The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Woman who was raped in Australian Parliament gets long-awaited validation

- YAN ZHUANG NYT

WHEN A young former government employee said on national television in 2021 that she had been sexually assaulted in Australia’s Parliament two years earlier, it shocked the nation and unleashed a wave of anger aimed at the country’s insular, male-dominated political establishm­ent.

The employee, Brittany Higgins, accused her colleague Bruce Lehrmann of raping her when she was inebriated, and said that she felt pressure from the government at the time not to report the assault. She became a figurehead for a reckoning on women’s rights that ultimately contribute­d to the electoral ousting of Australia’s conservati­ve national government. But for years, there was no legal conclusion to the case.

On Monday, it was finally — somewhat — settled, in a roundabout way. Lehrmann lost a civil defamation suit that he had filed against the television station that first broadcast Ms. Higgins’s account, with the judge ruling that based on the available evidence, it was more likely than not that Lehrmann had raped her.

The proceeding­s did not take place in a criminal court, and the offense did not have to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt. Instead, the standard of proof was a balance of probabilit­ies — a legal term meaning whether something is more likely than not to have occurred.

Still, for many, this was a long-awaited validation for Higgins. “Something resembling justice has been done,” said Sarah Maddison, a political science professor at the University of Melbourne.

Justice Michael Lee of the Australian Federal Court in Sydney determined on Monday that it was more likely than not that Higgins had been inebriated, unaware of her surroundin­gs, and lying still “like a log” while Lehrmann assaulted her. The judge found that Lehrmann had been “hellbent” on having sex with her, disregardi­ng whether she had the capacity to consent.

“In his pursuit of gratificat­ion, he did not care one way or another whether Higgins understood or agreed to what was going on,” Justice Lee said in his ruling. The judge added that although he believed Higgins had overstated the extent to which the government had tried to cover up the incident, her account of the assault itself was believable. The judge also said that nothing Lehrmann had said should be accepted as fact without corroborat­ion from other sources.

In 2022, during a criminal trial about the case, Higgins sat through days of intense cross-examinatio­n by defense lawyers who suggested that she did not actually remember what had happened, and who accused her of making up the accusation. She denied that repeatedly, sometimes defiantly and sometimes in tears. That trial ended in a mistrial after a juror went against the judge’s instructio­ns and brought research on sexual assault cases into the jury room. But prosecutor­s decided against a retrial because of concerns about Higgins’s mental health.

Lehrmann then sued Network Ten and Lisa Wilkinson, the journalist who was the first to interview Higgins on television, for defamation. “Having escaped the lions’ den, Lehrmann made the mistake of going back for his hat,” Justice Lee said.

After Monday’s verdict, Wilkinson told reporters: “I feel glad for the women of Australia today.”

Lehrmann and Higgins did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment made through their lawyers.

 ?? AP File ?? Bruce Lehrmann at a court in Sydney in 2022. The court found that he was ‘hellbent’ on having sex with Brittany Higgins, disregardi­ng whether she had the capacity to consent.
AP File Bruce Lehrmann at a court in Sydney in 2022. The court found that he was ‘hellbent’ on having sex with Brittany Higgins, disregardi­ng whether she had the capacity to consent.

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