Tory MP Jamie Wallis was wearing leather mini-skirt and high heels during late-night car crash
Tory MP Jamie Wallis, who has represented Bridgend since 2019, was wearing a “black leather mini-skirt” and “high heels” when he was involved in a late-night car crash, a court heard this afternoon.
Wallis is on trial accused of failing to stop, failing to report a road traffic collision, driving without due care and attention and leaving a vehicle in a dangerous position. He denies the charges.
The charges relate to a collision on November 28 last year in which the Mercedes he is said to have been driving hit a lamppost and telegraph pole on Church Road in Llanblethian, South Wales.
Wallis claims he left the scene of the crash out of fear he would be “raped, killed or kidnapped” due to post-traumatic stress disorder which he developed after being raped in September.
Carina Hughes, prosecuting, said residents Adrian Watson and Natalie Webb were having a gathering when just after 1am they heard a “very loud bang, significantly louder than a domestic firework”.
Webb said he went outside and saw amber flashing lights and that a Mercedes E-Class saloon had crashed into the lamppost.
Mr Watson said he looked inside the car and saw “a white male wearing a white long-sleeve top which was tight to the body, a black leather PVC mini-skirt, tights, dark shoes with a high heel and a pearl necklace”.
Ms Webb in her statement described the male as wearing “black court shoes”.
He followed him and witnessed him make two phone calls, and during one he claimed he was being “accosted”.
He was then picked up by his father in a Land Rover Discovery.
Police Sergeant Gareth Handy said that when he attended Wallis’ family home address, which he described as a “mansion” and “absolutely colossal”, he forced entry into the property out of concern for the MP.
Mr Handy said Wallis was eventually found in one of the rooms of the house and when he got to the room he said: “I saw Jamie had make-up on his face.”
When police searched his flat at the property, they found a “blonde wig” on a table, the court heard.
Pc Louis Hall found Wallis in a bedroom within the house asleep and said: “He appeared to be wearing make-up. His eyelids were dark, his lips were red and his cheeks were bronzed, and he had red nail polish on his toes.”
Wallis was found naked in bed and was given a modesty blanket until clothing could be found.
The black leather skirt and pearl necklace were found next to the bed and were seized by police.
Taking to the stand, Wallis said the day before the crash he was at home “wearing clothes I felt most comfortable in, which I often do when I’m alone, which are women’s clothes”.
Peter Rouch QC, defending, asked Wallis: “How long have you felt like this?”
Wallis replied: “Since I was a small child.”
Wallis said he would describe himself as transgender.
In March 2022, Wallis became the first MP in the UK to come out as transgender.
Wallis revealed in the same public statement that he had been raped.
Asked to describe the incident in September 2021, Wallis said: “In September, I was raped.”
Mr Rouch said: “You don’t need to go through the details. But you were subjected to penetrative rape yes?”
Wallis said: “Yes.”
Wallis continued: “It was profoundly distressing and traumatised. I became obsessed with what happened, I kept thinking about it, having nightmares and flashbacks.
“I would wake up in the middle of the night believing he was in my flat.
“I was hyper-anxious, and hyper-alert.”
Wallis said he was diagnosed with PTSD after he was raped.
He claims he left the scene of the crash because he had a “PTSD attack” and felt “vulnerable” and “as if I was going to be attacked again”.
In a prepared statement to police, the MP said he was in “pain and shock” after the collision.
“I noticed a group of people approaching and felt anxious,” he said.
“Due to my medical condition and time of the day and the weather conditions I felt I needed to get away.
“When I got home I took my medication and felt drowsy.
“I have been recently diagnosed with post traumatic stress disorder.”
The trial is expected to last up to two days.