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Accused Brittany Higgins rapist fights to keep defamation actions alive

Former Liberal staffer Bruce Lehrmann faces the prospect that two late-filed defamation cases over media reports regarding the alleged rape of Brittany Higgins could be dismissed.

Mar 23, 2023, updated Mar 23, 2023
Former Liberal Party staffer Bruce Lehrmann, accused of raping colleague Brittany Higgins at Parliament House in 2019, is suing media outlets for defamation (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas)

Former Liberal Party staffer Bruce Lehrmann, accused of raping colleague Brittany Higgins at Parliament House in 2019, is suing media outlets for defamation (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas)

In a Federal Court hearing on Thursday, Network Ten, News Corp and journalist Lisa Wilkinson all attacked Lehrmann’s lawsuits, arguing the cases were filed outside the required 12-month period.

The cases were launched on February 7 this year, almost two years after Ten program The Project and a separate News article by Samantha Maiden reported on Ms Higgins’ allegations.

Higgins accused Lehrmann of raping her in the Parliament House office of former minister Linda Reynolds, who they both worked for, in 2019. He has always strenuously denied this claim.

Lehrmann’s barrister, Matthew Richardson SC, said it would not have been reasonable for his client to launch the defamation cases sooner because of ongoing criminal proceedings against him.

Australian Federal Police charged Lehrmann in August 2021. After going to trial, the jury was discharged in October last year due to potential jury misconduct.

Prosecutors said they would no longer pursue the charges in December, citing concerns for Higgins’ mental health.

Lehrmann had the benefit of the full 12-month period to file the lawsuits and should not have been forced to launch proceedings in the six months before he was charged, Richardson told Justice Michael Lee on Thursday.

Inconsistencies between evidence given by Lehrmann in court last week and WhatsApp messages sent on February 15, 2021, about advice he was given in a six-hour meeting with lawyer Warwick Korn could be explained, Richardson said.

While the former staffer said in his texts that criminal charges were “off the cards” and he would be “up for millions” in defamation damages, he was putting on a brave face for those he knew.

It was “implausible” Korn would have actually given this advice as a criminal lawyer, the court heard.

Claims by Ten and News that Lehrmann was a “habitual liar” should be rejected, Mr Richardson said.

“This is unfair to a human being who found himself in that situation.”

Ten’s barrister, Matthew Collins KC, argued Lehrmann’s focus had been on defamation from the day he viewed the media reports, and he had compiled a list of friendly media outlets, PR representatives and a “hit list” of those he wanted to sue in the months after.

Accusing Lehrmann of giving unreliable evidence, Collins urged the court to look at the messages sent on February 15 as a better indicator of whether defamation action was considered at the time.

The messages showed he was told he had a “red hot defamation case” and that criminal prosecution was unlikely, Collins said.

“Why on earth was he sitting on his hands for a year?” the barrister asked.

The hearing continues.

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