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'Calculated risk' costs media including Nine and News Corp $1.1m in fines mumbrella.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mumbrella.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Print text only Cancel Federal Court Justice Anthony Besanko says he will allow four Afghan villagers and a person with the Australian Defence Force to give evidence remotely from overseas in the defamation case of a Special Air Service Regimen (SAS) veteran. Ben Roberts-Smith is suing The Age, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Canberra Times over a series of articles which he said wrongly suggest he disgraced the Australian Army while serving overseas. The villagers from Darwan are expected to give evidence about the alleged murder of a man in 2012. In Mr Roberts-Smith s statement of claim, the former SAS soldier said the articles were defamatory because they portrayed him as someone who broke the moral and legal rules of military engagement . ....
LETTER | Malaysiakini’s contempt of court: Let the media beware A - LETTER | Lawyers and media groups have understandably expressed concern over the Federal Court s decision to cite news organisation Malaysiakini for contempt and fine it RM500,000 over five reader comments. But didn’t the lawyers and media groups see it coming? Perhaps not the fine amount which is, arguably, excessive, but the contempt decision itself? Based on the summary of the majority decision, Malaysiakini admitted that the comments are indeed offensive, inappropriate, disrespectful, and contemptuous and regretted the publication of them. But both Malaysiakini and editor-in-chief Steven Gan maintained that they both played no role in publishing them. ....
February 1, 2021 06:33:02 pm Twelve Australian media companies pleaded guilty in the Supreme Court of Victoria Monday to contempt of court for breaching a gag order imposed by the County Court of Victoria preventing Cardinal George Pell from being named in the country as a convicted child sex offender until February of 2019. The guilty pleas are part of a plea deal ending the trial. The media companies charged included The Herald and Weekly Times, News Life Media, Queensland Newspapers, Nationwide News, Advertiser Newspapers, Fairfax Media Publications, Mamamia, Allure Media, General Television Corporation, Radio 2GB Sydney, the Age Company and Geelong Advertiser. Individual journalists and editors who worked at the companies were also charged, but their charges were dropped as part of the plea deal. Sub judice contempt charges against the companies were also dropped. Although none of the companies or individuals named Pell in their coverage before the gag order expired, t ....