TikTok Covid cases comedian appears in court over Sydney anti-lockdown protest speech

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Australia’s ‘Covid numbers TikTok guy’ finally has his day in court over anti-lockdown protest speech – as cops say he MUST be punished

  • TikTok comedian faces court over attendance at anti-lockdown protest last July
  • Pleaded guilty to two charges of leaving home without a reasonable excuse
  • Jon-Bernard Kairouz will fight third charge encouraging commission of crimes

A TikTok comedian who addressed a Sydney Covid-19 anti-lockdown protest is fighting a charge that he encouraged the group to commit a crime.

Jon-Bernard Kairouz, 25, faced three charges in Downing Centre Local Court on Wednesday in contravention of the public health act for attending a public protest on July 24, 2021.

He pleaded guilty to two counts of being away from his residence without a reasonable excuse, and participating in a public gathering while Greater Sydney was plunged in hard lockdown due to the rapid spread of Covid-19.

The comedian is fighting a third charge for encouraging the commission of crimes after delivering a speech using a megaphone from Sydney’s Town Hall steps.

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An estimated crowd of about 3,500 people had gathered, the court was told.

TikTok Covid cases comedian appears in court over Sydney anti-lockdown protest speech

Jon-Bernard Kairouz  (pictured) pleaded guilty to two charges when he faced a Sydney court on Wednesday. He plans to fight a third charge

The online entertainer went viral on TikTok and saw follower numbers soar at the height of the Sydney pandemic after correctly reporting how many cases NSW would announce hours before they were reported.

Kairouz claimed at the time said he had no inside government source but was predicting the figures mathematically.

On Wednesday his defence lawyer Daniel Grippi said his client’s pleas of guilty to the first two charges should quash the third charge, as the gathering had a shared common purpose between all.

‘And he gathers in front of persons, the same persons the prosecution alleges he then encourages to commit an offence of gathering,’ Mr Grippi said.

Prosecutor Michael Cleaver pressed the charge, saying his offending included ‘the manner in which (the words) were delivered, through the demeanour and physical actions, and the circumstances he is speaking to the public via a loudspeaker’.

He said magistrate Emma Manea should punish someone who was allegedly encouraging others to commit a criminal offence while in contravention of the public health order.

The hearing continues.

Jon-Bernard Kairouz became famous during the Sydney lockdown for correctly guessing the number of Covid cases NSW had each day

Jon-Bernard Kairouz became famous during the Sydney lockdown for correctly guessing the number of Covid cases NSW had each day

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