After the interview aired, Lehrmann was charged with sexual intercourse without consent, but the trial was abandoned in 2022 due to juror misconduct and not revived due to fears about Higgins’ mental health.
Without a trial and a means to clear his name, Lehrmann turned to defamation action, claiming that Network Ten and “The Project” presenter Lisa Wilkinson damaged his reputation by providing enough information in the program for him to be identified, though he was not named.
Network Ten and Wilkinson chose to fight the charge, mounting a truth defense, meaning that to win, the network’s lawyers needed to prove that on the balance of probabilities the rape happened.
Lee found Monday that the two had sex that night, but Higgins was so inebriated she couldn’t possibly have given her consent – and that Lehrmann didn’t seek to obtain it.
“I’m satisfied that it is more likely than not that Mr Lehrmann’s state of mind was such that he was so intent upon gratification to be indifferent to Miss Higgins’ consent,” said Lee.
The ruling delivers a devastating blow to Lehrmann’s attempt to clear his name. As Lee put it in his judgement: “Having escaped the lion’s den, Mr Lehrmann made the mistake of going back for his hat.”
Note that this is in Australia. The difficulty of winning defamation lawsuits varies considerably from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. My understanding from past reading is that the US takes a very dim view of these, whereas it is much easier to win these in the UK; this had been a serious political international issue in the past, where plantiffs had kept trying to move legal action that probably should have occurred in the US to the UK on flimsy grounds, because it was much easier to win defamation lawsuits in the UK. Notably, in the UK, the burden of proof rested upon the defendant; one was “guilty until proven innocent”. In 2010, Congress ultimately passed legislation disallowing US courts from enforcing defamation actions in other jurisdictions unless the venue of the lawsuit had protections that were at least as strong as provided by the First Amendment.
Note that subsequent to that point, the UK passed some legislation that did make defamation actions somewhat more difficult.
This may be more-of-a-big-deal than it might sound to American readers – accustomed to defamation lawsuits that are rare and hard to win – if Australian defamation law is more like that in the UK, which I suppose is plausible.
googles
Yeah, from Wikipedia, it sounds like Commonwealth defamation law has been somewhat similar:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Defamation
googles
https://theconversation.com/why-defamation-suits-in-australia-are-so-ubiquitous-and-difficult-to-defend-for-media-organisations-157143
According to this, it sounds like Australia had two stages of defamation reform legislation passed recently, the first in 2021; part of this was that defamation law had apparently varied province by province, and there was an attempt to unify it. Apparently these tended to shift things in favor of the defendant, especially where the defendant was a news organization, as is the case in OP’s article.
https://www.bartier.com.au/insights/articles/stage-2-defamation-law-reforms-what-to-expect-in-2023
https://www.ruleoflaw.org.au/civil/defamation/2021-law-reform/