Mr Mosley revealed that he used the pseudonym 'Mike' to protect his identity although all the women, who led "perfectly normal and respectable lives", seemed entirely trustworthy.
He said that the role-play "prison" scenario, which is at the centre of his breach of privacy action against the News of the World, involved him and woman B, a fellow German speaker, being dominant to submissive characters who could not understand them.
Mr Mosley, the 68-year-old son of the 1930s Fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley, said this "added to the excitement of a scenario".
He said that at no time did he or woman A, who arranged the "parties", like the one in a Chelsea basement flat on March 28, ever use the word "Nazi" in their discussions, adding: "A Nazi theme would be abhorrent to me - and I suspect that none of the women would wish to take part should anyone suggest such a theme."
Mr Mosley says that his life was devastated by the expose of what the newspaper called a "sick Nazi orgy with five hookers" and is asking for an unprecedented award of punitive exemplary damages.
His counsel, James Price QC, has said that the "gross and indefensible intrusion" was made substantially worse by the entirely false suggestion that Mr Mosley, president of the FIA (Federation Internationale de l'Automobile) was playing a concentration camp commandant and a cowering death camp inmate.
News Group Newspapers is strongly contesting the action and argues that publication was justified in the public interest.
Before the court went into private to view a videotape of a similar scenario, which occurred on March 8, Mr Mosley agreed that the March 28 session involved women wearing black jackets, black boots and a black cap, but denied any Nazi aspect .
He said that if he had asked for a Nazi theme, he would have been deeply disappointed to be greeted, as he was, with the phrase "Welcome to Chelsea" rather than "Brandenburg Tur".
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He said that the role-play "prison" scenario, which is at the centre of his breach of privacy action against the News of the World, involved him and woman B, a fellow German speaker, being dominant to submissive characters who could not understand them.
Mr Mosley, the 68-year-old son of the 1930s Fascist leader Sir Oswald Mosley, said this "added to the excitement of a scenario".
He said that at no time did he or woman A, who arranged the "parties", like the one in a Chelsea basement flat on March 28, ever use the word "Nazi" in their discussions, adding: "A Nazi theme would be abhorrent to me - and I suspect that none of the women would wish to take part should anyone suggest such a theme."
Mr Mosley says that his life was devastated by the expose of what the newspaper called a "sick Nazi orgy with five hookers" and is asking for an unprecedented award of punitive exemplary damages.
His counsel, James Price QC, has said that the "gross and indefensible intrusion" was made substantially worse by the entirely false suggestion that Mr Mosley, president of the FIA (Federation Internationale de l'Automobile) was playing a concentration camp commandant and a cowering death camp inmate.
News Group Newspapers is strongly contesting the action and argues that publication was justified in the public interest.
Before the court went into private to view a videotape of a similar scenario, which occurred on March 8, Mr Mosley agreed that the March 28 session involved women wearing black jackets, black boots and a black cap, but denied any Nazi aspect .
He said that if he had asked for a Nazi theme, he would have been deeply disappointed to be greeted, as he was, with the phrase "Welcome to Chelsea" rather than "Brandenburg Tur".
Related News
Editor blasts Mosley "crime"
Editor blasts Mosley "crime"
Mosley court case under way
Mosley calls for F1 reform
Button blasts FIA tax plans
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