Another article:
Peter Roebuck 'faced ***ual assault charge' | Sport | The Guardian
South African police were poised to arrest cricket commentator before he jumped from 6th floor window, says former colleague
South African police were about to arrest the cricket commentator Peter Roebuck on a charge of ***ual assault when he apparently jumped from a hotel window, according to a close friend who was with him just before he died.
Jim Maxwell, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's main commentator, told the Guardian he left Roebuck's Cape Town room "less than a minute" before the 55-year-old former Somerset captain apparently leapt to his death on Saturday.
"He was in a state of utter despair – apoplectic," said Maxwell. "He was sitting in a chair near the window. It takes just five seconds to open that window. Given his emotional state he must have suffered a brain explosion and out he went."
South African police refused to confirm that an officer was with Roebuck when he leapt from the 6th floor of the Southern Sun hotel, near Newlands cricket ground. Oxford-born Roebuck was staying at the hotel while covering Australia's Test series for Australian media.
Police spokesman Colonel Vishnu Naidoo said: "We have opened an inquest docket to determine the cause of death. We will interview everyone who can shed light on the buildup to what happened on Saturday night. There is no evidence of foul play."
Naidoo refused to comment on reports in South Africa's New Age newspaper that a 26-year-old Zimbabwean man had gone to nearby Claremont police station earlier on Saturday and laid charges of indecent assault against Roebuck. According to the report, the man told police he had met Roebuck after the broadcaster arrived in Cape Town on 7 November to discuss a university sponsorship, but instead was subjected to an attempted ***ual assault.
Maxwell said Roebuck had called him to his room on Saturday at about 9pm. "There were two officers there. They were going to arrest him on a charge of ***ual assault. He was very emotional. I asked whether he wanted me to call Fairfax, his employer. He said 'No, they will know soon enough' or something like that. He wanted a lawyer. And he wanted me to find a way of contacting friends who were planning to greet him at the airport."
Maxwell, who left the Newlands hotel on Monday morning with other journalists covering the Test, said he had known Roebuck for more than 30 years. In 2001, he appeared as a character witness for Roebuck when he received a suspended sentence for assault after beating three 19-year-old cricketers across their bare buttocks. The South African teenagers had been invited to stay at his former home in Taunton, Somerset, for coaching in the late 1990s.
"We all have our demons," said Maxwell. "People will make assumptions about Peter because of that sentence 10 years ago. But as far as I know nothing untoward ever happened with all the young people Peter supported."He spent thousands of dollars of his own money helping people and supporting cricket. He was a philanthropist," said Maxwell.Sebastian Berinato, general manager of the four-star Southern Sun Newlands, confirmed that Roebuck fell from his window and died instantly after landing on a ledge above the reception area. Staff at the hotel were to receive trauma counselling, he said.
Roebuck captained Somerset and opened the batting for much of the 1980s. He passed 1,000 runs nine times in 12 seasons. After retiring from cricket, he had established a media career in Australia. He also had a home in South Africa, near Pietermaritzburg.
He had spent the hours before his death with members of the Australian cricket team, who were beaten by South Africa by eight wickets in the first Test on Friday.