Defendant claims Nigella Lawson lied under oath
One of the personal assistants accused of defrauding Nigella Lawson and Charles Saatchi has accused them of lying under oath as she gave evidence in her trial.
Elisabetta Grillo, 41, also said other members of the TV cook's 'Team Cupcake' lied in court.
The defendant, who along with her sister Francesca Grillo, 35, is accused of spending £685,000 on credit cards belonging to the celebrity couple to buy designer goods and luxury holidays for herself, made the claims as she spent a second day in the witness box at Isleworth Crown Court in west London.
As she began cross-examining her, prosecutor Jane Carpenter asked: "Ms Grillo, is it your evidence that Ms Lawson has lied to the court?"
She replied: "Yes."
"And Mr Saatchi?"
"Yes."
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"And you're the one telling the truth?"
"I am."
"And the other PAs, have they lied as well?"
"Yes."
The court previously heard that the defendants allege that Nigella, who divorced multi-millionaire Mr Saatchi earlier this year, regularly snorted cocaine and smoked cannabis during her 10-year marriage.
But, giving evidence last week, the TV cook told jurors she had only taken cocaine with her late husband John Diamond when he found out he had terminal cancer, and on another occasion in July 2010 during her troubled marriage to Saatchi.
Giving evidence yesterday, Elisabetta said she regularly found signs that Nigella was using cocaine, including a packet of white powder found in a toilet in the home she shared with Diamond, as well as rolled-up banknotes and credit cards with white powder on them.
Asked if she had ever seen Nigella taking drugs, Elisabetta - who is also known as Lisa - said: "No."
But she told jurors she was aware that her former employer had taken illegal substances.
The court heard that an original defence case statement for Elisabetta Grillo in August did not include allegations of Nigella's drug use because she did not want them raised in a court of law out of a 'remnant of sympathy' for her former boss. But an extra statement added in November did include the claims.
The additional statement, read to the court by Grillo's barrister Anthony Metzer QC, said: "The defendant will assert that the prosecution witness Nigella Lawson habitually indulged in the use of Class A and Class B drugs in addition to the abuse of prescription drugs throughout the time that the defendant was employed in the household.
"This evidence is of substantial importance as it explains why Ms Lawson initially consented, or appeared to consent, to the expenditure as the defendants were intimately connected to her private life and were aware of the drug use which she wanted to keep from her then-husband Charles Saatchi.
"The defendant's case is that Ms Lawson's drug use and the defendant's knowledge of it materially affected her attitude to the defendant's spending and in turn her attitude to this prosecution.
"Whilst it is not the defendant's case that there was an explicit agreement for silence in return for aquiescence in expenditure, the intimate atmosphere created by such knowledge informed their relationship and what the defendant considered was permitted by Ms Lawson."
The statement said the defendant suggested the reason why Nigella had maintained she did not consent to the spending was because of her 'fear of Mr Saatchi' and concern that he would think the spending had been allowed, either expressly or implied, by Nigella because her drug use could be exposed.
The court heard that Grillo had told her solicitors about the issue but did not originally want it in her defence case statement because she felt a 'remnant of sympathy towards Ms Lawson' and so did not want it to be raised in a court of law.
But the statement added: "On mature reflection, given that this illicit use of drugs goes directly to her defence of actual or implied consent, she now expressly instructs that this matter should be raised to ensure fairness in the proceedings."
Patrick McLennan is a London-based journalist and documentary maker who has worked as a writer, sub-editor, digital editor and TV producer in the UK and New Zealand. His CV includes spells as a news producer at the BBC and TVNZ, as well as web editor for Time Inc UK. He has produced TV news and entertainment features on personalities as diverse as Nick Cave, Tom Hardy, Clive James, Jodie Marsh and Kevin Bacon and he co-produced and directed The Ponds, which has screened in UK cinemas, BBC Four and is currently available on Netflix.
An entertainment writer with a diverse taste in TV and film, he lists Seinfeld, The Sopranos, The Chase, The Thick of It and Detectorists among his favourite shows, but steers well clear of most sci-fi.