Police officer Jordan Weston’s messages to partner revealed in court documents
Court documents reveal a senior constable in the NSW Police abused his partner while at work at a Sydney station.
A police officer told his girlfriend “I hope you get raped” and “get killed on the way to work” in a series of texts sent before and during a shift at a Sydney station, court documents reveal.
Jordan Leigh Weston, a senior constable with the NSW Police transport command, was charged in May over domestic violence offences committed over the course of two years.
Court documents released to news.com.au detail the verbal and text abuse, and sometimes physical assault, a 34-year-old woman endured between 2021 and 2023, during an on-and-off relationship with Mr Weston.
“I hope you get raped,” one message from May 2021 read.
“You’re dirt,” said another.
A set of agreed facts also state the Parramatta man “regularly misused his position as a police officer” to look up information about the woman’s family, friends and ex-husband on internal systems.
The documents state Mr Weston would check the woman’s phone messages and photos, track her through iCloud and “at times he flew into fits of rage”.
“She felt isolated from friends and family due to this behaviour,” the documents state.
On May 16, 2021, after seeing an old message on the woman’s phone from an ex-partner, Mr Weston “became jealous” and accused her of cheating.
The next day between 4.55am and 6.10pm, much of which time he was working at Liverpool police station, he sent more than 60 offensive messages to the woman.
Mr Weston wrote he hoped the woman, who he called a “whore” and “feminist f***ing slut”, would “bleed to death” on her next period.
The 29-year-old went on to threaten he would “make your life a misery” and that she would “pay … and suffer”.
“I hope you f***ing get killed on the way to work,” one text read.
“I hope you crash and die. I f***ing hate you c***.
“I hope you suffer forever.”
A court hearing set for early November was vacated last month and Mr Weston’s matters were adjourned to February 10, 2025 for a section 14 application or sentence.
Section 14 applications allow a court to dismiss a charge without a finding of guilt if a person is deemed to have cognitive or mental health issues.
Mr Weston is facing charges including two counts each of common assault, stalking and using a carriage service to menace, harass or offend respectively.
His lawyer has indicated to the court guilty pleas would be entered if the section 14 application was unsuccessful.
Several counts of accessing restricted data will also be heard before the court in February.
The court documents seen by news.com.au state Mr Weston returned home from work and pushed the woman into a wall after the rageful text barrage on May 17, 2021.
He then pushed her onto a lounge, “hit the victim on the head” and “continued to yell abuse and called the victim names”.
“After the offender calmed down, he demanded the password to the victim’s phone and searched through its content for several hours, which continued into the early hours of the morning,” the documents state.
Other incidents detailed in the court papers include Mr Weston stomping on the woman’s foot at a wedding in Byron Bay in 2022 after she had hugged some male friends.
In 2023, following an argument during a holiday in Huskisson, Mr Weston also followed the woman in his car, prompting her to run away out of fear to a nearby park, the court papers state.
After the couple broke up for the last time in June 2023, the woman told Mr Weston not to contact her anymore.
“The offender had previously told her that when they were broken up he would park near her house just to be close to her. This made her feel afraid,” the documents state.
On June 9 of that year he waited in his car near the woman’s house for her to return for work before knocking on the door as he wanted her to “confirm the relationship was really over”.
This incident prompted her to change the locks on the house as she worried Mr Weston may have copied her keys, according to the court documents.
“I am afraid of you. I love you, but afraid of you,” she told him in a text message.
“Turning up here terrified me.
“This is my safe place. Do not take that away from me.
“If you take my safe place away from me, I will have no alternative but to call the police, and I don’t want to do that, but I will if you continue.”
On August 27, 2023, an “aggravated” Mr Weston rang the woman 60 times after he discovered the woman had taken screenshots of messages he had sent her.
“The offender told her he would ‘sink’ her, ‘bury’ her, “destroy’ her amongst other things,” the court documents say.
“He told her that because he was a police officer he knew the system and that (the woman) would be ‘screwed’ if she was to report his behaviour.”
The woman never made a report to police but officers approached her in late 2023, and she made a statement in January.
Mr Weston was arrested in May and suspended from work with base pay.
NSW Police said this week he was now suspended without pay and his employment was under review.
heath.parkes-hupton@news.com.au
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