Nascar racing star, Kurt Busch, in a shocking revelation, told the Delaware court in Dover on Tuesday that his ex-girlfriend, Patricia Driscoll, was a trained assassin, working for the government of The United States.
Nascar driver Busch, accused by Driscoll of domestic assault, testified before the court that his ex-girlfriend is a hired killer on covert missions around the world. He even cited an instance that occurred in El Paso, Texas, when she returned to him in a gown splattered by blood. He further claimed before the court that Driscoll had told him that her mission took her across Central and South America and Africa, reported ESPN.
"Everybody on the outside can tell me I'm crazy, but I lived on the inside and saw it firsthand," CNN quoted Busch as telling the court, while testifying over Driscoll's request for a no-contact order.
Busch also said that Driscoll had once told him that one of the characters in the film "Zero Dark Thirty" was based on her and few other women.
Though Driscoll and her attorney, Carolyn McNeice, did not refute the testimony during the four-day hearing at the court, she, in an interview late Tuesday with the Associated Press, termed the allegations as "ludicrous." She further said that Busch has proofread a fictional movie script that she had been working on for almost eight years, and asserted that Busch had got the idea from there.
Busch's allegation came straight after Driscoll accused him of holding her by the throat and slamming her head into a wall thrice, at his motorhome at Dover International Speedway in September.
Michael Doncheff, personal assistant to Busch and Driscoll too confirmed Busch's allegations saying that Driscoll had once told him that she was a trained assassin, working for the U.S. government. "I take down foreign governments. I own Washington," Doncheff quoted Driscoll as having mentioned once.
Doncheff revealed to the court that Driscoll had told him way back in September that a big man and slammed to the ground while she was helping with the immigrants at the Mexican border, which according to Doncheff sounded "far-fetched."
Richard Andrew Sniffen, a Christian music minister was friends with Busch and Driscoll. He said before the court that Driscoll had told him on the night of the so-called assault that she hit her head after Busch pushed her.
Sniffen said that she was initially upset and ready to reconcile. However, the sorrow turned into anger in the weeks that followed. "I will destroy him," Sniffen quoted Driscoll as telling him.
Driscoll, who is a defense contractor, is allowed to carry weapons. Meanwhile, in regards to the no-contact order, the court will pass a verdict later this month or in early February.