Willems reviewed Worden’s daily work logs from June 2015 to February 2016 and had data pulled from the department-issued phone he used. Several thousand text messages and phone calls were found each month that were placed to four numbers. Willems noted that “there was minimal activity” on the squad cellphone during days Worden wasn’t working.

“Thinking back to my conversations in early March with Officer Worden regarding (the woman), these phone records did not support his claims that she was stalking him,” Willems wrote in the report.

Worden, accompanied by the Hudson Police Union president and the Wisconsin Professional Police Association business agent, was interviewed April 20.

In the interview with Willems, Worden admitted to having a sexual relationship with the complainant — and made clear the activity did not occur on his personal time.

“I only saw her or spoke to her while I was on duty,” Worden said to Willems, the report states, noting that he exclusively used police equipment “to avoid getting caught” by his significant other.

Worden’s statement to Willems largely corroborated the allegations laid out by the woman about sex on duty. He said he did not enter his time with the woman on his work log, but considered the interludes part of his break time.