EXCLUSIVE
An Aussie bloke whose experiment with ‘super Viagra’ ended with him accidentally flashing a teenage Hungry Jack’s worker has been shown mercy by a judge.
Judge Therese Austin accepted David Bruce Richardson’s eye-watering account of his Viagra overdose and found there had been no ‘sexual’ intent when the Darwin man accidentally exposed his privates to a 16-year-old girl working at the drive-thru.
The young woman was said to be ‘traumatised’ and ‘reduced to tears’.
Mr Richardson’s ill-fated Hungry Jack’s run last September took place a day after he took a sexual enhancement drug called ‘Pit Bull Super’ prior to attending an orgy with ‘friends’ at a local hotel.
While Pit Bull Super is advertised as a ‘natural formula’, it in fact contains the prescription-only drugs sildenafil (Viagra) and tadalafil (Cialis), which are used to treat erectile dysfunction in men.
David Bruce Richardson’s (pictured) ill-fated experiment with ‘super Viagra’ ended with him accidentally flashing a teenage Hungry Jack’s worker. He was shown mercy by a judge who accepted there was no ‘sexual’ intent behind the flashing
As a result of taking the pill, 시알리스 처방 which is not approved by the TGA, Mr Richardson’s erection would not subside and became ‘extremely painful’.
‘He was with a number of young ladies and ciapower.com they were having relations and he says that his erection would not cease and it became extremely painful,’ Mr Richardson’s lawyer Peter Maley told Darwin Local Court, as first reported by NT News.
The lawyer said Mr Richardson, a farrier from the town of Humpty Doo, about 40km south-east of Darwin, ‘started to panic’ and ‘the side of his penis began to split because of the lack of circulation’.
Mr Richardson then drove home and grabbed a towel but said he couldn’t touch his penis because it felt like it ‘was about to explode’.
‘He pulled into Hungry Jack’s, he’s purchased some food, there was a towel, he says he didn’t get out of the car, he was dreadfully embarrassed,’ Mr Maley said.
Mr Richardson told Daily Mail Australia he’d taken a ‘super Viagra’ and did not believe the drive-thru workers would see him. (Stock image of a Hungry Jack’s drive-thru sign)
Speaking to Daily Mail Australia after the embarrassing incident made headlines in the Northern Territory, a remorseful Mr Richardson admitted he’d ‘made a mistake’ and ‘honestly didn’t think the [Hungry Jack’s] workers would see me’.
‘I wasn’t trying to expose myself to the poor young girl,’ he said.
‘The pill was way too strong. I’m surprised it’s legal to sell that stuff, and I was in a lot of pain.
‘I wasn’t trying to flash myself at anyone. I just wanted to grab a feed and go home.’
Mr Richardson said he had to take several days to ‘rest’ after the effects of the ‘super Viagra’ wore off.
However, the effects of the court case have been worse, taking a significant toll on his mental health.
‘It’s been giving me a lot of grief and anxiety. Really been playing on my mind,’ he said.
‘Then there’s the embarrassment of talking with police about it and having it turned into front-page news in the local paper.’
While Pit Bull Super is advertised as a ‘natural formula’, it in fact contains the prescription-only drugs sildenafil (Viagra) and tadalafil (Cialis), which are used to treat erectile dysfunction
Mr Richardson was left ’embarrassed’ by locals papers that published the incident as front-page news
In court, Judge Austin agreed the packet of Pit Bull Super looked ‘dangerous’ but said Mr Richardson should have gone to the hospital instead of the drive-thru.
She handed Mr Richardson a nine-month good behaviour bond after finding he had no ‘sexual’ intent behind the exposure.
‘There’s no evidence before me that you intended to behave the way you did for any sort of sexual gratification,’ Judge Austin said.