Taylor Swift’s mom testifies alleged groping ‘shattered our trust’

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In this sketch by courtroom artist Jeff Kandyba, pop singer Taylor Swift, left, and a defense attorney look on as former radio host David Mueller, background right, speaks during a civil trial in federal court Tuesday, Aug. 8, 2017, in Denver. Swift alleges that Mueller touched her during a concert meet-and-greet in 2013. The case went to court after Mueller sued Swift, claiming her false accusation cost him his job. He is seeking at least $3 million in damages. Swift countersued, claiming sexual assault. (Jeff Kandyba via AP)

DENVER: Whether Taylor Swift wins or loses a federal court battle stemming from her allegation that she was groped by a Denver DJ, the incident in question has already made the singer less trustful of the public and less open to fans, her mother testified.

Andrea Swift, who acts as part of her famous daughter’s management team, took the witness stand on Wednesday in the trial pitting the Grammy-winning pop star against the man she accuses of sexual assault, radio personality David Mueller.

The U.S. District Court jury is weighing Taylor Swift’s accusation that Mueller grabbed her bare buttocks at a pre-concert fan reception in 2013 against Mueller’s assertion that he was falsely accused and consequently fired from his job.

“It absolutely shattered our trust,” Andrea Swift, 59, said of the alleged incident, adding that meet-and-greet events for fans have since been scaled back, and metal detectors are now in place at all functions where her daughter interacts with the public.

According to the 27-year-old recording artist, Mueller slipped his hand under her dress as the two posed, along with Mueller’s girlfriend, during a brief picture-taking session.

“It was not an accident, it was completely intentional, and I have never been so sure of anything in my life,” Taylor Swift has said in a deposition. She is expected to take the witness stand herself later in the trial.

Mueller, 55, testified on Tuesday that he may have made innocent physical contact with Swift, perhaps brushing her arm or torso. But he denied any inappropriate behaviour.

Asked whether he grabbed Swift’s backside, Mueller replied, flatly, “No, I did not.” A sketch of Taylor Swift and her attorneys in Denver Federal Court during the Swift groping trial in Denver U.S. August 8, 2017.

The singer’s mother was inexplicably called as a witness by the Mueller’s lawyer, Gabriel McFarland, the next day, but her testimony was anything but favourable to the former disc jockey for radio station KYGO-FM.

The elder Swift said she “wanted to vomit” when her daughter told her: “‘Mom, a guy just grabbed my ass at the meet-and-greet.'”

Asked if she sought out eyewitnesses to verify the account, the mother said she had no reason to doubt her daughter’s word.

“He sexually assaulted my daughter, right there, that guy,” Andrea Swift said as she pointed at Mueller, sitting 15 feet away. “I heard it from my daughter’s mouth. I know that it happened.”

A member of Swift’s security team later confronted Mueller, and a representative for the singer ultimately lodged a complaint with the radio station. But Swift’s mother said the police were not called for fear of publicity.

The mother said that seeing the photo in retrospect she could tell something was amiss from her daughter’s body language and the “look in her eyes.” She did not elaborate.

Mueller initiated the litigation, claiming Swift fabricated the groping story and pressured KYGO to fire him. Swift then countersued for assault and battery.