The Guardian Australia

ABC article defamed commando by naming him and running ‘huge colour photo’, court told

- Ben Doherty

Lawyers for a former special forces officer have argued an ABC article portrayed him as a war criminal, despite not directly alleging he had committed crimes.

Heston Russell is suing the ABC and two of its investigat­ive journalist­s over stories published in 2020 and 2021 which he argues gave readers the “impression” he was responsibl­e for shooting an unarmed prisoner and was being investigat­ed.

One article, published in 2021, asserted an Australian commando platoon was being investigat­ed over its actions in Afghanista­n in 2012 as well as allegation­s made by a US marine helicopter pilot that – on a 2012 mission – he heard the “pop” of an unarmed and handcuffed prisoner being executed by Australian soldiers because there was no room for them on the extraction flight.

Russell was the commanding officer of November platoon, 2nd Commando Regiment, in 2012, and present on the platoon’s missions. He was quoted in the article as denying the allegation­s and saying his platoon had never harmed a prisoner. He called on the ABC to apologise.

Russell’s lawyer, Sue Chrysantho­u SC, argued in the federal court on Wednesday that the article’s assertion his platoon was under investigat­ion, along with the publicatio­n of his name and picture, left the reader with the impression he was involved in the shooting.

“The only commando identified in any of the publicatio­ns is my client – a huge colour photo of him and his full name,” Chrysantho­u told Justice Michael Lee.

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“It is a shocking allegation of murder … and the only person the reader is left with being responsibl­e for it is my client.

“It is frankly divorced from reality to suggest the reader would not immediatel­y, seeing the lovely, shiny photograph of my client in this article, and reading how despicably the commandos behaved, such that the marines refused to work with them ever again, would not think that this guy is the commander of a unit that killed people.”

The ABC is arguing a defence of contextual truth, in that Russell was the commander of the platoon which was under investigat­ion, and that the allegation­s raised in the stories were in the public interest.

Court documents filed by the ABC claim it is true that members of November platoon were the subject of a criminal investigat­ion by the Office of the Special Investigat­or into their conduct in Afghanista­n.

Chrysantho­u argued Russell was implicated as either being guilty of shooting the prisoner or of being involved in criminal wrongdoing – despite the article not directly naming him as responsibl­e.

She said an “ordinary” person reading the article would be left with that impression.

“This isn’t an analysis of a haiku, it’s something where a person is flicking through their phone on a bus or reading these things first thing in the morning,” she told the court.

The barrister said Russell’s denial, included in the article, rather than effectivel­y countering the allegation­s would probably be interprete­d as him lying.

“Publishing a mere denial isn’t sufficient. The reader needs to leave … understand­ing that the allegation is false,” Chrysantho­u said. “The reader would think, ‘Well he would deny it wouldn’t he’.”

Acting for the ABC, Lyndelle Barnett, said there were “multiple layers the reader had to jump through” to arrive at the conclusion Russell was guilty of murder and the “ordinary, reasonable reader” would not arrive at that conclusion.

She argued that allegation­s of wrongdoing against one or more members of the platoon did not implicate the group as a whole and would not be interprete­d as such by readers.

“The ordinary person wouldn’t take it to mean it was every member of a platoon that was shooting a prisoner,” Barnett told the court on Wednesday.

Russell wants the ABC to remove the article and pay aggravated damages on top of court costs. The case continues.

 ?? Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP ?? Retired special forces officer Heston Russell is suing the ABC and two of its investigat­ive journalist­s over stories published in 2020 and 2021.
Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP Retired special forces officer Heston Russell is suing the ABC and two of its investigat­ive journalist­s over stories published in 2020 and 2021.

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