"The Court Case"
Girls Aloud singer Cheryl Tweedy has denied
making racist comments to
a toilet attendant she is accused of assaulting.
The 19-year-old singer from Newcastle, whose
band is currently No 1 in the pop charts,
was arrested after an alleged assault on a black washroom
attendant in a nightclub
early on 11 January.
It was reported that Tweedy screamed racial
abuse at London law student
Sophie Amogbokpa,39, before punching her in the face,
leaving her with a badly swollen eye.
But a spokesman for the group's record company
Polydor, said:-
"She is not racist in any way and was very upset by the
suggestion that she is."
Ms Amogbokpa told the Sunday Mirror newspaper:-
"I was shocked. I don't care how many number ones she's had,
if she was nobody, she shouldn't have said those things to me or
hit me.
"I had done nothing to her and whoever gives me an eye like this should be punished."
She said Ms Tweedy had been irate and called
her "a black bitch"
and other racist names - saying she wanted to hit her again.
Record bosses admit the fight at the Drink
Club, in Guildford took place,
but deny there was any racial element and said Ms Tweedy's
actions were in self-defence.
'Completely negative'
A spokesman for Polydor Records said:-
"Cheryl obviously deeply regrets getting into the fight but
when the terminology
that she was supposed to have used came out yesterday she was
shocked
and absolutely distraught.
"The press have been completely negative
and have even been digging out ex-boyfriends
of hers who happen to have been black."
He said they were now considering legal action following the claims of racism.
He said: "We will be meeting with our
lawyers because these allegations
of racial abuse are completely false."
Ms Tweedy was one of the five winning singers
on the ITV show Popstars: The Rivals,
who formed the band Girls Aloud, and who went straight to No 1
with their debut single
Sound of the Underground.
Police bail
She was held by Surrey police for 10 hours
after the alleged incident which happened
as she and friends let their hair down after recording in a
nearby studio in Guildford.
She was released without charge on police bail
just in time for rehearsals before
appearing on ITV's Ant and Dec Show.
The Polydor spokesman said the incident would not affect the band's future.
He added: "There is obviously a lot more
to this incident than meets the eye,
and we will be getting to the bottom of it.
"Cheryl is with the rest of the band at
the moment and they
are all being completely supportive of her."

In the most recent high profile music court
case, Cheryl Tweedy from Girls Aloud
is seen departing from Kingston Crown court, having been found
guilty of attacking
female nightclub attendant Sophie Amogbokpa.
Tweedy, 20, was cleared of a charge of carrying out a racist
attack on her victim.
But she was sentenced to 120 hours of community service,
and ordered to pay her victim £500 compensation and pay £3,000
prosecution costs.
Will the community service involve cleaning out toilets though?
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