Jurors see and hear Waffle House sex tape in courtroom

Mye Brindle, former housekeeper for Waffle House Chairman Joe Rogers Jr. and defendant in the sex tape case, listens to the testimony of Rogers  in the Fulton County Courthouse Wednesday, April 4, 2018. STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC

Credit: Steve Schaefer

Credit: Steve Schaefer

Mye Brindle, former housekeeper for Waffle House Chairman Joe Rogers Jr. and defendant in the sex tape case, listens to the testimony of Rogers  in the Fulton County Courthouse Wednesday, April 4, 2018. STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC

The former CEO of Waffle House became tearful Wednesday, shaking his head and turning his eyes away from the gallery, while jury members listened to audio from a sex tape his former housekeeper is accused of secretly recording of him in 2012.

The recording, which the judge said prosecutors could not keep from the public, is at the center of a six year-long tangle of civil and criminal litigation that went all the way to the Georgia Supreme Court last year.

Previously: Trial begins in Waffle House chairman's sex tape case

Joe Rogers Jr., who now serves as chairman for the national restaurant chain, took the stand Tuesday to testify against his former housekeeper Mye Brindle, who is accused of working with two attorneys to covertly record herself performing a sexual act on Rogers without his knowledge.

After the audio was played, the jury watched the video footage, which lasted for several minutes. Rogers began biting his nails while the video was shown for the first time in criminal court to a stone-faced jury.

Waffle House Chairman Joe Rogers, Jr.,  testifies in the Fulton County Courthouse  Wednesday, April 4, 2018. STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC

Credit: Steve Schaefer

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Credit: Steve Schaefer

In testimony that took up most of the trial’s second day, Rogers said the encounter played for the court was a typical one — he'd been having sexual encounters with Brindle for more than nine years.

Defense attorneys for Brindle have argued she was justified in making the tape as evidence of sexual harassment she has alleged against Rogers. Rogers has maintained their encounters were consensual.

Brindle and her lawyers, David Cohen and John Butters, face charges of unlawful surveillance.

Check back at myAJC.com for more coverage of this trial.