A high-profile Australian automotive industry leader has launched a rare private criminal prosecution against his former model girlfriend, alleging a series of targeted blackmail attempts that saw her demand as much as $16 million or an engagement to suppress damaging audio recordings.
Sean Buckley, executive chairman of national car service and roadside assistance provider Ultra Tune, has brought five formal blackmail charges against Jennifer Cruz Cole, his ex-partner and the mother of one of his children, which were officially filed with Melbourne Magistrates’ Court this Monday. Martin Amad, Buckley’s own solicitor, is leading the prosecution in the case, a unique arrangement permitted under Australian private prosecution rules that allow private citizens to initiate criminal proceedings instead of state law enforcement agencies.
Cole, who previously worked as one of Ultra Tune’s well-known “rubber girl” promotional models, appeared in court in person following the service of charges on April 12. She was not required to enter a plea at this early procedural hearing.
Court documents outline that between October 2019 and December 2020, when the former couple’s relationship was coming to an acrimonious end, Cole made five separate “unwarranted demands with menaces” against Buckley. The court ordered Buckley’s name be redacted from public charge sheets. The first charge details an October 2019 demand for $10 million, with a threat to damage the unnamed victim’s reputation via the high-rating current affairs program *A Current Affair*. The most serious allegation dates to late 2020, when Cole is accused of demanding either $16 million or a formal engagement agreement in exchange for withholding “reputationally damaging” audio recordings of the victim.
Magistrate Gerard Lethbridge confirmed during the preliminary hearing that the severity of the charges means the case will eventually be transferred to the higher County Court for trial, a process that requires the state Director of Public Prosecutions to formally approve and sign the indictment.
Cole’s legal team, led by barrister David Hancock, requested an interim gag order to temporarily block media from reporting case details, but the magistrate rejected the application, ruling a media ban would not be appropriate in this matter.
This prosecution is the latest in a string of overlapping legal disputes between the former couple, who dated from 2017 until their split in December 2020. Buckley and Ultra Tune currently have an ongoing civil claim before the Supreme Court against Cole, centered on her alleged publication of a secretly recorded conversation between the two that took place in a Crown hotel room in early 2020.
In a separate prior criminal matter, allegations that Buckley stalked, secretly recorded, and assaulted Cole in 2020 were dismissed by Melbourne Magistrates’ Court last August, four years after the claims were first filed. Buckley’s legal team has long maintained the allegations were a deliberate set-up by Cole.
Speaking to reporters outside the courtroom, Amad confirmed Buckley’s decision to pursue a private prosecution was a choice he was legally entitled to make, and that the case would proceed through the courts according to due process. Hancock has stated he will not make any public comments on the matter at this stage. The case is scheduled to return to Melbourne Magistrates’ Court for a further procedural hearing on August 10.
