logo
Read the email political staffer sent to politician who allegedly sexually assualted him years earlier

Read the email political staffer sent to politician who allegedly sexually assualted him years earlier

Daily Mail​2 days ago

A political staffer has admitted embellishing a glowing email he wrote to a state MP who allegedly sexually assaulted him years earlier.
Kiama MP Gareth Ward, 44, is on trial in the NSW District Court after pleading not guilty to sexual intercourse without consent and indecent assault charges.
The jury was told he approached a young, drunk political staffer after a mid-week event at NSW Parliament House in 2015 and offered him a place to stay for the night.
The man, who was 24 at the time but is now in his 30s, said Ward climbed into bed with him, groped his backside, and sexually assaulted him despite him repeatedly saying 'no'.
During his third day of cross-examination on Tuesday, he was asked about an email he wrote to Ward in March 2019, congratulating him on his appointment as minister for families.
'Your friendship means the world to me and my respect for you is already as high as it can be,' the complainant wrote to Ward.
He told the jury he sent the email in the hopes of securing a job in politics at a time when he was worried about his career prospects, so he embellished and fibbed about appreciating Ward's friendship.
The complainant maintained the email was not inconsistent with his claims he had been sexually assaulted by Ward, whom he continues to hold in professional esteem.
'I respect Mr Ward immensely. He is an incredible local member and he has done some incredible work as a minister,' the alleged victim said.
When asked if he told another political staffer that NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian had chosen a 'rapist' for her cabinet, the complainant said he couldn't recall the conversation but the words were consistent with what he has reported.
He said he didn't tell anyone about the alleged sexual assault before 2019 because it was 'incredibly embarrassing' and 'not something I would bring up in conversation.'
The jury was told the man was left feeling 'dirty' and 'confused' after the painful assault and he continued to ask himself whether he had invited the unwanted advances.
Ward is also accused of indecently assaulting an intoxicated 18-year-old in 2013 at his South Coast home after meeting the man at a networking event a year earlier.
The man claims the MP fondled his buttocks and scrotum, and gave him an unwelcome back massage despite his repeated requests to stop.
Ward, who was charged over the alleged assaults in 2022, is fighting the allegations in a four-week trial.
He has held the Kiama electorate since 2011, winning three elections as a Liberal before securing the 2023 poll as an independent.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hollywood legend reveals Trump phoned him and accused him of 'wussing out' over 2020 stolen election claims
Hollywood legend reveals Trump phoned him and accused him of 'wussing out' over 2020 stolen election claims

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Hollywood legend reveals Trump phoned him and accused him of 'wussing out' over 2020 stolen election claims

Playwright David Mamet revealed that President Donald Trump called him and complained that he 'wussed out' over those 2020 stolen election claims. Mamet was the guest on this week's episode of comedian Bill Maher's Club Random podcast. The Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright, screenwriter and author - known for Glengarry Glen Ross, Wag the Dog and The Untouchables - ditched liberalism in 2008 and is a supporter of Trump. Maher, a liberal who's taken swipes at the left for being too 'woke,' commented to Mamet that 'man, each book you get more right-wing,' and recalled how Mamet had come on his HBO show Real Time to publicize the last one. The comedian said that at the time, he thought Mamet was 'hedging' on the so-called 'big lie,' Trump's false claims that the 2020 election was stolen from him. 'You know, you don't know what happened to me the next morning,' Mamet said. Mamet recalled that on Maher's show, he was 'kind of iffy on it, right?' 'Next morning, eight o'clock, the phone rings. Woman on the phone says, "Mr. Mamet, will you hold for the president?"' Mamet recalled. 'I said wait a second, is Biden calling?' 'Is Trump! During the Biden administration. He says, "David, it's Donald Trump." I say, "Oh, Mr. President, thank you for calling to what do I owe the honor?"' the author described. 'He said, "I saw you on Bill Maher yesterday, you were great." He said, "But you wussed out on the question of the stolen election,"' Mamet said. 'And then he talked to me for like 20 minutes about how the election was stolen.' Maher interjected, 'It wasn't!' But this time Mamet took Trump's side. 'Well, I think it was,' the playwright pushed. Maher pointed out that 'they've adjudicated this.' 'They've looked at this. Republicans have looked at it,' Maher said. 'It was tested in court like 60 times. It was thrown out every time. Trump's own commission appointed by his own commissioners to look at the election ...They all said the same thing. It was the most fair, honest election we've ever had.' Christopher Krebs, who served as Director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, had called the 2020 election 'the most secure in American history.' In April, Trump revoked Krebs' security clearance via a presidential memorandum and directed Attorney General Pam Bondi and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to review Krebs' activities during his time working in government. 'I'm not talking about the votes. I'm not talking about counting the votes,' Mamet pressed. 'That the Hunter Biden laptop was suppressed, the COVID information was suppressed. Zuckerberg said himself that the White House pressured him not to bring forward the information on the laptop,' Mamet argued. 'And Rasmussen said, had that come out, there would have been a 17 point spread,' the playwright added. The New York Post broke the Hunter Biden laptop story on October 14, 2020, just weeks before the presidential election. The Biden campaign had officials in the intelligence community sign a letter saying that the information in the laptop being shopped by Trump allies had marks of a Russian disinformation campaign. Since then the Daily Mail and other outlets have authenticated the laptop. Maher wasn't buying Mamet's explanation.

Michael Gove's Spectator could Reform its allegiance
Michael Gove's Spectator could Reform its allegiance

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Michael Gove's Spectator could Reform its allegiance

In the past 12 months the Conservatives have lost power, lost a leader, lost their way and now, it seems, they may lose their organ. The Spectator has usually been a bastion of support for the Tories but, with the right wing in flux, it seems even that endorsement may be up in the air. 'We're giving house room to Reform,' the new editor Michael Gove told Andrew Neil on Times Radio, as he weighs up his options. Gove says that both Farage's upstarts and Badenoch's bedraggled band will be held to account by the magazine until either has shown they can be an 'effective governing force'. Neil was sceptical of this impartiality, pointing out that the editor now takes the Tory whip in the Lords, but apparently this isn't enough to tame the Govester. 'The whip in the House of Lords,' Gove said, 'is a whip so gentle that it doesn't even count as BDSM.' Spooky coincidence It's Pride month and everyone is getting into the spirit, including our spies. Sir Richard Moore, the head of MI6, announced on Tuesday that his organisation would be flying the Pride flag from its base in Vauxhall Cross. Moore tweeted that this showed that 'sexual orientation is no bar to you working and thriving' in our secret service. A praiseworthy message — although it probably would not have come as much of a shock to Guy Burgess and Anthony Blunt. No ifs, no butts The students of Eton are lucky in their provost. The journalist, museum chief and fashion honcho Sir Nicholas Coleridge, who now holds that post, told the Radio Oldie podcast that he goes for walks across the college grounds on a daily basis to get his 10,000 steps in. On any other campus, this would mean seeing all sorts of rule-breaking, but he does his bit to ensure the integrity of the college is upheld. 'If I saw someone smoking out of a window,' he said, 'I just wouldn't look too hard.' Bigger news still: Coleridge says that Eton is admitting women, though only at reunions for very old boys. 'They're allowed to bring their wives when they're 78,' he said, 'so they can drive them home afterwards.' Perhaps future generations of old boys will be a little more egalitarian, although one would have thought that this particular group of alumni could afford a cab. Presidential seal A good review can do wonders for a restaurant but sometimes a bad review is even better. The former editor of Vanity Fair, Graydon Carter, is also a restaurateur and owns the Waverly Inn in New York's Greenwich Village — which, despite being a great success, hasn't been to every Manhattanite's taste. One bad review has ended up at the top of the menu. It reads 'Worst food in the city', a quote attributed to one Donald Trump. Carter tells the River Cafe podcast Table 4: 'That hasn't hurt business.'

Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial LIVE updates: Rolling updates as Erin Patterson tells murder trial her side of the story following fatal beef Wellington lunch
Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial LIVE updates: Rolling updates as Erin Patterson tells murder trial her side of the story following fatal beef Wellington lunch

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Erin Patterson mushroom murder trial LIVE updates: Rolling updates as Erin Patterson tells murder trial her side of the story following fatal beef Wellington lunch

Follow Daily Mail Australia's live coverage of accused mushroom chef Erin Patterson's murder trial at Latrobe Valley Magistrates' Court in Morwell, Victoria. 21:54 Erin Patterson to enter witness box for fourth straight day Erin Patterson will resume giving evidence in her murder trial shortly after today's proceedings kick off at 10.30am. Lead defence barrister Colin Mandy SC is expected to finish questioning his client before the prosecution lead by Dr Nanette Rogers SC (pictured) will have an opportunity to cross-examine the accused killer.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store