NRL star Sam Burgess is set to learn his fate this morning when a magistrate rules whether he is guilty of criminal charges related to a heated clash with his father-in-law in the wake of his messy break-up with wife Phoebe.
The showdown between Burgess and Mitchell Hooke took place at Phoebe’s family home where the couple got married in the New South Wales Southern Highlands.
Burgess was accused of assaulting and intimidating Mr Hooke, although there was never any allegation of actual physical violence.
Police had also taken out an interim apprehended violence order to protect Mr Hooke from the 32-year-old onetime South Sydney Rabbitohs captain.
NRL star Sam Burgess is set to learn his fate this morning when a magistrate rules whether he is guilty of criminal charges. PIctured: Sam with lawyer Bryan Wrench at Moss Vale Local Court on Friday
Burgess waited more than a year for this case to be finalised, having insisted through his solicitor Bryan Wrench from the start he was not guilty of committing any crime.
Officers were called to the Hooke family’s multi-million dollar Glenquarry estate outside Bowral, known as Daffodil Downs, on October 19, 2019.
Burgess had been at the house for an arranged visit with his two young children who had been living with their mother since their parents split two weeks earlier.
The two men gave vastly different versions of what happened after the visit, with each accused of threatening the other.
Mr Hooke attended court in his RM Williams boots and plaited kangaroo skin belt with an Order of Australia pin on his lapel, even when he was not required
Sam Burgess married Phoebe Hooke at her family home just outside Bowral in the NSW Southern Highlands in December 2015. The couple had two children and split in late 2019
Burgess claimed Mr Hooke told him: ‘I’m going to destroy you if it’s the last thing I do. I’m going to destroy you and your career.’
Mr Hooke said he was left in ‘absolute terror’ that the dual-code international was going to hit him in his own home.
The case pitted Burgess, one of four footballing brothers from England’s north, against gentleman farmer Mr Hooke, a former CEO of the Minerals Council of Australia.
Burgess hired some of Sydney’s best lawyers and was accompanied throughout the proceedings by his fiercely protective school teacher mother Julie.
Mr Hooke attended the hearing in his RM Williams boots and plaited kangaroo skin belt with an Order of Australia pin on his lapel, even when he was not required in court.
He and his daughter have admitted co-operating with a reporter they both knew who in October wrote stories accusing Burgess of drug use and domestic violence.
Burgess married Phoebe at her parents’ home in December 2015 and they have two children, four-year-old Poppy, and Billy, who turned two in December.
Sam’s ex-wife Phoebe leaves court after admitting to giving damaging documents about her ex-husband Sam to The Australian newspaper. She denied she did so to destroy his reputation
The couple separated in late 2018 before rekindling their relationship by April 2019. They split permanently on October 2 that year and have since divorced.
If Burgess had once been close to the wider Hooke family, by the time he, Mr Hooke and Phoebe had given evidence about what happened at Daffodil Downs the gulf was irreparable.
Burgess told the court his relationship with Mr Hooke had deteriorated over the last year of his marriage but he had treated him with respect before their confrontation.
He was asked if Mr Hooke had embraced him as part of the family. ‘In his words, yes,’ Burgess responded.
Burgess used to call Mr Hooke ‘Mitchy Boy’ in text messages and said he had routinely signed off with ‘love you’ and Xs out of politeness.
‘He’s my father-in-law,’ he told the court.
Mr Hooke said that Burgess had initially seemed normal while visiting his house for the access visit until told it was time to go home.
Sam and Phoebe married in 2015 and separated in late 2018 before rekindling their relationship by April 2019. They split permanently on October 2 that year and have since divorced. Burgess is pictured taking bags from the former marital home in January 2019
He said Burgess told him: “This is f***ing inhumane and you know it”.
‘I said to him, “You can’t abuse me like that in my own home”,’ Mr Hooke told the court. ‘In a place where we’ve provided you love and support and afforded you sanctuary.’
Mr Hooke said Burgess had told him: ‘F*** you, you’re a piece of s***. You’re just like your daughter.’
‘I was taken aback because I had never seen that behaviour directed at me by Sam before.’.
‘He said, “F*** you, you’re a piece of s***”. I said, “Sam, you’ve got to go”.
‘He came straight over, right in my face. He said, “F*** you. I’m going to get you. You’ve set all of this up.” He was wild. He was yelling.
‘I’m standing there, there’s a six foot five, 118 kilo bloke threatening to beat me, threatening to hit me. I’ve never felt fear like it.’
‘I said, “You’re going to hit a 64-year-old man?” And he said, “I’m going to get you, I’m going to f***ing get you.” I said, “They’re going to put you away Sam”.’
Asked what he thought was going to happen next, Mr Hooke said: ‘I was resigned to being hit. I had absolutely no doubt.’
Phoebe has said she will keep using the Burgess surname because that is what her children are called. She has continued to post images to Instagram of her apparently idyllic lifestyle
Even with the repetition of a few colourful phrases, Burgess’s version of the face-off with Mr Hooke was far less confrontational.
Burgess said when he arrived at the Hooke home about 2pm he was met by his father-in-law who told him: ‘The kids are there, instructions are there’, then left him alone with the children.
The children played happily with their father until just after 4pm when Phoebe sent Burgess a text message asking when he was leaving the property.
Burgess sent Phoebe a text to say he would wait until she returned to the house because he did not want to leave the children unattended.
Phoebe insisted in another message that Burgess leave, then Mr Hooke emerged from his office and spoke to Burgess.
‘He tapped his watch and said, “Time’s up, let’s go”,’ Burgess told the court.
‘I told Mitch I thought that this was inhumane.
‘At this point I didn’t really want to argue or discuss things in front of the kids. I said, “Mitch, please, not in front of the children. Let’s leave it.”
‘He said, “Since you opened the batting I’m going to continue”.’
In happier times: Burgess’s ex-wife Phoebe and his father-in-law Mitchell Hooke gave statements about Burgess to the media. The three are pictured together
Burgess said he left the house and Mr Hooke followed him outside.
I said, “Mitch, I think you’re a bad person inside and out… and that’s why Phoebe is the way she is.” I told him he couldn’t make up for lost time.’
Burgess said Mr Hooke approached him on the pebble driveway and said, ‘You could have had all this’.
‘I think he meant the property,’ Burgess said.
‘He was pretty upset. He then shouted at me. He said, “F*** you Sam”. I returned serve. I said, “F*** you Mitch, you’re a piece of s***”.
‘He said, “Sam, nobody loves you. Your own family doesn’t love you. We loved you. You’ve thrown that away”.”
Burgess said he then told Mr Hooke: ‘No one in this whole town likes you. You’re a bad person’.
Mitchell Hooke ran the Minerals Council of Australia. He is pictured with daughters Phoebe (centre) and Harriet after being made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2016
Under cross-examination Burgess said he was unhappy about leaving the property before Phoebe returned.
‘I didn’t want to leave the children with Mitch because I didn’t trust him with them,’ he said. ‘He’d never had them before by himself.’
He did not think it was Mr Hooke’s job to tell him what to do with his children and agreed he had called him a ‘s***house grandfather’.
Burgess’s barrister Phillip Boulten SC put to Mr Hooke that he told the footballer: ‘I’m going to destroy you if it’s the last thing I do.’
‘You have taken steps to destroy his reputation as best as you can humanly do it,’ he said to Mr Hooke, who denied it.
Mr Hooke said he did not recall Burgess telling him, ‘You’re a bad person. You’re a bad person inside and you’re bad outside. You’ve got a bad heart.’
He denied telling Burgess, ‘You run away from everything in your life’, ‘No one loves you’ and ‘Your family don’t even love you.’
Mr Hooke further denied saying to Burgess of Daffodil Downs: ‘What have you done, Sam? All this could have been yours.’
Burgess pleaded not guilty to charges of intimidation and common assault after a confrontation with his father-in-law Mitchell Hooke at the Hooke family home (pictured)
Phoebe’s sister Harriet gave evidence she had heard Burgess shouting from the house and saw him standing over her father in a ‘menacing stance’.
‘He said, “What kind of grandfather are you? Everyone that knows you hates you. I’m going to get you”,’ Harriet told the court.
Mr Boulten had said the case against Burgess on the intimidation and assault charges hung on the phrase ‘I’m going to get you’, which his client denied using.
‘What you’re left with is two grown men arguing about the end of a access visit and that is not intimidation.’
Mr Boulten said Mr Hooke had become upset when challenged by Burgess in his home and his evidence about the encounter should not be accepted.
‘Mr Hooke is a man who is not used to being questioned or challenged,’ Mr Boulten told the court.
‘He is a man who has a very firm belief in his own stature and particularly so in his own living room.’
As the head of the Minerals Council, Mr Hooke had played a key role in derailing then-Labor prime minister Kevin Rudd’s planned mining tax.
Mr Hooke denied Mr Boulten’s suggestion he considered himself a ‘hard man’ and had bragged to Burgess he brought down Mr Rudd.
‘Mr Hooke regards himself as being a tough head,’ Mr Boulten told the court.
‘He abides by a public policy advocacy principle if you’re going to hit me make sure I stay down because if I don’t I’m going to come after you.
‘He does not brook opposition without coming after his opponent doubly hard.’
On October 2 a report in The Australian newspaper made untested allegations of domestic violence by Burgess towards his wife, as well as claims of wild partying including drug use. Burgess and Phoebe are pictured
The court had been played a Triple Zero call made by Phoebe in which she told the operator she wanted to report ‘something that’s just happened at my home’.
Phoebe said the family did not require police assistance and nobody had been physically harmed. ‘We’re all fine,’ she said.
Before making the call Phoebe had tried to ring Brisbane QC Sydney Williams, a family friend, and spoke to her solicitor Carly Middleton.
Mr Hooke called Mr Williams and another lawyer four hours before making a police statement. He also spoke to former colleague Ben Mitchell, a public relations expert.
Mr Boulten submitted Mr Hooke and his daughter had used the court proceedings against Burgess as part of an orchestrated plan to destroy him.
‘They were lawyered-up and PRed up from the get-go,’ Mr Boulten said.
‘This is an unusual phenomenon. This is not the way things normally occur. This is top-shelf treatment.’
‘Mitch Hooke and Phoebe Burgess have tried to destroy my client’s career. This case is part of it and it’s not going to stop here, you might think.’
Mr Hooke (pictured with wife Sarah) denied setting out to destroy the footballer’s career after the breakdown of his marriage to wife Phoebe during questioning in November
On October 2 a report in The Australian newspaper made untested allegations of domestic violence by Burgess towards Phoebe, as well as claims of wild partying including drug use.
That report drew on a 50-page police statement Phoebe had made to police in late September 2020 and included quotes from Mr Hooke.
Phoebe admitted giving documents damaging to Burgess to The Australian, but denied she did so to destroy his reputation.
Mr Hooke also denied setting out to destroy the footballer’s career but did admit to talking to The Australian about Burgess.
Source link