Webster said he was happy just to get a job at the radio station: “I did every shit job there was … in the world of 2GB, I was very small, you couldn’t get any smaller than me.”
One of his jobs was to reportedly to drive Jones home from 2GB’s Pyrmont studios to his apartment in the Circular Quay building.
“During those 10 minutes, it would be wandering hands and then it just gradually became him grabbing my d.... And he would go for it. It was horrible,” he was quoted as saying.
Webster, who claimed he had to carry Jones’ bags up to his apartment, alleged to The Sydney Morning Herald that when he was in the lift Jones would corner him and forcibly kiss him on the lips.
He claimed Jones would then put on a dressing gown and head to his office while Webster was assigned chores, including ironing Jones’ underpants.
Webster alleges Jones – who was naked underneath the red gown – would swivel around “and his nuts were just hanging out, it made you sick”, he said.
“There’s no doubt that at the time when all this was going on, I truly felt helpless, you feel helpless,” Webster told the Sydney Morning Herald. “The power he had was ridiculous. You cannot quantify the power that that man had.”
One former producer, who asked not to be named due to fear of reprisals, claimed that while he didn’t see Jones touching genitals, “I did see inappropriate behaviour and I saw it on a number of occasions.”
The producer was quoted as saying Jones’ petting and pawing of young men was “uninvited”, “predatory”, “brazen” and “absolutely confronting”.
Businessman Alexander Hartman, prior to his death, reportedly confided in four journalists, expressing his desire for justice before Jones’ death.
Hartman alleged Jones “forces himself on young men and uses his power in a predatory way”.
The Sydney Morning Herald, after sending detailed questions to Jones, reported it had received a statement from the law firm Mark O’Brien Legal. The statement vehemently denied the allegations, calling them scandalous, grossly offensive, and seriously defamatory.
In 1984, Jones was elected coach of the Wallabies, taking over from Bob Dwyer, and coached Australia until early 1988. The team won 102 matches making him the most successful Australian rugby coach ever at the time. His teams won 23 tests out of 30, and four of those losses were by just a point.
In 1986, Jones coached the Wallabies to Australia’s history-making Bledisloe Cup victory in New Zealand. It was only the second time the Wallabies had won a series on New Zealand soil, following the 2-0 tour triumph of 1949. That series had featured a depleted host squad, as a 30-man All Blacks squad was absent, touring South Africa.
In 2020, Jones announced the end of his radio career. According to reports at the time, 2GB quickly lost advertising after Jones called New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern “a complete clown” a year earlier.
Jones drew flak from all quarters after telling his listeners Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison should “shove a sock down the throat” of Ardern. The broadcaster had taken umbrage after he thought Ardern had been critical of Australia’s efforts to tackle climate change.
Jones later apologised to Ardern, saying he never intended to suggest any violence towards her.