The Guardian Australia

UTS professor allegedly sent herself threatenin­g letters with one containing her underwear

-

“Chop our future we chop yours,” read one of 19 threatenin­g letters a former University of Technology Sydney dean of science sent to herself and colleagues, a jury has been told.

One letter contained Prof Dianne Jolley’s underwear with the attached note stating “sorry for your loss”, while another included a photograph of her with a red line through it, the crown prosecutor, Roger Kimball, said in his opening address in Sydney’s district court.

Jolley, 51, orchestrat­ed the scam to gain “emotional and physical” support for closing down the traditiona­l Chinese medicine course, deemed the least financiall­y viable in the science faculty, the crown said on Tuesday.

She has pleaded not guilty to 20 charges including three for sending a letter with the intention of inducing a false belief that the safety of her fellow staff was at risk.

These related to messages sent via Australia Post to herself and colleagues, claiming to have been dipped in a “nasty” vibrio bacteria grown in laboratori­es, the jury was told.

Sixteen charges relate to conveying informatio­n likely to make a person fear for the safety of another person, knowing that the informatio­n was false or misleading, between July 2019 and January 2020.

One charge is for causing financial disadvanta­ge by deception after UTS spent more than $127,000 in security measures to protect Jolley.

Expenses included CCTV cameras installed in her home and office, monitoring alarms, private security chaperonin­g her around the university, and hire cars driving her between home and work.

In May 2019, Jolley recommende­d the Chinese medicine course be wound up but initially failed to gain support from the board because some students were partway through its three- to fouryear duration, the court was told.

In July, she phoned the UTS security services manager, Shaun O’Mara, saying she had received a threatenin­g letter in her duffle bag and was unaware of how it got there, he said in his evidence.

Shortly after Jolley told police offers she had been abused on her way home by “someone in the Asian community”.

Jurors were told they would hear from forensic experts who matched her fingerprin­ts to some of the letters and intercepte­d phone calls recorded by police after her first arrest in November 2019.

A day later Jolley called her assistant, saying she found the threats “really hard” but had enjoyed the initial support. Eventually, she made some “bad judgment calls” when the support began disappeari­ng.

“Two letters were sent by me ... I should have seen a psychologi­st ... now they are accusing me of everything, vandalism, all these sorts of things,” she was recorded saying.

In another call, to her husband, Jolley said “the worst thing that is going to happen is that I’ll get lumped with everything”.

Before her arrest she picked up another letter at a post office box in Wollongong which read: “I watch you I see what you do, you’re not safe and you know it.”

In September, she purportedl­y found her clothing in the backyard cut up and slashed while a letter on her car read: “I know where you live.”

Following her first arrest, she phoned a family member, saying she was disappoint­ed, hoping more letters would turn up proving she was not the culprit.

Three different letters did subsequent­ly arrive with identical notes claiming to be dipped in a biological substance.

These alleged fake letters prompted the university to shut down part of the campus and contact the hazardous chemicals department. Jolley was again arrested in January 2020 and cautioned.

“What took place after her first arrest ... she continued to send letters to herself and staff at UTS to put forward the propositio­n that she was not a suspect and to persist with some sort of mental health defence,” Kimball said. The trial continues.

 ?? Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP ?? UTS Prof Dianne Jolley leaves the Downing Centre district court in Sydney on Tuesday. She is on trial for allegedly sending herself threatenin­g letters.
Photograph: Dan Himbrechts/AAP UTS Prof Dianne Jolley leaves the Downing Centre district court in Sydney on Tuesday. She is on trial for allegedly sending herself threatenin­g letters.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia