McGregor rape accuser telling 'web of lies', court told
- Published
A woman who claims she was raped by Irish mixed martial arts fighter Conor McGregor in a Dublin hotel has been accused of telling a "web of lies" in the hours following the alleged incident.
Nikita Hand is claiming civil damages against Mr McGregor and another man, alleging she was sexually assaulted in December 2018.
Ms Hand has accused Mr McGregor of pinning her to a bed and raping her in a hotel bedroom in Dublin.
The High Court previously heard that she told her ex-partner in the aftermath of the alleged incident that she cannot say who assaulted her as "he told me he'd kill me".
Ms Hand, a former hair colourist from Drimnagh in Dublin, refused to tell her former partner who attacked her, telling him she was raped and choked three times.
On her fourth day of giving evidence at Dublin's High Court, Ms Hand was cross-examined by Remy Farrell SC, defence barrister for Mr McGregor.
"You told your former partner that 'he told me he'd kill me'. That was a reference to McGregor, wasn't it?" Mr Farrell asked.
"Yes," she replied.
Mr Farrell said that she never once suggested during subsequent police interviews or in evidence that Mr McGregor threatened to kill her.
"Is that something that happened or didn't?" Mr Farrell asked.
She told the court she could not remember.
Cross examination
Mr Farrell also questioned Ms Hand over comments she made to her then-partner about being in a taxi with a friend after she left the Beacon Hotel, where she claims she was raped.
Ms Hand admitted that was not true as she had been alone in the taxi, and said that she made the comment to reassure her ex-partner that she was okay.
However, Mr Farrell said the untruth she told her former partner were all "part of a web of lies you were weaving".
He added: "You were telling lies to your ex-partner and he was catching you out on some."
Ms Hand said she had been upset, confused and hurt by what had happened, saying that she did lie to her former partner.
"I was raped and battered a few hours before that, so my mind wasn't perfect at the time," she told the court.
"I didn't care about anything at the time. All I cared about was my body and how hurt I was. I didn't care about anyone else."
John Fitzgerald SC, for James Lawrence, said the "strange feature" of this case is that his client is part of these proceedings because of something he said, and not what she claimed.
Mr Fitzgerald said he "brought himself into the case" by telling the police in January 2019 that he and Ms Hand had consensual sex.
Mr Fitzgerald also put it to Ms Hand that she had sex with Mr McGregor and that the door between the sitting room and the bedroom of the hotel penthouse was open and they could be "heard clearly having sex".
"They were moaning noises and noises that indicated you were having a good time and not a bad time," Mr Fitzgerald said.
He claimed that she was having "pleasurable sex" with Mr McGregor while Mr Lawrence was also having sex with her friend in the next room.
Mr Fitzgerald further claimed that Ms Hand did know her friend and the second defendant were having sex because she saw them.
"I think this is another made-up story," Ms Hand said.
Mr Fitzgerald also said that Mr Lawrence claims he saw her on top of Mr McGregor having sex.
"Lies," she said.
Ms Hand also said that Mr Lawrence was lying when he told police that she had sex with him twice when they returned to the hotel room.
Ms Hand said: "I think he's lying."
Mr Fitzgerald asked: "You think he's lying about having sex with you?"
"Absolutely," Ms Hand replied.
The court previously heard that Ms Hand has been on disability allowance since the alleged attack and returned to work for a short time, but could not continue her employment due to her anxiety.