A Met Police officer has mentioned he was “determined to pursue” the prosecution of Chelsea footballer Sam Kerr after she referred to as him “stupid and white”, a courtroom has heard.
Australia worldwide Kerr is on trial charged with inflicting racially aggravated harassment to PC Stephen Lovell throughout an incident in south-west London within the early hours of January 30, 2023.
It’s alleged that Kerr, 31, and her associate, West Ham midfielder Kristie Mewis, had been out ingesting once they had been pushed to Twickenham Police Station by a taxi driver who complained that they’d refused to pay clean-up prices after one in all them was sick, and that one in all them smashed the car’s rear window.
The ladies advised officers the motive force had been “acting in a crazy way” by driving very quick, repeatedly stopping and dashing up once more, locking them within the automobile, and refusing to allow them to go for about quarter-hour, Kingston Crown Courtroom heard because the trial continued on Tuesday.
Footage from PC Lovell’s body-worn digital camera was beforehand performed to jurors, during which Kerr tells PC Lovell and PC Samuel Limb that she and Ms Mewis had been “very scared” and “trying to escape” the cab once they broken the car.
On the police station Kerr is alleged to have turn into “abusive and insulting” in the direction of PC Lovell, calling him “stupid and white”.
Kerr accepts making the feedback however denies that they quantity to the cost.
The Crown Prosecution Service initially determined to not cost Kerr, the courtroom heard.
It was put to PC Lovell that he solely offered a press release alleging that Ms Kerr’s feedback had precipitated alarm or harassment after that call.
In his first assertion to the CPS, the officer made no point out of the “stupid and white” remark having an influence on him, the jury was advised.
Police submitted a request to evaluate the CPS choice to not prosecute, and it responded that the end result can be restricted to an apology, the courtroom heard.
Prosecutors later requested additional proof and a second assertion from PC Lovell was offered in December 2023, mentioning the alleged influence.
He learn a bit of the assertion to the courtroom which mentioned the feedback made him “shocked, upset, and (left) me feeling humiliated”.
The cost was authorised later in December 2023, practically a 12 months after the incident.
Grace Forbes, defending Kerr, mentioned throughout cross-examination: “The only reason you made that statement was because the Crown Prosecution Service had declined to authorise a criminal charge to prosecute Ms Kerr.”
He responded “no” earlier than agreeing that officers had been coping with whether or not to pursue prosecution in August 2023.
“Throughout July and August 2023, the Women’s World Cup was playing,” the defence lawyer mentioned.
PC Lovell responded: “If you say so, yes.”
Ms Forbes mentioned “Ms Kerr was playing for her country” and “she would have been all over TV – do you recall seeing her?”
The officer denied seeing the striker on TV earlier than the defence barrister mentioned “this person who made you feel unimportant”.
She added: “You were determined to pursue this person, weren’t you?”
PC Lovell mentioned “yes” and Ms Forbes requested “through the criminal courts?”
The officer mentioned “yes” once more.
Ms Forbes famous that the CPS had initially discovered no proof of harassment or alarm attributable to Kerr’s feedback, and instructed PC Lovell’s second assertion described their impact “purely to get a criminal charge over the line”.
Throughout re-examination by prosecutor Invoice Emlyn Jones KC, PC Lovell advised the jury that being referred to as “f****** stupid” had made him really feel “belittled and upset”.
Requested the way it felt being referred to as “f****** stupid and white”, he mentioned “it felt very unnecessary”.
Mr Jones requested if his race had “any relevance as far as you can see to what was going on”, and PC Lovell mentioned “no” and later added that the reference to him being white “upset me, I guess”.
The prosecutor requested: “Is that correct, PC Lovell, that you just made something up to get a charge over the line?”, and he replied: “No, I didn’t make it up to get a charge over the line.”
The trial continues.