Kerr apology âenoughâ, says Chelsea boss Bompastor
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Sam Kerr was found not guilty of causing racially aggravated harassment on Tuesday
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Published
Chelsea boss Sonia Bompastor says Sam Kerrâs apology âis enoughâ and that the club will not be taking any further disciplinary action following the playerâs court case.
On Tuesday, Kerr was found not guilty of causing racially aggravated harassment after calling a Metropolitan Police officer âstupid and whiteâ following an incident in Twickenham on 30 January 2023.
After the case, the 31-year-old Australia international apologised âfor expressing myself poorly on what was a traumatic eveningâ.
Bompastor said: âSam made a statement, she apologised and I think that is enough.
âEveryone can make mistakes and thatâs what you learn from and thatâs how you move forward.
âWhat she was facing last week was hard enough for her so the only thing we want to do as a club is support her.â
The trial heard Kerr and her partner Kristie Mewis had been out drinking when they were driven to Twickenham Police Station by a taxi driver who complained that they had refused to pay clean-up costs after Kerr was sick, and Mewis had smashed the vehicleâs rear window.
Kerr said she and her partner had feared for their lives and in an expletive-laden exchange, accused one of the police officers of being âstupid and whiteâ.
The Chelsea striker, who made the comments to PC Stephen Lovell, did not deny using the words âstupid and whiteâ but denied it amounted to a racial offence.
Bompastor, who has been in charge at Chelsea since succeeding Emma Hayes in May, said she was âsurprisedâ Kerr was involved in a court case.
âWho she is doesnât reflect what I heard in the court and what I was reading in the newspapers,â Bompastor added.
More to follow.