A POLICE special constable sent his neighbour alleged extreme pornography and claimed other officers did it too, a court heard.

John Murray, 61, is said to have engaged in a course of behaviour which was the abuse of a 47-year-old woman between April and December 2019 in Glasgow's Easterhouse.

The special constable and black cab taxi driver is alleged to have sent the woman three sexual videos which the witness described as making her "physically sick."

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The woman also claimed the boxing teacher uppercutted her during a holiday to Benidorm and recorded her on his phone without permission.

Prosecutors state Murray attended the workplace of the woman’s daughter to ask questions about her.

It is claimed he repeatedly sent the woman pornographic images and assaulted her by repeatedly punching her head and seizing her by the neck.

Court papers claim Murray approached her and uttered sexual remarks and monitored her home using CCTV installed at a property.

It is further alleged he repeatedly phoned her employer to complain about her fitness to practise.

He also allegedly repeatedly watched the woman at her address, gestured towards her and gestured with his mobile to give the impression of taking photographs or video footage.

It is further claimed Murray recorded the woman without her permission as well as at her home.

Allegations state Murray followed her and her vehicle as well as looked inside it.

Murray faces a separate charge of breaching his bail by contacting the woman.

His final charge claims Murray had possession of extreme pornography.

Murray pleads not guilty at Glasgow Sheriff Court to the three charges.

The court heard from the woman - a former NHS worker - who stated she went to Benidorm together with her neighbour, Murray.

She claimed that she was “pressured into sex” by “controlling” Murray.

The woman alleged she caught Murray recording a conversation with her daughter about her wanting to come home while he was out the room.

The woman stated during the conversation, Murray had tried to grab her phone.

She said in evidence: “The phone got flung and he uppercutted me...he teaches boxing.”

The woman claimed she was hit on the chin which knocked her to the floor.

Prosecutor Emma Baker asked how the woman felt and she replied: “I was terrified.

“I was screaming and he has his hand to my throat and my legs. I was trying to defend myself at that point.”

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The woman claimed she left the hotel but returned later that night as she had nowhere else to go.

She stated that she sustained a mark and swelling to her jaw and “could hardly open my mouth.”

Pictures of Murray with apparent scratch injuries were shown to the witness.

She admitted that it “most likely” came from her while she was defending herself.

A video was shown to the court from the night of the incident in which the woman is heard repeatedly calling Murray “a creep.”

Miss Baker asked why she called him that name.

The woman replied that Murray had brought a variety of sex toys with him to Benidorm.

She added: That’s just not my cup of tea as well as the sexual advances towards me.”

The woman stated in another video that Murray was a "womanizer."

The woman claimed that this was the first time she had seen the videos and that she was unaware Murray was recording her.

The witness was later asked about text messages that she was sent by Murray.

She replied: "He sent me a few vulgar images" before describing three sexual videos that she received.

The woman said: "The police send them all round about, everyone sends them to each other."

Miss Baker asked what Murray's job was and she replied: "A special constable for the traffic police and a taxi driver."

The woman claimed that she did not want the videos and that they made her feel "physically sick."

The woman claimed Murray would wave his phone at her in the street as if he was recording her.

She added that she had to live with her blinds down at the front of the house.

The woman described a further incident in which she claimed Murray followed her home as she drove her new car.

She told the court that Murray took note of her registration number on his phone before he laughed and stuck two fingers up at her.

The trial continues in January before Sheriff Brian Cameron.

Murray, whose bail address is the professional standards department at Police Scotland headquarters in the city’s Dalmarnock, remains on bail meantime.