Lawyers Yan Erick Sihombing, left, and Haposan Sihombing with their client David Taylor in Denpasar. But Denpasar police chief Hadi Purnomo said there was no indecent act and that that was just an "alibi" to try to make it look as if Ms Connor was innocent. "She will admit everything, she promised she will admit that what was said yesterday, that was a false statement," Mr Purnomo told the media. "Today she will confess the honest truth what she did." Ms Connor was brought to the crime scene at the beach outside the Pullman Hotel in Kuta on Sunday night for a preliminary reconstruction of what occurred on the night Mr Sudarsa was killed. Mr Purnomo said she had reconstructed how she had gone to the beach with Mr Taylor, bought a drink from a food stall, played in the water and "made out" with her boyfriend.

David Taylor is taken from his holding cell at Denpasar police station for interrogation. Credit:Amilia Rosa He said they had three Bintang beers, but one went missing, along with Ms Connor's wallet. "They were drunk," he said. There had been no mention of a police officer committing an "immoral act" in the police statement. David Taylor has confessed to killing the police officer, his lawyer says. Credit:Facebook "What was said through the lawyer, that's normal, that's a defence for her. But today she will admit what she did."

Asked if Mr Sudarsa had been spying on the couple, Mr Purnomo said he had been "not spying, observing". A lawyer for Sara Connor says her story was a "little bit different" to claims earlier aired by the lawyer for Ms Connor's boyfriend David Taylor. "He was on the job from 8pm to 8am in front of the (Pullman) hotel. There were two people dating there, so he was observing." Mr Purnomo said if Mr Sudarsa was spying he would have changed out of his police uniform. Much of what has emerged about the alleged events that torrid night is bizarre, confused, contradictory and fluid. Sara Connor is escorted by police from a hospital where she was examined. Credit:Amilia Rosa

Mr Haposan told the media there were inconsistencies in his client's statement to police, including the timeline of events, why he just left after the police officer allegedly bit him and who had pushed Ms Connor onto the sand and then laid on top of her. "Reading his statement ... there were unsynchronised statements, I saw something he was hiding. I tried to move his conscience to say it as it is, what he knows, what he felt, what he saw," Mr Haposan said. Slain Bali police officer Wayan Sudarsa. Mr Haposan had earlier said Mr Taylor told police Ms Connor had been distressed after encountering the "bad cop" while the pair had separated to search for her missing handbag. Mr Taylor reportedly went back on the beach where he found a man face down on the sand.

According to his version of events, Mr Taylor went to "help him" but the man bit him on the finger. Mr Taylor swore and walked away. Ms Connor later told him a "bad cop" had pushed her to the ground and laid on top of her on the beach. She screamed and people came to her rescue. Mr Haposan visited his client on Sunday and told the media he had tried to confirm when Ms Connor had told Mr Taylor about the "bad cop" and where he allegedly pushed her onto the sand. "He said: 'Apologies Sir, I will convey that tomorrow honestly during the investigation'."

Mr Haposan pointed out to his client that he had represented Bali nine drug mule Renae Lawrence, who received a sentence of 20 years in jail when the other Bali nine members received life imprisonment or the death penalty. He warned Mr Taylor that under Indonesian law suspects that are not co-operative, tell convoluted stories and do not admit their guilt receive heavier punishments. "So I conveyed that to him – think about that tonight because [on Monday] there will be additional interrogation." Asked if Mr Taylor admitted he had been dishonest, Mr Haposan said: "What he said was that what he said [on Saturday] was incomplete, it means there are things he still covered up." Mr Haposan said this could mean Mr Taylor would change or add to his statement.

"I again reaffirmed that when a defendant is in court there are other mitigating factors honesty, admitting to what they did, feeling remorse, promising not to repeat it, youth, family. "What he will state, we will wait until tomorrow [Monday]." The interrogation of Ms Connor, a 45-year-old mother of two who ran her own pasta-making company in Byron Bay, will also resume on Monday. Loading Ms Connor's lawyer, Erwin Siregar, told reporters she had been too exhausted for more than preliminary questioning on Saturday.