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Chelsea star Sam Kerr's 'stupid and white' remark was 'hostile': prosecutors
Prosecutors in the trial of Chelsea and Australia striker Sam Kerr, who called a police officer "stupid and white", have asked the jury if perceptions would be different had she said "stupid and black".
The Australia captain is on trial charged with causing racially aggravated harassment, which she denies, to police constable Stephen Lovell during an incident in southwest London in the early hours of January 30, 2023.
It is alleged that Kerr, 31, and her partner, West Ham midfielder Kristie Mewis, had been out drinking when they were driven to a police station by a taxi driver who complained that they had refused to pay clean-up costs after one of them vomited, and that one of them smashed the vehicle's rear window.
At the police station, Kerr, who is mixed race, is alleged to have become "abusive and insulting" towards Lovell, calling him "stupid and white".
In his closing speech on Friday, prosecutor Bill Emlyn-Jones asked the jury: "What if PC Lovell had been a black male and what if she had called him... stupid and black? Now of course that is not a fair question, because black and white is not a fair swap.
"Calling a white man is not as loaded, so you can't just turn it around, it is not as easy as that. In the heat of the moment this was an insult delivered in reference to race and that is what the law prohibits.
"The test for you is the same regardless of the ethnicity in question. She was insulting him and, at the time, she was hostile to him by reference to his race. So the fact you will be able to think of much worse examples of racial aggravation is irrelevant.
"Would we consider this a racially aggravated insult if she had said stupid and black? Of course you would, it wouldn't even be contestable."
During the trial, the court heard character references from Chelsea team-mates and former head coach Emma Hayes.
Carly Telford, a goalkeeper who played for Women's Super League club Chelsea from 2017 to 2022, described Kerr as a "close friend" and an "introverted extrovert".
She said: "On the pitch you see the skills, the backflips (but) away from pitch, she's quite quiet and shy. Quite reserved."
Grace Forbes, defending Kerr, read out statements from Hayes, Chelsea captain Millie Bright and midfielder Erin Cuthbert.
Hayes, who is the former Chelsea manager and current head coach of the United States football team, said Kerr was an "exemplary role model".
W.Stewart--AT