
Bombshell bucks party revelation at Outback Wrangler trial
Zachary Chellingworth testified at the trial of Outback Wrangler host Matt Wright, who is accused of attempting to pervert the course of justice over the chopper crash which killed his Netflix co-star Chris Wilson.
Under cross examination Mr Chellingworth admitted his brother had used cocaine but he 'cannot name the time' three times.
'I was aware of my brother's cocaine use . . . that it was few and far between,' he said
'He did not take drugs on a regular occasion. I'm his big brother so I know.'
Mr Wright's lawyer David Edwardson KC insisted the witness reveal the time and place he had seen Mr Robinson consume cocaine.
'It was my bucks party on Matt Wright's boat,' he said, which was in 2016.
Earlier Mr Chellingworth, a licensed aircraft maintenance engineer for CareFlight, recalled the morning he discovered his brother had been involved in a fatal crash.
'I received a phone call from mum, and she was quite distraught, telling me that Sebastian had been in an accident,' he said.
'Pretty much my colleagues have been dispatched to the site.' Chris Wilson with his wife Danielle. Credit: Supplied
The court heard that Mr Robinson lived in a cottage on the sprawling Darwin property of Wild Harvest NT director Mick Burns, who had contracted the egg collecting mission. Mr Robinson's hangar is also on Mr Burns' property.
Mr Chellingworth told the jury that after the crash, Mr Burns informed him and his mother that Mr Wright had 'collected the logbooks' from Mr Robinson's home.
'Mick Burns had notified myself and mum that Matt Wright had collected the log books from Mick Burns' residence, which is where Sebastian lives, and he (Mr Wright) had given them to a pilot named Jock Purcell and Jock Purcell held on to them,' he said.
Mr Chellingworth said that after being told this, he went to Mr Purcell's home – about a week after the crash – to retrieve the logbooks.
He said Mr Purcell was not home when he arrived but his wife handed them over.
'It was Sebastian's aircraft log book,' he said.
'It was in between A4 and A5 size, (inaudible) backing and gold writing.
'Every time Seb flies, he logs it in that logbook.'
Soon after, Mr Chellingworth visited Mr Robinson at the Royal Brisbane Hospital where Matt Wright is accused of pressuring the pilot to falsify flight records after the crash.
He confirmed COVID restrictions were in place and he had to provide proof of vaccination to gain entry to the hospital.
Mr Chellingworth said he was in his brother's private hospital room when Mr Wright arrived at the hospital with his wife Kaia and their young son to visit.
He told the court that he stayed in the room throughout the Wrights' hour-long visit.
'He (Mr Wright) was carrying some type of documentation,' Mr Chellingworth said.
'Matt Wright had said to Sebastian 'I need you to take 15 to 20 hours off IDW, the crash helicopter, and put them onto (his own helicopter) ZXZ' because they were hours unaccounted for.
'Sebastian responded and he said 'no'.
'He (Mr Wright) said, 'it's OK if you don't want to do it and we'll find another way'.'
Mr Chellingworth said Mr Wright also asked his brother to delete any texts, videos, notes and phone calls in relation to the crash.
'No he did not physically get hold of the phone,' he said.
'He asked Sebastian to delete things.
'Sebastian disagreed.'
Mr Chellingworth said the rest of the conversation was 'general chit chat about the helicopter and the accident'.
He did not recall Mr Wright leaving any documents at the hospital.
Mr Edwardson accused Mr Chellingworth of inventing his claims about Mr Wright's alleged actions during the March 11 hospital visit to protect his sibling.
'You, your mother and brother (Mr Robinson) have manufactured these claims against Matt Wright,' the lawyer suggested to the witness.
'You're making it up as you go along, aren't you?'
Mr Chellingworth replied, 'it's not true'.
'I'm telling the truth,' he said.
The trial before Acting Justice Alan Blow continues.

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ABC News
3 hours ago
- ABC News
Matt Wright's friend denies committing perjury to protect the Netflix star, NT Supreme Court jury hears
Matt Wright's friend has denied committing perjury out of loyalty to the celebrity croc wrangler after accusations he became "tangled in [his] own lies" during the trial. Mr Wright has pleaded not guilty in the Northern Territory Supreme Court to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice in the aftermath of a fatal 2022 helicopter crash. Catch up on today's live coverage of Matt Wright's Supreme Court trial. The crash killed his Netflix co-star Chris "Willow" Wilson and badly injured pilot Sebastian Robinson but Mr Wright is not accused of any wrongdoing in relation to the accident itself. Instead, prosecutors allege he tried to frustrate the investigation that followed in a bid to cover up shoddy record keeping in his chopper business, including by asking Mr Robinson to doctor flight records. On Wednesday, Mr Wright's employee and friend Tim Johnston told the court his boss had become "irate" and was "at 11 out of 10" after finding out he had taken items from Mr Robinson's Brisbane hospital room after the crash. Mr Johnston told the jury he was in Brisbane on holiday when a mutual friend, Jai Tomlinson, asked him to "pick something up" from Mr Robinson's mother, Noelene Chellingworth, but he had "no idea" what it was. "How do you pick something up that you don't now what it is?" Crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC asked. "You ask someone for it and grab it and pick it up," Mr Johnston replied. "How did you know what you were picking up?" "That was not for me to know, I was asked to pick something up." Mr Johnston said after Ms Chellingworth handed him a "folded-up A4 bit of paper" he went outside Mr Robinson's room and asked the injured pilot's brother if there was "anything else you want me to take back". "He had a little backpack there and in his backpack there was a book and a phone and various other things," he said. "He got them both out but he didn't want to give me the phone." Mr Johnston said he then took the diary and piece of paper and went to catch a taxi but called Mr Wright before leaving the hospital grounds. "I told him what I'd brought back and mate, he went, he got very irate, very irate," he said. "About what?" Mr Gullaci asked. "Taking the diary," Mr Johnston replied. "I can't recall in detail what he said but I know when Matt gets irate and he was at 11 out of 10 that day. "He told me that I've done the wrong thing and I need to get it back up to Noelene." After the lunch break, Mr Gullaci suggested it was actually Mr Wright who had instructed Mr Johnston to collect the items and asked him if "you understand what perjury is". "Are you still prepared to tell lies for Matt Wright in that scenario?" he asked. "I have never been prepared to tell lies for Matt Wright," Mr Johnston replied. "I'm putting to you directly that what you want to do, and out of loyalty and out of friendship I can understand it, you want to protect Mr Wright at all costs?" "Disagree." "And you are prepared to tell blatant lies if in your mind it protects Mr Wright?" "No." Mr Gullaci also suggested there were "critical differences" between the account Mr Johnston gave in a pre-trial hearing in July and his evidence on Wednesday. "That's because you became tangled in your own lies," Mr Gullaci suggested. "Disagree," Mr Johnston replied. Mr Tomlinson also took the stand on Wednesday and denied ever asking anyone to "go and collect some items" from Mr Robinson before visiting him in hospital with Mr Wright. "At any point before your visit, had you done any of those things, that is, ask anyone to go there and get particular items from Mr Robinson?" Mr Gullaci asked. "No," Mr Tomlinson replied. The trial continues in Darwin on Thursday when Mr Tomlinson will resume his evidence.


The Advertiser
4 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Witness accused of lying to protect reality TV star
A witness has been accused of lying to protect reality TV star Matt Wright from accusations he tried to cover up evidence following a fatal helicopter crash. The Outback Wrangler star is on trial in Darwin Supreme Court having pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. The charges follow a crash in February 2022 that killed Wright's friend and co-star Chris "Willow" Wilson on a crocodile-egg collecting mission in the Northern Territory's Arnhem Land. Pilot Sebastian Robinson, 32, was left a paraplegic. Prosecutors allege Wright was worried investigators would learn his choppers' flying-hour meters were regularly disconnected to extend flying hours beyond official thresholds and that paperwork was falsified. In court on Wednesday Tim Johnston, a manager at Wright's company Helibrook, was accused by crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC of lying about a visit he made to Mr Robinson in hospital days after the crash. Mr Johnston earlier told the jury he had been asked by Wright's friend Jai Tomlinson to pick up items from Mr Robinson's family at the hospital but he had not been told what they were. Mr Johnston met Mr Robinson's mother, Noelene Chellingworth, in ICU and was given the pilot's diary and a flight maintenance document by one of her sons, but not a phone which he had asked if he could take as well. He said he left the ICU and rang Wright to report he had seen Mr Robinson, who was "not in a good way". When he told him he had Mr Robinson's diary Wright got "very irate", Mr Johnston said. "I know when Matt gets irate and he was at 11 out of 10 that day," he said. "He told me that I've done the wrong thing and I need to get it back up to Noelene." He said he hung up on Wright and called Ms Chellingworth and arranged to return the diary straight away. But Mr Gullaci put it to Mr Johnston he was lying and had in fact been asked by Wright to collect Mr Robinson's pilot logbook, a maintenance release form and his phone. He said the evidence of Ms Chellingworth and her sons was that she called Mr Johnston and demanded he return the diary, which he did. "Are you still prepared to tell lies for Mr Wright? Mr Gullaci said. "I have not lied," Mr Johnston replied. Mr Gullaci accused Mr Johnston of wanting to protect Wright at any cost and had been asked by the TV star to fetch the phone so he could delete and hide flying hour entries. Mr Johnston denied that, saying, "I'm telling you the truth". The jury heard after returning the diary to Ms Chellingworth he took the crashed chopper's maintenance release to Wright in Darwin. The court earlier was told Wright offered $10,000 to Mr Robinson's family but they had declined the offer. Ms Chellingworth was questioned about her diary entries in the weeks after the crash, agreeing she had recorded Wright offering her the $10,000 to "tide her over" and pay bills. "We told him we didn't want it," she said. One of her diary entries made when she was with her son in Royal Brisbane Hospital read: "Matt Wright came in today and tried to persuade Sebastian to put hours on his helicopter". Senior defence counsel David Edwardson KC put it to Ms Chellingworth she had added diary entries to support her claims in court, which she denied. She disagreed with Mr Edwardson's accusation she falsely alleged Wright had wanted Mr Robinson to transfer flying hours from the crashed chopper onto the pilot's helicopter. The charges against Wright do not relate to the cause of the accident and the prosecution does not allege he is responsible for the crash, Mr Wilson's death or Mr Robinson's injuries. A witness has been accused of lying to protect reality TV star Matt Wright from accusations he tried to cover up evidence following a fatal helicopter crash. The Outback Wrangler star is on trial in Darwin Supreme Court having pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. The charges follow a crash in February 2022 that killed Wright's friend and co-star Chris "Willow" Wilson on a crocodile-egg collecting mission in the Northern Territory's Arnhem Land. Pilot Sebastian Robinson, 32, was left a paraplegic. Prosecutors allege Wright was worried investigators would learn his choppers' flying-hour meters were regularly disconnected to extend flying hours beyond official thresholds and that paperwork was falsified. In court on Wednesday Tim Johnston, a manager at Wright's company Helibrook, was accused by crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC of lying about a visit he made to Mr Robinson in hospital days after the crash. Mr Johnston earlier told the jury he had been asked by Wright's friend Jai Tomlinson to pick up items from Mr Robinson's family at the hospital but he had not been told what they were. Mr Johnston met Mr Robinson's mother, Noelene Chellingworth, in ICU and was given the pilot's diary and a flight maintenance document by one of her sons, but not a phone which he had asked if he could take as well. He said he left the ICU and rang Wright to report he had seen Mr Robinson, who was "not in a good way". When he told him he had Mr Robinson's diary Wright got "very irate", Mr Johnston said. "I know when Matt gets irate and he was at 11 out of 10 that day," he said. "He told me that I've done the wrong thing and I need to get it back up to Noelene." He said he hung up on Wright and called Ms Chellingworth and arranged to return the diary straight away. But Mr Gullaci put it to Mr Johnston he was lying and had in fact been asked by Wright to collect Mr Robinson's pilot logbook, a maintenance release form and his phone. He said the evidence of Ms Chellingworth and her sons was that she called Mr Johnston and demanded he return the diary, which he did. "Are you still prepared to tell lies for Mr Wright? Mr Gullaci said. "I have not lied," Mr Johnston replied. Mr Gullaci accused Mr Johnston of wanting to protect Wright at any cost and had been asked by the TV star to fetch the phone so he could delete and hide flying hour entries. Mr Johnston denied that, saying, "I'm telling you the truth". The jury heard after returning the diary to Ms Chellingworth he took the crashed chopper's maintenance release to Wright in Darwin. The court earlier was told Wright offered $10,000 to Mr Robinson's family but they had declined the offer. Ms Chellingworth was questioned about her diary entries in the weeks after the crash, agreeing she had recorded Wright offering her the $10,000 to "tide her over" and pay bills. "We told him we didn't want it," she said. One of her diary entries made when she was with her son in Royal Brisbane Hospital read: "Matt Wright came in today and tried to persuade Sebastian to put hours on his helicopter". Senior defence counsel David Edwardson KC put it to Ms Chellingworth she had added diary entries to support her claims in court, which she denied. She disagreed with Mr Edwardson's accusation she falsely alleged Wright had wanted Mr Robinson to transfer flying hours from the crashed chopper onto the pilot's helicopter. The charges against Wright do not relate to the cause of the accident and the prosecution does not allege he is responsible for the crash, Mr Wilson's death or Mr Robinson's injuries. A witness has been accused of lying to protect reality TV star Matt Wright from accusations he tried to cover up evidence following a fatal helicopter crash. The Outback Wrangler star is on trial in Darwin Supreme Court having pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. The charges follow a crash in February 2022 that killed Wright's friend and co-star Chris "Willow" Wilson on a crocodile-egg collecting mission in the Northern Territory's Arnhem Land. Pilot Sebastian Robinson, 32, was left a paraplegic. Prosecutors allege Wright was worried investigators would learn his choppers' flying-hour meters were regularly disconnected to extend flying hours beyond official thresholds and that paperwork was falsified. In court on Wednesday Tim Johnston, a manager at Wright's company Helibrook, was accused by crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC of lying about a visit he made to Mr Robinson in hospital days after the crash. Mr Johnston earlier told the jury he had been asked by Wright's friend Jai Tomlinson to pick up items from Mr Robinson's family at the hospital but he had not been told what they were. Mr Johnston met Mr Robinson's mother, Noelene Chellingworth, in ICU and was given the pilot's diary and a flight maintenance document by one of her sons, but not a phone which he had asked if he could take as well. He said he left the ICU and rang Wright to report he had seen Mr Robinson, who was "not in a good way". When he told him he had Mr Robinson's diary Wright got "very irate", Mr Johnston said. "I know when Matt gets irate and he was at 11 out of 10 that day," he said. "He told me that I've done the wrong thing and I need to get it back up to Noelene." He said he hung up on Wright and called Ms Chellingworth and arranged to return the diary straight away. But Mr Gullaci put it to Mr Johnston he was lying and had in fact been asked by Wright to collect Mr Robinson's pilot logbook, a maintenance release form and his phone. He said the evidence of Ms Chellingworth and her sons was that she called Mr Johnston and demanded he return the diary, which he did. "Are you still prepared to tell lies for Mr Wright? Mr Gullaci said. "I have not lied," Mr Johnston replied. Mr Gullaci accused Mr Johnston of wanting to protect Wright at any cost and had been asked by the TV star to fetch the phone so he could delete and hide flying hour entries. Mr Johnston denied that, saying, "I'm telling you the truth". The jury heard after returning the diary to Ms Chellingworth he took the crashed chopper's maintenance release to Wright in Darwin. The court earlier was told Wright offered $10,000 to Mr Robinson's family but they had declined the offer. Ms Chellingworth was questioned about her diary entries in the weeks after the crash, agreeing she had recorded Wright offering her the $10,000 to "tide her over" and pay bills. "We told him we didn't want it," she said. One of her diary entries made when she was with her son in Royal Brisbane Hospital read: "Matt Wright came in today and tried to persuade Sebastian to put hours on his helicopter". Senior defence counsel David Edwardson KC put it to Ms Chellingworth she had added diary entries to support her claims in court, which she denied. She disagreed with Mr Edwardson's accusation she falsely alleged Wright had wanted Mr Robinson to transfer flying hours from the crashed chopper onto the pilot's helicopter. The charges against Wright do not relate to the cause of the accident and the prosecution does not allege he is responsible for the crash, Mr Wilson's death or Mr Robinson's injuries. A witness has been accused of lying to protect reality TV star Matt Wright from accusations he tried to cover up evidence following a fatal helicopter crash. The Outback Wrangler star is on trial in Darwin Supreme Court having pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. The charges follow a crash in February 2022 that killed Wright's friend and co-star Chris "Willow" Wilson on a crocodile-egg collecting mission in the Northern Territory's Arnhem Land. Pilot Sebastian Robinson, 32, was left a paraplegic. Prosecutors allege Wright was worried investigators would learn his choppers' flying-hour meters were regularly disconnected to extend flying hours beyond official thresholds and that paperwork was falsified. In court on Wednesday Tim Johnston, a manager at Wright's company Helibrook, was accused by crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC of lying about a visit he made to Mr Robinson in hospital days after the crash. Mr Johnston earlier told the jury he had been asked by Wright's friend Jai Tomlinson to pick up items from Mr Robinson's family at the hospital but he had not been told what they were. Mr Johnston met Mr Robinson's mother, Noelene Chellingworth, in ICU and was given the pilot's diary and a flight maintenance document by one of her sons, but not a phone which he had asked if he could take as well. He said he left the ICU and rang Wright to report he had seen Mr Robinson, who was "not in a good way". When he told him he had Mr Robinson's diary Wright got "very irate", Mr Johnston said. "I know when Matt gets irate and he was at 11 out of 10 that day," he said. "He told me that I've done the wrong thing and I need to get it back up to Noelene." He said he hung up on Wright and called Ms Chellingworth and arranged to return the diary straight away. But Mr Gullaci put it to Mr Johnston he was lying and had in fact been asked by Wright to collect Mr Robinson's pilot logbook, a maintenance release form and his phone. He said the evidence of Ms Chellingworth and her sons was that she called Mr Johnston and demanded he return the diary, which he did. "Are you still prepared to tell lies for Mr Wright? Mr Gullaci said. "I have not lied," Mr Johnston replied. Mr Gullaci accused Mr Johnston of wanting to protect Wright at any cost and had been asked by the TV star to fetch the phone so he could delete and hide flying hour entries. Mr Johnston denied that, saying, "I'm telling you the truth". The jury heard after returning the diary to Ms Chellingworth he took the crashed chopper's maintenance release to Wright in Darwin. The court earlier was told Wright offered $10,000 to Mr Robinson's family but they had declined the offer. Ms Chellingworth was questioned about her diary entries in the weeks after the crash, agreeing she had recorded Wright offering her the $10,000 to "tide her over" and pay bills. "We told him we didn't want it," she said. One of her diary entries made when she was with her son in Royal Brisbane Hospital read: "Matt Wright came in today and tried to persuade Sebastian to put hours on his helicopter". Senior defence counsel David Edwardson KC put it to Ms Chellingworth she had added diary entries to support her claims in court, which she denied. She disagreed with Mr Edwardson's accusation she falsely alleged Wright had wanted Mr Robinson to transfer flying hours from the crashed chopper onto the pilot's helicopter. The charges against Wright do not relate to the cause of the accident and the prosecution does not allege he is responsible for the crash, Mr Wilson's death or Mr Robinson's injuries.


7NEWS
5 hours ago
- 7NEWS
Outback Wrangler star Matt Wright ‘offered money' to injured pilot's family after fatal chopper crash in NT
Reality TV star Matt Wright offered $10,000 to the family of a helicopter pilot badly injured in a fatal crash but it was declined, a jury has heard. The Outback Wrangler star is on trial in Darwin Supreme Court having pleaded not guilty to three counts of attempting to pervert the course of justice. The charges follow a helicopter crash in February 2022 that killed Wright's friend and co-star Chris 'Willow' Wilson on a crocodile-egg collecting mission in the Northern Territory 's Arnhem Land. Pilot Sebastian Robinson, 32, was left a paraplegic after the crash. On Wednesday his mother, Noelene Chellingworth, was questioned about her diary entries in the weeks after the crash, agreeing she had recorded Wright had offered her $10,000 to 'tide her over' and pay bills. 'We told him we didn't want it,' she said under questioning by crown prosecutor Jason Gullaci SC. Chellingworth told the court she had met with a lawyer in March 2022 to discuss whether her son could sue for negligence and explored claiming workers' compensation. She agreed the legal advice was that Robinson was an independent contractor so making a claim as a direct employee was not an option. One of her diary entries made when she was with her son in Royal Brisbane Hospital read: 'Matt Wright came in today and tried to persuade Sebastian to put hours on his helicopter'. Wright has been accused of trying to get Robinson to fake flying-hour records because he was concerned crash investigators would find out he and his pilots had disconnected flight-time meters and faked paperwork. Senior defence counsel David Edwardson KC put it to Chellingworth she had added diary entries to support her claims in court, which she denied. She disagreed with Edwardson's accusation she falsely alleged Wright had wanted Robinson to transfer flying hours from the crashed chopper onto the pilot's helicopter. Under questioning from Gullaci, Chellingworth agreed she was very concerned her son might not walk or work again and explored legal options for compensation. 'He wasn't going to be dropped in on a wheelchair to collect eggs was he?' Gullaci said, referring to egg collectors being slung on a line under a helicopter to be dropped onto crocodile nests. Chellingworth tearfully told the court in the weeks after the crash she was devastated, and very worried about her son and his mental state. She said Robinson had a paraplegic uncle he was a carer for 'so he knew what he was in for'. The jury has heard Wright was unvaccinated against COVID so at the time of the crash could not work in Arnhem Land because of virus restrictions. That meant Robinson, who could sling collectors under a chopper, was 'always under pressure from Matt Wright,' Chellingworth said. The charges against Wright do not relate to the cause of the accident and the prosecution does not allege he is responsible for the crash, Wilson's death or Robinson's injuries.