Brooke Baker: Call girl who secretly filmed her client and sent a video of the couple having sex to his fiancé faces court

Brooke Baker: Call girl who secretly filmed her client and sent a video of the couple having sex to his fiancée must appear in court

A sex worker who secretly filmed a client having sex and sent the video to his fiancée later stalked him when he didn’t return her calls.

Brooke Ariel Grace Baker, from Sydney’s west, sent the client 244 text messages and made 87 calls to his phone in one evening, despite the victim not answering on one occasion.

The 31-year-old later appeared next to the man’s car when he was stopped at an intersection on his way to work, got in and refused to leave until he threatened to drive to a police station. news.com.au reports.

Baker pleaded guilty at Penrith Local Court this week to stalking or intimidation with intent to cause fear of bodily harm or mental harm, using the carriage service to intimidate or offend and breaching a warrant of arrest (DV).

She was previously found guilty in December of two counts of intentionally recording an intimate image without consent, despite not appearing in court.

Brooke Ariel Grace Baker stalked a client who used her services as a sex worker (stock image)

According to the agreed facts, the pair met in 2018 through the website Escorts and Babes, where Baker went by the name Amelia, and arranged to meet at Meriton Suites in Parramatta.

The pair had consensual sex, but Baker recorded video of the man performing oral sex on her without his knowledge.

When the man stopped using Baker’s services, she contacted both him and his fiancée and told the couple she was pregnant.

She then emailed the illegally recorded video to the man’s fiancée.

After she was found guilty of recording the video, an AVO was issued preventing her from contacting him.

Baker will return to Penrith District Court in October after pleading guilty to stalking and breaching a domestic violence order

Baker will return to Penrith District Court in October after pleading guilty to stalking and breaching a domestic violence order

But months later she saw him stop at the traffic lights at an intersection and get into his car where the couple argued, while the man had to continue driving the car in traffic.

She only left after he told her he was driving to a police station.

The next day, she sent the 244 text and made the 87 calls over a five-hour period, prompting the man to call the police.

On Tuesday, Magistrate Bree Chisolm adjourned Baker’s case so that a sentencing assessment report could be prepared.

She was released on bail and will return to court on October 24.