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Nigella Lawson admits using cocaine, cannabis |
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British television chef Nigella Lawson (C) leaves Isleworth Crown Court in west London, on December 4, 2013, after giving evidence in a case in which her two personal assistants (Elisabetta and Francesca Grillo) are accused of defrauding her and former husband Charles Saatchi. Speaking at the fraud trial of two ex-aides, Lawson admitted occasionally using cocaine and cannabis but dismissed claims she was a drug addict as an attempt by her ex-husband Charles Saatchi to "destroy" her. AFP PHOTO / CARL COURT.
By: Danny Kemp
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LONDON (AFP).- British celebrity chef Nigella Lawson on Wednesday admitted using cocaine and cannabis but dismissed claims she was a drug addict as an attempt by her ex-husband Charles Saatchi to "destroy" her.
Speaking at the fraud trial of two ex-aides, Lawson said she took cocaine when her first husband John Diamond was dying and again in 2010 when she was being subjected to "intimate terrorism" by multi-millionaire art dealer Saatchi.
"There are two times in my life when I have used cocaine. The idea that I am a drug addict or habitual user of cocaine is absolutely ridiculous," Lawson, 53, told Isleworth Crown Court in London.
"I have to say, since freeing myself from a brilliant but brutal man, I'm now totally cannabis-, cocaine-, any drug-free."
The allegations of drug-taking emerged at the start of the trial of Italian sisters Elisabetta and Francesca Grillo, who used to work as personal assistants to Lawson and Saatchi.
The Grillos each deny fraudulently spending £685,000 ($1.1 million, 820,000 euros) on Saatchi's company credit cards.
Lawson, the self-styled "domestic goddess", said she used cocaine with Diamond, her first husband and father of her two children, on six occasions because "it gave him some escape" when he was suffering from terminal cancer.
The second time was in 2010 when a friend gave her the drug as Lawson was having a "very, very difficult time".
"I felt subjected to intimate terrorism by Mr Saatchi," she said.
Lawson, who has made a fortune with a series of cookery books and television shows in Britain and the United States, said she also took cannabis in the last year of her marriage to Saatchi, 70.
"I have to be honest, I have smoked the odd joint. I found it made an intolerable situation tolerable," she told the court.
Earlier, Lawson said Saatchi wanted revenge after she refused to back him over paparazzi pictures that showed him gripping her by the throat at a London restaurant earlier this year.
The celebrity couple split after 10 years of marriage following the incident at the upmarket Scott's restaurant.
"He had said to me if I didn't get back to him and clear his name he would destroy me," Lawson said.
"I have been put on trial here, where I am called to answer, and glad to answer the allegations, and the world's press, and it comes after a long summer of bullying and abuse."
'He did have a temper'
Wearing a black fitted coat, an impassive-looking Lawson was flanked by seven police officers as she walked into the court building past a scrum of photographers and television cameramen.
In her evidence, Lawson told the court that after the "awful incident at Scott's", false allegations of drug use began circulating on a "PR blog".
The allegations on the blog were "dedicated to salvaging Mr Saatchi's reputation and destroying mine", Lawson said.
She painted a bleak picture of the end of her marriage to the former advertising guru, describing him as being quick to become angry.
"He did have a temper and I don't think that anyone can be in any doubt he had a temper," Lawson said.
Saatchi "didn't like to take part in family life" and her independence tended to "irritate" him, added Lawson.
Saatchi last week told the court he had no proof that his ex-wife had taken drugs but admitted he had sent an email claiming she was "off her head".
He said he was "utterly bereft" that the private email had been made public as part of the Grillo trial.
Saatchi accepted a police caution over the throat-grabbing incident but said he was disappointed Lawson had refused to say publicly that he had not abused her.
In court on Wednesday, Lawson claimed the incident occurred when she remarked how she was looking forward to having grandchildren.
"He grabbed me by the throat and said: 'I'm the only person you should be concerned with,'" Lawson said.
After the incident was made public, Saatchi "told everyone" he had been removing cocaine from her nose when the pictures were taken, she said.
© 1994-2013 Agence France-Presse
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