
Bruce Lehrmann tries to shut down rape trial amid police conduct claims
Lehrmann, 30, is accused of raping a woman twice during the morning of October 10, 2021 after they met at a strip club the previous night in Toowoomba, west of Brisbane.
Defence lawyer Zali Burrows filed an application in Toowoomba District Court on Monday seeking a permanent stay in Lehrmann's pending trial.
In court documents seen by AAP, Burrows sought a 'declaration that intercepted calls between Lehrmann's lawyers and Queensland Police (were) illegally obtained'.
Burrows' application was in response to an affidavit by Peter Blake-Segovia, a practice manager at the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions' Toowoomba chambers.
The affidavit stated police had possession of four audio recordings of calls between a detective and Lehrmann's previous lawyers.
Blake-Segovia stated he had emailed the arresting officer in Lehrmann's case, Detective Senior Constable Ashlee Ryder, concerning material in the case.
'Can you please confirm whether a copy of anything that is relevant to the proceeding? has been disclosed?' Blake-Segovia emailed on June 17.
In the court affidavit, Blake-Segovia stated Detective Ryder had 'outlined items that were in her possession that were not provided as part of the brief to the Director of Public Prosecutions'.
The items included 'four audio recordings between the arresting officer and (Lehrmann's) previous legal representatives'.
'I will review the contents of the material to ascertain whether they ought to be disclosed,' Blake-Segovia stated to the court.
In Queensland, it is generally lawful for a person to record a phone conversation without the consent of the other people on the call.
However, Lehrmann — a former ministerial staffer to Liberal senator Linda Reynolds — has ongoing legal matters in NSW and Tasmania, where it is generally illegal to record a phone conversation without consent.
The alleged victim previously told Toowoomba Magistrates Court she consumed cocaine with Lehrmann during a night out before consensual sex at about 4am.
The woman said she was woken about 10am by Lehrmann sexually assaulting her.
Lehrmann's former defence barrister, Andrew Hoare, said at a prior hearing the alleged victim was too intoxicated to remember giving consent and Lehrmann could have mistakenly believed he had consent.
Burrows on Monday also applied for a declaration that Queensland Police did not have the discretion to determine what is relevant to the defence case and must disclose all materials.
Blake-Segovia stated to the court that police held items, in addition to the phone call recordings, that had not been disclosed.
SnapChat messaging app.
The Ipswich District Court is due to hear Burrows' application on Wednesday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
7 hours ago
- Perth Now
Teenager planned 'Rudakubana-style attack' on Oasis fans at opening night of Oasis Live '25 tour
A 17-year-old boy planned to target Oasis fans at the band's first reunion concert in Cardiff on July 4, according to court proceedings. The teenager, whose identity is protected due to his age, reportedly searched online for weapons and 'places to attack.' His parents raised concerns with a counsellor after he allegedly expressed a desire to carry out a 'Rudakubana-style attack.' Axel Rudakubana, also 17 at the time, was sentenced to a minimum of 52 years in prison for the murder of three girls at a dance class in Southport, and the attempted murder of 10 others last July. The teenager in this case, from the Cwmbran area of South Wales, was not charged under the Terrorism Act 2000, according to The Times. However, he faces a charge of possessing information likely to be useful to someone preparing an act of terrorism — mirroring a charge Rudakubana also faced. Authorities discovered that the boy had researched Rudakubana and referenced him on Snapchat, albeit with a misspelling of his name. He also reportedly used the app to mock victims of the Southport attack. A peer later alerted police, claiming the teen discussed producing the poison ricin — another connection to Rudakubana's case — which he denied. Following his remarks to the counsellor, he allegedly shared an al-Qaeda training manual via mobile phone. Judge Justice Cheema-Grubb has called for both a pre-sentence report and a psychiatric evaluation of the youth. Meanwhile, huge steel fences have been erected around an area of Manchester's Heaton Park to stop ticketless Oasis fans from watching the band's Oasis Live '25 tour. The Wonderwall hitmakers performed two homecoming shows at the venue on Friday (11.07.25) and Saturday (12.07.25), but hundreds of fans unsuccessfully tried to storm the fences to gain entry to the Britpop legends' gigs. Now, Manchester City Council have urged ticketless Oasis fans not to travel to Heaton Park, after crowds previously gathered to get a glimpse of the big screens on an area that has been dubbed "Gallagher Hill". The Council said: "With three concerts still to be played by Oasis in Manchester's Heaton Park following their two hugely successful concerts at the weekend, the city council is repeating its request for fans without tickets not to travel to the park. "After taking stock of how the first two nights went, additional measures have now been deemed necessary and will be in place for the next three concerts, to protect the environment of the park, ensure areas of parkland and nearby livestock are protected, and maintain public safety. "These include the erection of steel fencing around a large area of the hill within the cattle field in the main park - which is currently being developed as a new woodland area for the park and has been recently planted with around 300 young whips including Hornbeam, Field Maple, Aspen, Downy birch, Rowan, Common Alder, Crab apple and more - as well as measures to protect the livestock in the field, which include expectant and nursing cows and a bull. "The erection of the fencing has a dual purpose - both to protect the environment from further damage and to dissuade people from gathering there. The necessary measure means the concert will no longer be visible from this area."


Perth Now
13 hours ago
- Perth Now
Men who felled ‘iconic' Sycamore Gap tree sentenced
The two men who sparked global outrage after felling one of the most famous and well-loved trees have been jailed. Daniel Graham, 39, and Adam Carruthers, 32, were found guilty of criminal damage after they caused the Sycamore Gap tree to fall onto Hadrian's Wall in Northumberland in September 2023. The pair used a chainsaw to hack down the 100-year-old tree which crashed into and damaged Hadrian's Wall, a UNESCO world heritage site. On Tuesday both Graham and Carruthers were sentenced to prison for four years and three months. Daniel Graham and Adam Carruthers initially denied involvement in the Sycamore Gap tree's felling. Credit: AAP During the sentencing, Justice Christina Lambert said that the motive of the two men was not clear, but she believed the outrage following the crime gave them 'some sort of thrill,' the BBC reported. Justice Lambert said the tree was a landmark and a 'symbol of the untamed beauty' of the surrounding landscape. In a victim impact statement read to the court, National Trust manager Andrew Poad said the 'iconic tree can never be replaced'. Mr Poad said the vandalism was 'beyond comprehension' and that the destruction led to an 'overwhelming sense of loss and confusion felt across the world'. The tree sat in a saddle between two hills. Credit: Ian Forsyth / Getty Images The tree sat in a saddle between two hills and became an iconic location after being featured in Kevin Costner's 1991 film Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. It was a well loved spot and was often the site of marriage proposals. Scientifically known as Ace pseudoplatanus, the tree is native to central Europe, Italy and western Asia. It is likely the tree was introduced to the UK by the Romans. Hadrian's Wall was built by Emperor Hadrian and it stretches about 117km through the north of England from the banks of the River Tyne to Solway Firth.

Sydney Morning Herald
a day ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Hannah McGuire's alleged murderer crashed her car into a tree before torching it, court told
The court heard O'Keefe replied: 'Does that mean not taking the car tonight?' O'Keefe said he went to bed and woke to the sound of Young honking the horn of McGuire's Mitsubishi Triton ute outside his home at 2.53am on April 5. He said Young asked him where they should take McGuire's car. 'I said, 'I don't know',' O'Keefe said. 'And he said, 'Follow me'... I got in my car and I followed him.' At no point did he see McGuire in the vehicle, O'Keefe told the jury. The court heard he was trailing Young in his own vehicle when Young crashed McGuire's car into a tree. O'Keefe said Young was driving slowly enough to not injure himself in the crash and then asked O'Keefe what he should do with the car. 'I said, 'Dump it, don't burn it. You get in more trouble for a fire',' O'Keefe testified. He told the jury that from the rear-view mirror of his own car he saw Young get a yellow blowtorch. Asked what he did with the blowtorch, O'Keefe said Young set the front seats of the ute on fire. Young paid him $45 after the incident, he said. The Supreme Court, sitting in Ballarat, earlier heard that Young sent messages to McGuire's friends in the hours after he killed her threatening to 'go off [his] dial' if she were not found. 'Where the f --- is she?' Young had written in a Snapchat message, shown in court, to one of McGuire's close friends on the morning she was reported missing. 'I will start going off my dial if she is not found.' Later that morning he had written another message to the same friend, saying: 'If anything happens to her, I will destroy this town.' Loading Prosecutors allege Young also tried to cover up Hannah's murder by sending text messages purporting to be from her and resembling a suicide note, to her mother at 3.43am on April 5. Several of McGuire's close friends and colleagues broke down while providing evidence detailing an alleged a pattern of aggression, controlling behaviour and abuse by Young. The jury heard claims that he would follow the university student on evenings out with her girlfriends, degrade her, body-shame her, scream at her and harass her with texts and phone calls whenever she was away from him. Tayla Schefferle, who worked with McGuire at a Ballarat primary school, testified she went to work early one morning in March last year and found McGuire distressed. 'I got there, and it was only us two at the time,' Schefferle told the jury. 'She approached me, and she just fell into my arms ... She was very upset and distraught.' Schefferle said McGuire revealed she had broken up with Young and expressed fears about her safety. 'She was just afraid that he would do something to her,' the witness said. Shefferley told the jury that following the break-up McGuire began arriving at work earlier and would park her car in a shed at the school to hide it. Another colleague and friend, Jaymie McDonald, testified McGuire often contacted her via Snapchat while crying at night after locking herself in the bathroom of the house she shared with Young. When prosecutor Kristie Churchill asked McDonald if she had observed a change in McGuire after her break-up with Young, she said: 'She had found such a glow. She was happy and beautiful and strong and loving.' Loading In a statement submitted to the court and shown to the jury, McGuire's childhood friend and hairdresser Caitlyn Stepnell recounted instances in which she alleged Young had abused his former girlfriend on nights out during their relationship. 'Hannah had a few guy friends who would just come up and say hello, and Lachlan would get very aggressive,' Stepnell wrote in her statement. 'He would tell the guy friends to F off and don't speak to her. He would also call them the C word.' One colleague told the jury McGuire was as an amazing teacher's aide who cared deeply about her work and the children she supported. 'The kids loved her,' she wrote in submission read to the jury. McGuire was on the cusp of finishing her university degree in teaching, and her friends said she was excited about the next chapter in her life when she was killed. Last week, Young's lawyer, Glenn Casement, said McGuire's death was 'an unplanned and spontaneous incident'. The trial continues.