spray, twice in the face and once on her back which was grazed after falling into the rough road surface.
'That can be done for no other purpose than the infliction of pain, to spray OC (Oleoresin Capsicum) onto a lady's back who has been at various stages dragged or fallen onto the floor,' crown prosecutor Nicholas Marney said.
Some of the pepper spray got onto her genitals, the court was told.
The woman's shrieks and sobs were full of expletives at the two officers.
'God, make me strong. God, make me strong,' she said repeatedly.
'God, please. I'm sorry I didn't listen. I'm sorry, God.'
At one stage, the woman defecated on the road and on Black's leg.
'Wash your dirty stinky arse,' one of the officers was heard saying.
The two men discussed using a Taser and long baton, while Trautsch was at one point seen laughing.
The officers could have restrained the woman or just talked to her but instead chose violence, Marney said.
'It should never have got to that stage, they had an obligation,' he told Judge Graham Turnbull.
There was no threat posed with the two men able to contain her by pushing her onto the road, he argued.
Even as the woman grabbed for the handcuffs, this did not require kicking her in the head, Marney said.
Speaking to a psychologist who gave evidence to the court, Black and Trautsch both claimed they were experiencing long-standing mental health challenges at the time of the incident.
Black pleaded guilty to assault occasioning actual bodily harm, using a prohibited weapon without a permit and three counts of common assault.
He also admitted two counts of intentionally publishing protected information after sending snippets of the body-worn footage to another police officer.
In a message exchange, he described how the pair had emptied two cans of pepper spray on the woman.
'The whole body worn (footage) is so good shows her being f***ed,' he wrote.
Trautsch pleaded guilty to one count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, three counts of common assault and one count of using a prohibited weapon without a permit.
Both officers no longer work for the NSW Police Force.
The woman died due to unrelated circumstances 18 months after the attack.
The sentence hearing continues on July 15.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ex WWE boss Vince McMahon says Hulk Hogan 'wasn't a racist' in very rare interview
Ex WWE boss Vince McMahon says Hulk Hogan 'wasn't a racist' in very rare interview

Perth Now

time13 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Ex WWE boss Vince McMahon says Hulk Hogan 'wasn't a racist' in very rare interview

Vince McMahon says Hulk Hogan "said some racist things" but "wasn't a racist". The former WWE boss - who has given his first interview since resigning from the wrestling promotion's parent company TKO amid a lawsuit accusing him of sex trafficking and sexual assault - has reflected on the late world champion's 2015 scandal when he was heard using racist language in a leaked tape. Speaking about why he brought Hogan back to WWE in 2018 after cutting ties with him over the footage, he told TMZ Presents: The Real Hulk Hogan: "I knew he wasn't a racist, I'd been with him for so many years. "He wasn't a racist. He said some racist things, and he should pay for that, and he did. "But in the end, I think that everyone saw the real Hulk Hogan, Terry Bollea and they felt: 'Wait a minute. "'This guy, he doesn't act like a racist, he's not a racist.' We all make mistakes. That was a big one, but he wasn't a racist." Hogan died on July 24 aged 71 following a cardiac arrest, which came 10 years to the day since WWE cut ties with him after the leak. In the footage, he ranted about his daughter Brooke dating a Black man, and said: "I am racist, to a point" while using slurs. McMahon, 79, recalled: 'It was unforgivable and I was aghast, 'What happened?' When those things occurred, that's not like him. 'What in God's name is going on?' 'As soon as it happened, obviously, the company didn't have anything to do with him anymore. We took him out of the Hall of Fame. You just don't do those things.' Hogan's final WWE appearance came in January this year, when he was booed by fans, with many feeling he hadn't apologised enough for the racism storm. McMahon said of the appearance: 'It wasn't set up properly. I'm sure he was probably despondent after that. "I was angry because we've known each other for a lifetime, professionally and personally. And setting up, so to speak, this larger than life superhero, you don't just let him walk out there. "He deserved something very, very special. More than anyone, they owe him. It's just like, okay, here comes Hulk Hogan. "I got angry because that's not the way I would have done it and he deserved much more." Elsewhere in the interview, McMahon admitted he was shocked by Hogan's death. He added: 'You just don't think about someone, a family member or someone that close to you, you don't think about them passing away. "Terry had kicked out, so to speak, of so many surgeries… and, you know, he overcame that. "It was a tremendous shot. It was a blow to my heart.'

David Speirs denies misusing email list to promote charity fundraiser
David Speirs denies misusing email list to promote charity fundraiser

ABC News

time15 hours ago

  • ABC News

David Speirs denies misusing email list to promote charity fundraiser

The SA government says it has received a complaint about emails sent by former Liberal leader David Speirs promoting a fundraiser for a charity hike, but Mr Speirs has denied that he has misused private information and described the complaint about him as political 'mudraking'. In one of the emails seen by the ABC, he wrote: "If you're getting this update it means you were subscribed to a mailing list I personally put together where I was a local councillor or Member of Parliament and would have received correspondence from me before". The emails included details to a ticketed community fundraiser on Thursday night to raise money for men's mental health. The former member for Black resigned from parliament in October after being charged by police with supplying a controlled substance. In April he was convicted and fined after pleading guilty to the offence. Leader of Government Business, Tom Koutsantonis, said his electorate office received a complaint, which was also sent to the parliament's Privacy Committee, raising a concern that Mr Speirs may have breached the Privacy Act. "People are receiving emails from Mr Speirs from information that was gathered while he was either Liberal leader or the member for Black and that information is privileged," he said. "It's not his to take once he leaves office, it belongs to the people of South Australia. "He shouldn't be doing that and he should stop." Mr Speirs told ABC Radio Adelaide he did not believe he had misused private data when he emailed updates to a mailing list of people who had signed up to a database via his website over the years. "I did communicate with them to tell people that I was back in terms of doing some public stuff around Kokoda and mental health fundraising," he said. "There is lots of opportunity for people to unsubscribe from that, I've gone over the top with those opportunities because I was conscious of making sure that I used that information carefully. "People signed up for a newsletter and that there is continuity of purpose around what that was used for and that was raising awareness about activities and what I was up to in the community." He added he was "a private citizen now" and did not want to "buy into political sort of mudraking". The former opposition leader said he was not running for election but did not rule out returning to some form of public service in the future. "That is not on my radar. It's not something that I feel today I have the resilience and the strength to rise to that challenge," he said. "I'm not here advocating for them to vote for me today because I'm not running for election. "I am not seeking their vote on your show today. I'm a long, long way from that, if ever." He has previously posted on social media that he planned a journey of the "iconic hike" to raise funds for men's mental health. Mr Speirs said he struggled with his mental health but added that "many of my challenges were self-inflicted". He said he had grappled with "circumstantial depression and a darkness wondering, what the future holds and how to move forward".

Great white shark found with missing jaws prompts black market trade concerns
Great white shark found with missing jaws prompts black market trade concerns

ABC News

time20 hours ago

  • ABC News

Great white shark found with missing jaws prompts black market trade concerns

A mutilated great white shark found washed up near Port Lincoln on South Australia's Eyre Peninsula was likely illegally caught for the black market trade, authorities say. The 5-metre shark was found on a Louth Bay beach with its jaws missing and its stomach cut open. Department of Primary Industries and Regions South Australia (PIRSA) director of operations with fisheries and aquaculture Matt Read said the shark was found "in a rather grim state". "It had actually been cut up, or at least mutilated in the respects that its jaw had been removed from its carcass," Mr Read said. "It also had its stomach cut open, presumably to sink the animal when it had been initially taken." Port Lincoln marine scientist Kirsten Rough, who walks her dogs at Louth Bay beach, photographed the shark carcass on Sunday. She said there was a trail of washed-up offal that could have been the shark's liver. Also near the shark carcass were the remains of two seals and a tuna head, which she suspected had come from the shark's stomach. "There was a couple of chunks of a lumpy, gooey brown and green substance before we saw the back half of a seal, just its two back flippers," Ms Rough said. "The last thing we came across was what was left of the shark." Ms Rough did not think the shark's death was a result of the toxic algal bloom causing dead marine life to wash up at beaches across Adelaide and the Eyre and Yorke Peninsulas. "I thought that someone had probably caught it," Ms Rough said. PIRSA was alerted to the carcass on Friday. It said the fur seal carcass and remains of a southern bluefin tuna found near the dead great white could have been used as bait. Mr Read said great white shark jaws were sought-after black market items due to the animal's protected status. Due to the large size of this particular shark, he said its jaws would be very valuable. "That's certainly what we fear. The size of this shark is very unusual," Mr Read said. "Unfortunately we do think this could be a case of being taken for sale." Wildlife trade expert and Flinders University chair of forensic DNA technology Adrian Linacre said the grizzly nature of the shark's death was "bizarre and worrying". "Sharks are not often taken for the wildlife trade — except for fins or parts of their body for trophies that could be sold on the black market," Dr Linacre said. "It's strange that in this case the carcass has been found. Someone has taken this and either not thought about removing the whole carcass, or maybe they got disturbed." Dr Linacre said people underestimated just how big the illegal animal trade was in Australia. "The vast majority, as far as we're really interested in, is things which leave the country where often the market is bigger than it is here," he said. The penalties for illegally fishing a great white shark are severe. Mr Read said the first offence for an individual could be up to $20,000. "It can certainly range all the way up to $100,000 and two years' imprisonment," Mr Read said. Parts of the shark have been taken as evidence by PIRSA to assist their investigation and will be stored in Adelaide. "It might give us some timelines with regards to when we need to start looking at different areas of the waterways nearby," Mr Read said. He encouraged anyone with information to call PIRSA's illegal fishing hotline FishWatch on 1800 065 522.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store