Fallen football star Ben Cousins allegedly held a screw driver up to the mother of his two children before threatening to ‘bury her alive’, a court has heard.
Cousins, 40, appeared in court on Wednesday just hours after being arrested outside the home of his ex-girlfriend Maylea Tinecheff at Canning Vale, in Perth’s south.
Police charged the AFL great with a total of 16 offences including possessing 13 grams of methylamphetamine, which they allege he hid in a plastic bag in his anus.
A distraught Cousins could be heard tearfully telling his lawyer ‘I can’t go back there’ as the magistrate denied his bail application.
The court earlier heard how just weeks before his arrest Cousins had allegedly made a number of threats to Ms Tinecheff, including that he would ‘kill her’ if she didn’t let him see their two children.
Fallen football star Ben Cousins screamed and cried after he was refused bail during a court appearance on Wednesday. (Pictured: One of the last known photos of Cousins, posing with a fan on the streets of Perth in early August)
Cousins reportedly told his ex-girlfriend and the mother of his two children Maylea Tinecheff (right): ‘I am going to kill you’
A prison van takes Cousins from Armadale Magistrates Court on Wednesday, after his bail was refused
Ms Tinecheff reportedly collected Cousins in her BMW and took him to lunch to talk about their children, when he allegedly became aggressive.
‘I’m going to kill you. Take your life, your freedom and the things you love the most,’ the court heard he said.
‘(I’ll take the children) where you will be able to hear them, but not be able to get to them.
‘The only way for me to see the kids is to have you knocked off. You have one week to rectify this.’
Cousins was released from jail in January, just 10 months into a one-year sentence he was serving for breaching a violence restraining order taken out by Ms Tinecheff.
The court heard on Wednesday that he had allegedly breached the restraining order multiple times over the past fortnight.
Speaking during his court appearance, the tearful father-of-two claimed he was ‘not a threat’ to anyone and revealed how he missed his children.
‘I am the victim in this. To be the subject of ridicule and embarrassment, and I know I’ve brought a lot of that on myself, but I don’t act out in violence,’ Cousins said.
‘I have been very late in maturing, and I’ve realised that. In the last six months I have had very little contact with my children.
‘I still haven’t gone back to my old ways… I tried to go through the appropriate channels (to see them) but it’s not easy.
‘I beg you I beg you I’m not a threat. Every day I close my eyes when the sun goes down and I spew that it’s another day I’m not going to be with my children.
‘Someone in my situation, you should use it as an example of hope, that things will work out. Not the opposite.’
‘The only way for me to see the kids is to have you knocked off. You have one week to rectify this,’ Cousins allegedly told Ms Tinecheff
The AFL champion (pictured) is facing 16 charges relating to drug offences, breaching an AVO and threatening to injure or endanger his former partner Maylea Tinecheff
During his appearance in the Armadale Magistrates Court, the court heard allegations that in custody on Tuesday night police found 14 grams of methylamphetamine hidden in a plastic bag lodged in Cousins’ anus
A distraught Cousins, who was only released from jail in January, could be heard in the court telling his lawyer Michael Tudori (pictured): ‘I can’t go back there’
Despite the advice of his lawyer Cousins opted to make an application for bail and told the court he had recently applied to work at Perth Casino in the kitchen.
‘I need you to understand I am making an effort. I am in the process of starting a job,’ he said.
‘I was rung about that yesterday actually.’
On Tuesday evening police arrived at Ms Tinecheff’s home and arrested the former footballer.
After being taken into custody officers performed a routine search during which it is alleged they found 13 grams of methylamphetamine hidden in a bag in his anus.
When officers asked Cousins to remove the bag he agreed before allegedly trying to push it further into his anus.
He later had to be taken to hospital to have it removed by doctors.
Just weeks earlier Cousins had happily posed for photos with football fans on Perth’s streets.
Among them was an Uber driver who was apparently such a big fan of the footy star that he allowed him to ride for free.
In the latest chapter to the AFL star’s controversy-filled life, police revealed he had been homeless in recent times.
A prison van carrying Cousins arrives at Armadale Magistrates Court on Wednesday morning
Police also revealed that Cousins (pictured) had been homeless in recent times, despite being bailed to the home of his parents after his release from jail
WA Police said in a statement: ‘Around 6:12 last night, a man was taken into custody by police at a house in Canning Vale in relation to another matter.
‘It will be alleged that while in custody, officers searched the man and 13 grams of methylamphetamine was located.
‘A 40-year-old man of no fixed address has been charged with possession of a prohibited drug with intent to sell or supply, threats to injure, endanger or harm any person, two counts of beached family violence restraining order or violence restraining order.’
After his release from jail in January, Cousins was offered a job with the West Coast Eagles in a ‘community and game development’ role.
But it was revealed in May that he was no longer in the role, after reportedly failing to turn up for work on multiple occasions.
Cousins has previously spoken in depth about his struggles with drug addiction, and in a 2010 documentary revealed the extent to which he used drugs during his career.
‘I’m a drug addict, just flat-out. Yeah, I was drug-f**ked,’ Cousins said in a 2010 documentary on his life
‘I’m a drug addict, just flat-out. Yeah, I was drug-f**ked,’ Cousins said.
‘It was fast, it was good. They were good times. Alcohol wasn’t the big thing for me at the time. It was all about drugs for me.
‘I wouldn’t have butter on my toast, let alone a truck load of beer… (but) I’d take drugs and I would train and f***king train and obsess and play good footy.
‘I knew that at the end of that one week block, two week block or sometimes on the month, I would start to absolutely annihilate and launch into as much drugs as I could.’
The former winner of the Brownlow Medal – the highest individual honour in the AFL – retired from the sport in 2010.