Married at First Sight s Coco Stedman has claimed she was sexually harassed by a decorated senior cop while she was working as a police officer.
In a leaked Snapchat video shared shortly after she left the New South Wales Police in 2018 she accused an unnamed police sergeant of preying on and harassing young female officers.
Stedman claimed her life was made a living hell during her six years on the force, and said junior officers who rejected the sergeant s advances were reprimanded.
The footage came to light after Stedman s ex-husband George Kyriacou was named as one of five officers who posted unprofessional or inappropriate messages to a vulgar, racist and sexist WhatsApp group called the Dog Pound .
Coco Stedman claims she was sexually harassed while working for NSW Police
Footage of her claiming her life was a living hell was leaked from Snapchat
It comes after her ex husband was named in court proceedings over WhatsApp
He was found to have acted unprofessionally in a vulgar chat with colleagues
Calvin Dunne created chat and discussed sexist, racist and derogatory matters
Do you know more? Email brittany.chain@mailonline.com
Calvin Dunne claimed he was unfairly dismissed from the NSW Police Force
He was fired after sexist, racist and derogatory texts he sent were unearthed
He created a work WhatsApp chat with colleagues to make the remarks
Dunne claimed he and his wife were struggling on her $120,000 salary
His application to be reinstated was dismissed due to doubts about his integrity
News by Ava Benny-Morrison
Premium Content
Subscriber only It was the police WhatsApp group that has led to a misconduct inquiry, two officers sacked, a man loaded up and wrongly charged - and the messaging app banned across the entire police force. Along the way it also exposed a culture of sexism and derogatory remarks about women, including female colleagues, among frontline police at a Sydney station. And the man who was wrongly charged and spent seven months in jail, Erhan Sevgin, 47, is now suing NSW Police. A group of at least nine general duties police officers based at Botany Bay Local Area Command started the group chat in 2017.
News by Ava Benny-Morrison
Premium Content
Subscriber only It was the police WhatsApp group that has led to a misconduct inquiry, two officers sacked, a man loaded up and wrongly charged - and the messaging app banned across the entire police force. Along the way it also exposed a culture of sexism and derogatory remarks about women, including female colleagues, among frontline police at a Sydney station. And the man who was wrongly charged and spent seven months in jail, Erhan Sevgin, 47, is now suing NSW Police. A group of at least nine general duties police officers based at Botany Bay Local Area Command started the group chat in 2017.