The Guardian (USA)

Parliament rape claim was true, judge rules in case that gripped Australia

- Tory Shepherd

For years, the Australian public has been fascinated by a rape allegation in Parliament House that embroiled government ministers, media personalit­ies and political staff in multiple complicate­d legal and civil battles.

The saga reached a climax on Monday when Justice Michael Lee declared he was satisfied, on the balance of probabilit­ies, that Bruce Lehrmann raped his then colleague Brittany Higgins in 2019.

Higgins alleged that she was raped in the ministeria­l suite of the then defence minister, Linda Reynolds, a Liberal party MP, whom Higgins and Lehrmann worked for. Those accusation­s spawned more than a dozen legal cases.

In a criminal trial in 2022, Lehrmann pleaded not guilty to one charge of sexual intercours­e without consent, denying that any sexual activity occurred. The trial was aborted after a juror obtained informatio­n outside the evidence presented in court and, in December of that year, prosecutor­s dropped charges against him for the alleged rape of Higgins, saying a retrial would pose an “unacceptab­le risk” to her health.

In Monday’s verdict, Lee noted that Lehrmann had instigated the defamation trial against Australia’s Channel Ten that has now led to him being labelled a rapist.

“Having escaped the lion’s den, Mr Lehrmann made the mistake of going back for his hat,” Lee said.

Higgins alleged that, after a “boozy” night out in Canberra, she and Lehrmann went to Reynolds’ ministeria­l suite. She woke to Lehrmann raping her on a couch, she said, then passed out again. Lehrmann left alone.

In his summary, Lee said he considered it “more likely than not in those early hours, after a long night of conviviali­ty and drinking and having successful­ly brought Ms Higgins back to a secluded place, Mr Lehrmann was hellbent on having sex with a woman he found attractive”, and that he knew she was inebriated.

That was enough for him to make the finding in favour of Ten on a defence of truth. Defamation cases require judges to make findings only on the balance of probabilit­ies, rather than the “beyond reasonable doubt” demanded by a criminal case.

Higgins’ claims were dramatical­ly reported on the Channel Ten show The Project in February 2021 – without naming Lehrmann.

Higgins had resigned her Liberal party position – by that stage she was working for the then employment minister, Michaelia Cash.

The prime minister at the time, Scott Morrison, and other senior ministers denied there was any sort of political cover-up of the allegation or pressure on Higgins to keep it quiet.

On Monday, Lee said allegation­s of a cover-up were “objectivel­y short on facts but long on speculatio­n”.

The Ten trial began in November. More than 46,000 people tuned in to a live broadcast as Lee read a summary of his 324 pages of findings.

Lee called the trial a “Rorschach test”, where people projected their “visceral responses” on to the scenario. He said the complexity of the case rendered it an “omnishambl­es”.

“Only one man and one woman know the truth, with certitude, of what happened,” he said, adding that those two people were “both, in different ways, unreliable historians”.

He said Lehrmann told “deliberate lies”. “To remark that Mr Lehrmann is a poor witness is an exercise in understate­ment … his attachment to the truth was a tenuous one.”

Higgins was “also an unsatisfac­tory witness” who made allegation­s about politician­s’ behaviour that were not backed up, and whose evidence about a bruise on her leg, potentiall­y from the alleged rape, was “vexing”. She “curated” pictures and messages on her phone, Lee said.

He described the two as “young and relatively immature staffers”.

The allegation­s inevitably got entwined with the #MeToo movement, and Lee said it was further complicate­d by stereotype­s about victims, “rape myths” and the suggestion of a “conspiracy to suppress a rape for political purposes”.

“For more than a few, this dispute has become a proxy for broader cultural and political conflicts,” he said.

Lee was critical of the conduct of Channel Ten’s The Project team, saying “the rape allegation­s were intertwine­d with the cover-up and the Project team had strong indication­s of the unreliabil­ity of their main source, particular­ly as to how she lost material on her phone and selected material survived”.

He also criticised its approach to seeking comment from Lehrmann: “If Network Ten wanted to get in contact with Mr Lehrmann, there were ways of ensuring that contact could be achieved. He was not living the life of a hermit.”

 ?? Photograph: Don Arnold/Getty ?? Bruce Lehrmann emerges from court on 15 April. The judge said Lehrmann had told ‘deliberate lies’.
Photograph: Don Arnold/Getty Bruce Lehrmann emerges from court on 15 April. The judge said Lehrmann had told ‘deliberate lies’.

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