The Post

Disgraced lawyer resigns from Russell McVeagh

- Damian George damian.george@stuff.co.nz

A partner at national law firm Russell McVeagh has resigned after an independen­t investigat­ion into complaints about inappropri­ate comments made while drunk.

Board chairman Malcolm Crotty said after a thorough investigat­ion which upheld the complaint, the partner apologised and quit.

‘‘We are deeply disappoint­ed in the partner at the centre of the investigat­ion.

‘‘Our firm is committed to changing the culture of our organisati­on and we all recognise that change requires collective and long-term commitment.

‘‘All partners in the firm agreed to uphold and lead the change,’’ Crotty said.

The firm revealed late last month that a partner was under investigat­ion after a complaint of inappropri­ate comments made at a recent client event.

The partner was banned from work while the investigat­ion was carried out.

‘‘The partner concerned let the firm down and we have now lost trust and confidence in him,’’ Crotty said. ‘‘The board determined that his conduct has fallen below our expected standards and we have accepted his resignatio­n.’’

Wellington Women Lawyers’ Associatio­n convener Steph Dyhrberg said she applauded the victim for coming forward, and Russell McVeagh for responding the way it did.

She called the resignatio­n ‘‘accountabi­lity in action’’.

‘‘That’s tremendous progress from where the firm was even a few short months ago.’’

Dyhrberg was not surprised to learn incidents like this took place, despite attempts to crack down on the harassment of young lawyers. ‘‘If people in positions of authority don’t have any insight about the unacceptab­le nature of their actions, and that if they get caught they’ll be held accountabl­e, they’ll keep doing it until they’re stopped.’’

Russell McVeagh said last month that Jo Avenell would replace Gary McDiarmid as chief executive of the firm, in what it said was a pivotal moment in its continued transforma­tion following revelation­s of a booze-fuelled bullying culture.

The appointmen­t came after a report published by Dame Margaret Bazley in July, triggered by claims of sexual misconduct involving summer interns around December 2015.

‘‘This is a critically important appointmen­t for our firm as we continue on our journey to building a safe, inclusive, and peoplefocu­sed culture that will underpin our future success,’’ Crotty said at the time.

Bazley’s report took four months to compile and included account interviews with 250 people.

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