Sam Kerr said she was “terrified” for her life during a taxi ride after the driver locked the doors and windows before speeding and swerving, which led to her partner smashing the car’s window with her boot in an attempt to escape, a court has heard.
Kerr, 31, the captain of the Australian women’s football team and Chelsea’s star striker, is on trial at Kingston crown court accused of racially aggravated harassment after calling a police officer “fucking stupid and white” when he doubted her claim of being “held hostage” by the driver. She denies the charges.
Giving evidence on Wednesday, Kerr was asked by her defence counsel, Grace Forbes, about the hours leading up to the incident with PC Stephen Lovell at Twickenham police station in the early hours of 30 January 2023, including the taxi ride.
Kerr told the court she was “terrified for [her] life” and that her partner, Kristie Mewis, had smashed the cab’s window by kicking it while it was still moving as the driver sped and swerved after Kerr was sick out of the window.
Forbes asked the Matilda’s star about her experience of racism growing up in Australia. Kerr, who identifies as White-Anglo-Indian, said she had faced racism since her school days over the colour of her skin.
“At school, I experienced being in situations where teacher had instigated that i was the troublemaker, or had started trouble,” she told the court. Kerr said she continued to face racism over social media and said she was “often followed around by security or a member of staff” while shopping if she was not “dressed correctly”.
Kerr said she moved to the UK in December 2019 after signing with Chelsea. She said she met her partner, Mewis, six months later after the West Ham United player “slid into my DMs”. She said the pair are due to get married in December and are expecting a baby boy in May.
On the evening of 29 January, they had been on a dinner date before visiting another restaurant for a friend’s birthday. Kerr said she had had some wine and cocktails that evening and ended up in a nightclub that was “a bit of a dungeon”. They stayed for 15 minutes before leaving to head home because the club “wasn’t for us”.
Kerr said she had tried to request three Uber taxis but they couldn’t find a ride. Instead, they hailed a black cab, which she told the court she never used over fears related to the Claremont killer, who murdered young women in an area of Perth close to where Kerr grew up.
“I lived in a state where, for 30 years, there was actually a seriel killer roaming that was thought to be a taxi driver, everyone was talking about not getting in taxis,” she said.
She said, at first, the taxi driver drove normally. Roughly 15 minutes into the journey however, Kerr began to feel sick. She put the window down and laid her head “on the outside of the window”.
“I started to feel a little bit sick and I was spit vomiting outside of the gap,” she said. While her head was still sitting on the car’s open window frame, Kerr said the driver rolled it back up. She said from this point onwards, the atmosphere in the cab became “very scary”.
She said he “instantly starting screaming after putting the window up” and it “became very dangerous and very erratic”. Kerr said the car was going “dramatically faster than before” and that it was “swerving in and out of lanes”.
Kerr said neither she nor Mewis had seatbelts on and they were “getting thrown around” the cab.
“I hate speed at the best of times so I was terrified for my life. I didn’t have a seatbelt on so I was getting thrown around the back of the cab,” she said. “Everything was going through my mind being in a car with a stranger.”
Kerr told the court that Mewis had pleaded with the driver to stop the car but he did not listen. “She was very distressed, crying, quite emotional to be honest and scared, said Kerr. “It made me more scared, because I realised how serious the situation was, but it also put me in protection mode for her.”
She said they had “tried everything” to get out of the car, both when it had stopped and was moving, including door handles and trying to open the windows again but everything was locked.
Kerr said the Mewis had smashed the window, kicking it “a couple of times” with her boot while the car was still moving. Forbes asked whether they had discussed this beforehand, Kerr said no and that she felt “surprised”.
Forbes asked Kerr how she felt when it shattered? “Relieved, because I saw it as a way out,” she said.
The trial continues.
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