By Alex Mitchell in Canberra
THE most senior police officer behind the arrest of Latrell Mitchell and Jack Wighton has admitted giving false evidence and lying under oath while testifying against the NRL stars.
During an explosive cross-examination, Sergeant David Power apologised to Wighton and admitted core allegations he made about why he kicked him out of a Canberra nightclub weren’t accurate.
It prompted Wighton’s lawyer to accuse police of trying to “frame” his client, declaring the case was an “old-school stitch-up”.
Sgt Power earlier alleged he saw Wighton with clenched fists, anger in his face and holding a man by the shirt before he removed him from Fiction nightclub.
But Wighton’s lawyer Steve Boland pieced together a timeline of events via CCTV footage that led the officer to admit none of it happened.
“What I saw appears to have not happened and my memory has failed me,” Sgt Power told the court.
He later addressed Wighton, saying: “Sorry Jack, if that’s what happened mate… I’m sorry.”
Mr Boland, who said the officer had invented his evidence rather than forgotten what he’d seen, criticised his apology.
“You’re not mates are you… how inappropriate,” he told the court.
He labelled the sergeant’s story “a total and utter fantasy you dreamt up to justify everything that happens”.
Sgt Power denied he’d intentionally misled the court. He acknowledged he had a “long-term memory issue”.
After Wighton was removed from the nightclub, he and Mitchell were accused of fighting before both were arrested.
Elliott Whitehead told an officer “the way you came over was out of order”.
Mitchell could be heard crying out in pain and screaming “please” as the players’ friends begged police to stop their “police brutality” as they handcuffed him.
The group had been at the nightclub celebrating Wighton’s 30th birthday, before they spilled on to the street when the former Raider was removed from the venue for alleged aggressive behaviour.
Among the group protesting with police was Canberra captain Elliott Whitehead, who told one officer watching Mitchell’s arrest “the way you came over was out of order”.
Sgt Power said he “didn’t see an issue with it” even after watching the footage of the arrest.
Vision played on Monday showed Mitchell surrendering on to his knees before police elbowed, kneed and pushed him face-down on to the ground.
Mitchell feared for his life and was a “weeping mess”, the court heard.
His defence centres around alleged heavy-handed police conduct, the star South Sydney fullback having told police while being arrested: “I’ve done nothing wrong but be a blackfella in Australia.”
The Birpai and Wiradjuri man is charged with affray, fighting in a public place and resisting a territory official.
Wighton, who is also a Wiradjuri man, is charged with fighting in a public place and failing to comply with an exclusion direction.
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