People say I shouldve known: Jamie Kah blindsided by white powder video, Victorian Racing T

Publish date: 2024-06-26

Jamie Kah has given evidence at her explosive “white powder” hearing at the Victorian Racing Tribunal, saying she was blindsided by a secret video which became public.

On Monday, Kah confirmed stablehand Ruby McIntyre was the person who filmed the video which included images of a white powder, which was later leaked and published in the media in June.

Kah and McIntyre have pleaded not guilty to conduct prejudicial to the image, interests, integrity or welfare of racing.

“People say I should’ve known, but I didn’t know she was taking that video,” Kah told the hearing on Monday.

“I got the screenshot of the video the night before it went public to the press.”

When asked what she would do if you knew she the video was being taken, Kah said: “In a polite way I would’ve kicked her out and been very upset that video was taken, made sure it was deleted or gone and not sent to anyone.

“I told stewards that, the next day after the incident she said thanks for having me and I said no worries, that was the only text. (That was) four days before I knew.”

Kah said McIntyre never sent her the footage, nor did she say she would share it with anyone.

Kah added a photo selfie on the night, which was also made public, was taken by her but “I was not sure where that photo was going to go.”

“There wasn’t anything bad about the photo,” she said.

In her interview, Kah told stewards she would happily volunteer a drug test “because that’s (drug use) not something I’d do or would be doing when I’m trying to get back to race riding”.

A subsequent drug test returned a negative result “to any and all number of substances”.

Kah told the tribunal she has been interviewed eight times “more or less” every year since she started race riding in 2012 — more than 100 tests.

Kah confirmed she has never tested positive.

The hearing heard Kah texted McIntyre in the half-day window before the images were published in the media.

“What the f**k are those photos doing going around,” Kah wrote. “Who has them?”

Asked why she texted McIntyre, Kah said: “I wanted to know who she sent the videos or photo to.”

“I still to this day don’t know how they got to the media. She (manager Emma Shelley) doesn’t how they got there I don’t think. I think she has her assumptions.

“I don’t know who was the in between person who sent them to the media. Obviously someone she sent the video to, and it’s gone from someone.”

Kah added both her and Ms Shelley believed McIntyre did not leak the images directly to the media.

In her evidence to the hearing on Monday, McIntyre admitted she “quickly recorded” the video and “sent it to just one other friend.”

“Yeah I probably did (conceal the taking of video),” she said.

Asked how she took the video, McIntyre said: “I was just across the table standing up just on my phone close to my body, it wasn’t something very obvious, not in anyone’s faces.

“I don’t think Jamie or anyone for that fact would be happy for a video going any further than that. No (didn’t tell Kah / Jacob Biddell she took the footage). No (I didn’t send to them).”

McIntyre allegedly captioned an image shared on the night with: “Something to add to the list of things I never thought I’d be doing, doing coke with Jamie Kah and another friend at her house until 3am and staying the night.”

During evidence on Monday, McIntyre said the caption was not written by her.

“I’m not sure where the actual messages and photo and screenshot, in this format (evidence book before tribunal), has come from,” McIntyre said.

Pressed on the caption, McIntyre said: “Not to my recollection, I didn’t write any of these things ... I’m not sure who it’s come from ... everything in that screenshot has not come from my phone, has not come from me.”

Counsel for the stewards, Russell Hamill, who has taken an undertaking to return to the tribunal with details on where the screenshot and caption originated, suggested the image in the evidence booklet was taken from McIntyre’s phone.

The relevance of text messages exchanged between Kah, her manager Emma Shelley, McIntyre and greyhound trainer Jacob Biddell prior to the publication of white powder images and video in the media was contested.

The prosecution said messages, including two from Shelley to “deny, deny, deny” and “get our eggs in a row”, ought to be considered by the tribunal as Kah subsequently told stewards she had no knowledge of the images and videos being in the public domain.

Message transcripts heard by the tribunal, between Shelley and McIntyre, included “Everyone is sick, this is career destroying (after what Kah has been through)”.

The messages were sent on June 21/22 — a couple of days before they were revealed in the media.

Matthew Stirling, counsel acting for both Kah and McIntyre, objected to the messages being used as his clients had only been charged for misconduct, not providing false or misleading evidence to stewards.

He accused the prosecution of a “smear campaign”, which counsel acting for stewards resented and objected.

The tribunal heard Kah was considering a Supreme Court injunction to stop the publication of the images, a move which predated any subsequent stewards’ inquiry.

“To now manipulate these conversations into a single context of a conduct prejudicial racing image is very selective and somewhat manipulative,” Mr Stirling said.

The tribunal wrestled with the discussion for the best part of an hour.

Messages between the parties includes requests to delete any/all images of the gathering from public and private Instagram accounts.

Mr Hammill told the inquiry: “It doesn’t matter what the powder was, and Ms Kah concedes that, it’s just not a good look.”

“This is about the look of what these images represent,” he said.

McIntyre shared the photos and video on a private social media account.

The tribunal heard another party on-shared the pictures and video.

McIntyre told stewards 11 times in her second interview, on July 4, she could not remember, “I don’t recall”, sharing the images or videos due to intoxication.

McIntyre allegedly captioned an image shared on the night with: “Something to add to the list of things I never thought I’d be doing, doing coke with Jamie Kah and another friend at her house until 3am and staying the night.”

Shelley first found out about the images being circulated through a friend in NSW.

The stewards’ case rests on the elements of public knowledge (leaked images/video), the “self-evident” conduct prejudicial to the sport, and blameworthiness.

Mr Hammill said Kah either knew (photos/video was being taken) or she was reckless, “either way it gets the stewards home on blameworthiness”.

In response, Stirling called a stop to the hearing for Kah and McIntyre to give evidence.

“We’re at the point of working out now what their case is and whether we’re going into evidence, we will be going into evidence, so I’d appreciate it if my learned friend stopped making submissions,” Stirling said.

The tribunal panel hearing the case is Judge John Bowman (Chairperson), Maree Payne and Des Gleeson.

The case has been adjourned until Monday, November 27.

Day Two of the hearing was originally scheduled for Tuesday.

9AM MONDAY:

Star jockey Jamie Kah and friend Ruby McIntyre will face the Victorian Racing Tribunal on Monday in relation to a white powder controversy in June.

Stewards charged the pair in July with conduct prejudicial to the image, interests, integrity or welfare of racing, whether or not the conduct takes place within a racecourse or elsewhere.

Kah and McIntyre pleaded not guilty at a VRT directions hearing in August.

The charge stemmed from leaked images and a short video of Kah and friends, including greyhound trainer Jacob Biddell, sitting around a table with a plate of white powder arranged in lines.

Biddell received a conditional suspended one-month ban for his part in the controversy.

The gathering at Kah’s house occurred between June 17-18.

Stewards will allege McIntyre recorded Kah using an identification card in her hand to arrange the white powder substance into three lines.

McIntyre shared the recordings with a person/s not in attendance at the gathering.

The images and video were subsequently leaked to the Herald Sun and circulated widely on social media.

Stewards allege the conduct was prejudicial to the image, interests, integrity and/or welfare of racing.

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If found guilty, the penalties available to the tribunal include a monetary fine, suspension and/or disqualification.

Kah has been able to put the controversy behind her and focus on her return to the saddle after a five-month absence with a severe concussion.

The 27-year-old champion jockey led all-comers at Flemington last week with six individual winners for the Melbourne Cup Carnival.

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