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Silence broken over Broncos sex scandal and NRL bans cheerleaders
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From : jupjupz
Added: May 16, 2009
THE WOMAN at the centre of a sex scandal involving three Brisbane Broncos in a nightclub toilet last year has revealed the speed at which the situation got out of control and the anguish she has since endured. "After a few kisses, things went drastically wrong," she said, speaking for the first time about what happened at the Alhambra Lounge nightclub in Brisbane's Fortitude Valley on September 13. The incident led police to question Broncos Karmichael Hunt, Sam Thaiday and Darius Boyd (who now plays for St George Illawarra) as part of a six-week investigation. Police said the players said they had consensual sex with the woman. She alleged to police that she was sexually assaulted. No charges were laid after the investigation and evidence - which included video taken on a mobile telephone - was independently reviewed by barrister Tim Carmody SC. While the three men continue to play top-level football, the 24-year-old feels she has become a forgotten victim in a sexual-attitudes crisis that has engulfed top-level rugby league. The woman said she had not seen an ABC TV Four Corners report on Monday that suggested a culture of extreme sexual promiscuity existed among some players within the code. But she has watched reports in recent days about TV personality and former Cronulla player Matthew Johns, whose career is in ruins after he admitted involvement in a group-sex incident after a 2002 football game in New Zealand. The woman said she had decided to speak publicly for the first time because those reports had prompted her to wonder what the Broncos players she met were thinking over the past week. The well-spoken, hardworking professional woman, who is a petite 160cm and 60kg, said she felt degraded and discarded. She has worked with a psychologist to get her life back on track, but said the encounter - which she refers to as The Incident - follows her around like a "dark cloud". She said: "The case (police investigation) has been closed, so it's history. But it's not history . . . I will never forget. I'm still functioning and my life is not over by any means, but I will never ever forget this.
Category : News
Added: May 16, 2009
THE WOMAN at the centre of a sex scandal involving three Brisbane Broncos in a nightclub toilet last year has revealed the speed at which the situation got out of control and the anguish she has since endured. "After a few kisses, things went drastically wrong," she said, speaking for the first time about what happened at the Alhambra Lounge nightclub in Brisbane's Fortitude Valley on September 13. The incident led police to question Broncos Karmichael Hunt, Sam Thaiday and Darius Boyd (who now plays for St George Illawarra) as part of a six-week investigation. Police said the players said they had consensual sex with the woman. She alleged to police that she was sexually assaulted. No charges were laid after the investigation and evidence - which included video taken on a mobile telephone - was independently reviewed by barrister Tim Carmody SC. While the three men continue to play top-level football, the 24-year-old feels she has become a forgotten victim in a sexual-attitudes crisis that has engulfed top-level rugby league. The woman said she had not seen an ABC TV Four Corners report on Monday that suggested a culture of extreme sexual promiscuity existed among some players within the code. But she has watched reports in recent days about TV personality and former Cronulla player Matthew Johns, whose career is in ruins after he admitted involvement in a group-sex incident after a 2002 football game in New Zealand. The woman said she had decided to speak publicly for the first time because those reports had prompted her to wonder what the Broncos players she met were thinking over the past week. The well-spoken, hardworking professional woman, who is a petite 160cm and 60kg, said she felt degraded and discarded. She has worked with a psychologist to get her life back on track, but said the encounter - which she refers to as The Incident - follows her around like a "dark cloud". She said: "The case (police investigation) has been closed, so it's history. But it's not history . . . I will never forget. I'm still functioning and my life is not over by any means, but I will never ever forget this.
Category : News
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