The Chaser Report - Bruce Lehrmann's Only Fans

Episode Date: October 14, 2024

Bruce Lehrmann's lawyer has told the court that poor Brucey is unable to get work due to being so unpopular. To remind you why he is so unpopular, here's Charles and Dom's reaction to when his defamat...ion case came to a close. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Chaser Report is recorded on Gadigal Land. Striving for mediocrity in a world of excellence, this is The Chaser Report. Hello and welcome to The Chaser Report with Charles and Dom. My name is producer Loughlin and I am the legal representation in their absence from the pod room today. They hope that their continued leave doesn't make them too unpopular. Like say, Australia's most unpopular man, Bruce Lerman, who the court heard has been unable to get work due to being so unpopular because of the whole being called a rapist on the balance of probabilities by a federal court judge thing. His lawyer has said that he might have to do something
Starting point is 00:00:44 like go to only fans or something silly like that because if there's anyone who you'd want to buy only fans content from it would be Bruce Berman. So while he's in the news, why not take a little reflection on the time that the rapist and liar on the balance of probabilities had his self-initiated defamation case self-destruct. Here's Charles and Dom. The Bruce Lerman defamation finding
Starting point is 00:01:12 was issued just a couple of hours ago. I spent several hours that I did not have spared listening to a lot of the judgment. And what you've got to realise is when you're in the media industry, you're a media professional like me or Dom, there is one opportunity
Starting point is 00:01:29 that you get, which is straight after a judgment comes out, you're allowed to call whoever the judgment went against, whatever the judge has adjudged them to be. Yeah, you might refer to the episode not long ago, Charles, where we mentioned Ben Roberts Smith, having been found in a court of law to be a war criminal. And when it's very contemporary, it's very safe to just say, for example, that Bruce Lehman is clearly a proven rape.
Starting point is 00:01:58 Bruce Lerman raped Brittany Higgins is what the judge said in court today. She did not consent and he was recklessly indifferent to whether she'd consented or not. That's what the judge found today. Therefore, Bruce Lerman is a rapist. According to Justice Michael leave the federal court, there's so much in this judgment to get through. Before we do, Charles, can we just take a moment to establish rapport between you and me, Bruce Loman style?
Starting point is 00:02:28 and this is some of the most extraordinary evidence that was heard. Taylor Auerbach from the spotlight Justice Lee pointed out that all of that lurid evidence was not especially relevant to the overall decision. There was a few little factors to do with Channel 7 and it sort of made him
Starting point is 00:02:45 further doubt Bruce Lerman's credibility which he'd already absolutely shredded by this point. But I've got a baggie of something here just just... Oh, just... Oh, right. Where did you get that from? I just called... I was at Frank a restaurant.
Starting point is 00:02:59 I just call my dealer. Can you just Google how to procure sex workers as we relax in this Meritin suite? Yeah. Well, we're just establishing rapport here. I'm just ready to do some journalism.
Starting point is 00:03:12 Can I buy the Chase a credit card, by the way? Oh, yeah, yeah. Well, actually, let's not put it on the corporate credit card. We'll just pay it back in Pardian. Yeah, pay it back in Pardians later on. That's good. That's good. Oh, I'm feeling relaxed.
Starting point is 00:03:26 Yeah, look, a lot of things. A lot of things came out, including since we did that episode, just before we get to the judgment, the whole saga of Bruce Lerman being in a house in North Sydney, one street away from where I grew up, by the way, in North Sydney, one of the most boring, lovely but boring neighbourhoods, and then shortly afterwards being evicted for doing karaoke first thing in the morning. And I want to pay tribute to Chase the Report, podcast producer Lachlan Hodson, who was at the federal court today and asked Bruce Lerman right after the trial, this important question.
Starting point is 00:04:02 What's your favourite karaoke song? Well, that was what was going through everyone's mind. We wanted to know. I'm so glad he had the finger on the pulse of the nation. That's right. In his journalism. It's been suggested that I fought the law and the law one might be the way to go. I tried to get Loughlin to offer him a baggie of white powder, but he didn't want to do that.
Starting point is 00:04:22 I think there will be a lot of baggies tonight somehow. On which side is the interesting question. Oh, I see. Anyway, look, it's a fascinating judgment. We'll get into it after this. So I think it's important at the beginning of this Charles to establish what defamation law is for because it's so easy, given these high-profile trials,
Starting point is 00:04:42 to lose sight of the fact, yes. That people like, I don't know, Ben Robert Smith, Bruce Lerman, they launched these actions to clear their names. Right, so I never studied law. No. So let me just understand this from a layman's perspective. A layman? A Lerman's perspective. A Lerman's perspective.
Starting point is 00:05:00 Which is clearing your name means getting a lawyer to unequivocally destroy your reputation. That's what clearing your name obviously means. Because there's so many cases in the last few years. Christian Porter, Ben Robert Smith, Bruce Lerman. I mean, there's other ones. There are many more. Yeah, you gave the Defoe Awards at your case last year. There's so many of them.
Starting point is 00:05:27 Part of the problem here is that defamation law is traditionally to vindicate your reputation, but some people, like, it's so close to, so close to eviscerate your reputation. What goes wrong, Charles, is that if you sue for defamation, what people seem not to realize is that the other side is able to bring up whatever evidence they can possibly find to prove that the claims are true, and it can be anything. So even if you win the case technically, the other side can bring up every sort of detail that can possibly cast doubt on what you're done. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:00 Like, you know, you might have a random Channel 7 producer just coming up and sharing the receipts of your wild partying with cocaine and sex workers. I'm not directly relevant to the trial. I mean, Channel 7 weren't even actually named. Channel 10 were the ones being sued, but you can't have a defamation trial without Channel 7 coming to the party. Well, it wasn't Kerry Stokes helping Bruce out?
Starting point is 00:06:20 Yeah, he paid his rent for a year. Yeah, that's right. I must say, I think Kerry Stokes, I mean this in the nicest possible way, might need better advisers on which horses to back. I don't know if he's a racing man, Charles, but I don't think at race day I'd be signing on to any of Kerry Stokes's horses, to be honest. So my understanding is defamation is one of the oldest forms of law, right?
Starting point is 00:06:41 Yeah, absolutely. And it was traditionally used by rich white men to shut other people up. Oh, it's still used for that purpose. So what has gone wrong with defamation in the last few years? Like, is it that they've changed the law and suddenly it's thing? Or are our lawyers becoming more... Like, because as a rich white man, you know, like, or I aspire to one day be a rich white man.
Starting point is 00:07:04 I want to be able to sort of act with impunity. So if you ever have any money, you want to be able to sue my way out of any sort of accountability in life. Well, yes, to answer a couple of the points of your question, seriously. Yes, they have changed the law. In the past few years, certainly since I studied law in the 1990s, they have changed the law such that truth is a complete defence. That's what happened here. Truth didn't used to be.
Starting point is 00:07:27 I remember we used to do media training in the early days of the chaser, and they'd say, oh, it doesn't matter if it's true or not. You're not allowed to say it. So in New South Wales, it was truth plus public interest was a complete defense. So you didn't have to just be right. He had to prove that it was in the public's interest to know this particular piece of detail. And that was how they got you a lot of the time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:48 So that's one aspect. But in terms of it being used as a tool by rich white men, I mean, Kerry Stokes would probably think that that was no longer the case. But if you heard, Justice Michael Lee, when he was being, despite being an elderly white man, very, very sensitive to the condition of Brittany Higgins. Yes. And some of the things that she said, he viewed as being the kinds of things you might say if you'd had a traumatic experience such as this.
Starting point is 00:08:14 And he went into great sort of detail about what psychologists say happened. Yes. And so he's, for instance, found that without wanting to get too much into the sort of details, which people can do, he found that some of the... the things she said such as that she said no repeatedly in the ministerial suite were not credible that she probably just said nothing but that that didn't matter that she probably shut down and he was very sympathetic to the kinds of things we now know happen in that situation so what this means charles is that being a rapist is a lot harder these days and he actually set out a whole
Starting point is 00:08:45 framework to assess these sorts of trials so we need to clarify as well this was as we said it's not a criminal finding the criminal trial was aborted in the in the ACT, so he's not going to go to jail for what the court found. It was a finding of the balance of probabilities, and the judge set it out in great detail that was much more likely that A, sex occurred,
Starting point is 00:09:06 that B, Brittany Higgins didn't consent to it, and that C, and this is the third element, Lehman had to sort of be aware of the lack of consent. And this is where the law is changing, such that Justice Lee said that Lerman was recklessly indifferent to whether she consented or not. And there was a lot of evidence about how much she'd had to
Starting point is 00:09:22 drink. She couldn't walk when she got into apartment house. And I'm sorry to get out of the sort of gleeful nature of our intro to this, but it's really interesting to hear the reality of what happened, which is people go out and get drunk and can't consent and can't agree to this sort of thing. And it kind of didn't matter. There was no need to prove that she knew what she was doing or not. And Justice Lee painted this picture of a man who had been out partying all night, was determined to have sex with a woman that he found sexually attractive and did not care. No. Went ahead. Willie-nilly was the term of use, which strange term to use.
Starting point is 00:09:57 But, yes, saw she was drunk, bought her drinks and should have known better is essentially the finding. And look, this is a bit of a landmark decision, I think, in terms of looking at the reality of how people behave and saying, actually, there is a line and you're not meant to cross it. He said, this isn't about the legal definition of rape. This is what's commonly understood by the term because that's what was used in the media. They weren't looking at the kind of precise criminal definition, which is changing as well in these directions. but saying did was their non-consensual sex and and did he proceed uh with knowledge of that or indifference and so yeah this is a big moment in these kinds of cases that is good news so he found that higgins did not consent to sex he found that uh like lerman was so intent on gratification
Starting point is 00:10:45 that he was hell-bent on having sex with her and he did not care one way or another um but then at the in, he makes this sort of wry comment that Lerman went and had that aborted trial in the ACT, where very luckily for Lerman, Adjura, there was a breach of confidentiality or something, but the trial had to be aborted, A, because of whatever that issue was, I can't remember the details, but then the ACT public prosecutor or whatever, whoever it was, decided that it would be too damaging to Brittany Higgins's mental health to go through the whole thing, again, to have to rerun the trial, even though she then had to go through all this again as a witness in this case in many ways.
Starting point is 00:11:27 So she's had an unending nightmare since this moment of having her credibility questioned, and she's been absolutely vindicated in terms of the core of what she said. And then, just as Michael Lee said, having escaped at Lion's Den, Mr. Lerman made the mistake of coming back, his hat, referring to the decision to launch defamation proceedings against Channel 10 and Higgins. Having made the decision to launch proceedings against Channel 10 and Lisa Wilkinson. Yes. Yes.
Starting point is 00:11:56 And so this is the point. Everyone's quoting this quote about the Lions Den and going back for your hat. Look, it is practical advice. I don't know whether you've ever found yourself in a Lions Den. Don't go back for your hat. It's not just Lions Den's burning building. If you're having to evacuate a plane, don't go back for your hat. In fact, why wear a hat in the first place?
Starting point is 00:12:14 They're very old-fashioned. And I think we can broaden that lesson. I think we can say, if you, kicked an innocent civilian off a cliff, don't launch defamation proceedings. And if you've acted with indifference and sexually assaulted somebody in Parliament House, don't launch defamation proceedings against the reporting of that. I would say also don't kick people off cliffs is also. But if you did do that and you didn't get investigated for it and there's no sort of court
Starting point is 00:12:40 marshal for it, because what happens is as we saw, yes, in the BRS case, because of the different standard of proof in civil trials such as this, it's the balance of probabilities, and that's a much easier bar to satisfy. So now you've got a judge, having looked at the evidence extensively, for months and months and months, hours and hours. Right, a 340-page judgment or something on this. Comprehensively finding Bruce Lehman is correctly labelled a rapist,
Starting point is 00:13:06 and they didn't even name him. This is the amazing thing, as we've been saying, in the original report by Channel 10 in the project, which, by the way, the judge said did identify Mr. Lamman, So that was interesting. They said that he was identifiable from the details given. Yes, that was really early on in the judgements. Everyone was sort of going, oh, no, oh dear.
Starting point is 00:13:22 Because it was sort of like one of the first judgments he made was he found that one of Channel 10's whole defences were that, oh, well, we didn't even name him. It was like, nah, nah, you don't get out of that. More on this in a moment. The Chaser Report, news a few days after it happens. And yeah, look, we're not cracking a whole bunch of jokes. It's just a fascinating story to think about. There were lots of other interesting details, too. He found some major issues with Brittany Higgins' credibility in certain areas,
Starting point is 00:13:55 but he distinguished between what happened after she became a public figure and started essentially, he said, curating the details of her story to make it more convincing. But he found that the evidence from immediately afterwards when she was not even thinking about pursuing a complaint, he found that compelling. She told people at the time that she'd been raped, including her dad, and he found that enormously convincing, whereas he was incredibly critical of Bruce Lerman's evidence, and basically said he was sort of a Walter Mitty-like character who just said whatever we needed to say for his own purposes, which I think is defamatory towards Walter Mitty, just quietly. Wow.
Starting point is 00:14:32 Yeah, so we're now, for Bruce Lerman. I mean, I assume he gets an offer from Channel 7 to become a senior executive or something. To pay his rent. What career path can you get as a proven rapist and liar? Well, it's a very good question. I mean, the immediate question is where is you going to live, I guess, too? And I'm just wanting, just Ben Robert Smith have any spare rooms at his place? Yes, that's a good point.
Starting point is 00:14:58 Perhaps get together. Yeah, look, where Bruce Lehman goes, I don't know how he affords all the partying he seems to do. Do you reckon maybe he should go into the dealing side? of the Coke stuff Oh, interesting Because I can't see him picking up a corporate job Anytime, except for Channel 7 You couldn't have said that yesterday
Starting point is 00:15:20 But now, what we've been, him being Yeah, you know, someone who's been found in court To be a rapist You can't really tarnish his reputation, much What sort of job can you do in that situation? Look, yeah, like you've got to sort of go outside the law, don't it? You might have to, you might have to Become a Coke dealer
Starting point is 00:15:36 Mind you, it'd be a sort of step up reputationally Well, I mean, you'd come into contact You'd come into contact with a lot of High-profile figures, wouldn't you? Yeah, yeah. Charles, one thing that's clear is that there are some vacancies coming up at Spotlight. We know Taylor Albaugh's not there anymore.
Starting point is 00:15:53 Yeah, Mark Llewellyn, step down. During the judgment. Talk about trying to bury that story. So there's a whole bunch of people who've left the program and we know that Lehman's very good at cutting deals. He's good at building rapport. He's very good at building rapport. Yeah, the next time this,
Starting point is 00:16:10 happens. The next time Kerry Stokes wants to pay... It's good at getting a gram of rapport. The next time Kerry Stokes wants to fund someone shredding their own reputation, I can see Lehman doing a wonderful job of whining and dining that person and saving all the receipts and then turning up at the trial and sticking
Starting point is 00:16:28 the knife in. Do you think we need to sort of set up some sort of island for all these misfits? I think Jeffrey Epstein tried. No, it's been more like a prison island. Oh, a prison island. You know what I mean? Like, somewhere where we're, you know, ideally, definitely no men, ideally no civilians, certainly no cliffs. The thing is, Charles, that Bruce Lehman is now one of the most famous people in Australia after this trial. Everywhere he goes.
Starting point is 00:16:53 He's as famous as Rolf Harris. Any bar that Bruce Lerman goes to now, he walk into one of these bars in Canberra or in Sydney or wherever it might be. Every head in the room will turn. Those of them who belong to drug dealers will think, hello, it's Christmas. allegedly But that imputation hasn't been tested yet I can't see Bruce Lerman I can't see Bruce Lerman wanting to sue
Starting point is 00:17:18 Anyone else to defamation anytime soon But it would be a brave person Who has bought drinks at this stage, wouldn't it? Yeah By Bruce Lennon So presumably he's got a bright future In the Young Libs It'd just have to stick to the Liberal Bay
Starting point is 00:17:33 I think it's the only place that will take him You're being very harsh on the corporate sector Don't people, you know, wind up just sort of disappearing into anonymous corporate jobs? Yeah, right, yeah, yeah. There's always another mate, isn't there? Lockhees Martin or something. He can work on Orcus.
Starting point is 00:17:46 He can work on Orcas. Yes. Well, look, he had connections in the Liberal Party. I don't know how those connections are going. He certainly knows about explosive allegations. At the end of the day, Charles, if you were wanting to advise someone about whether, if they felt their reputation had been injured,
Starting point is 00:18:01 would you say go to defamation court? That's the place to go to. It's a good day for defamation. A bad day for defamation. defamation lawyers. I think so. Because I was thinking about this. No one's going to be launching defamation suits from now.
Starting point is 00:18:14 Or do you reckon white men are arrogant enough to continue just? Surely at some point they'll learn. But you'd think that. They'd never learn. You'd have to shatter the bubble, Charles, of these people going, well, I'm special. I'm different. It won't apply to me. That's unlikely to happen any time soon.
Starting point is 00:18:31 So I think the defamation industry is probably safe. It's good news. But I do think, yeah, I mean, people like us. But this has been a good day for accountability in Australia. There is a lesson for us in this Charles as well, which is not pleasant. You're not going to like it. We're not going to like it. It says that you've actually got to have journalistic ethics and that if someone comes to you with some explosive claims, you can't just print the claims.
Starting point is 00:18:57 I mean, Justice League was quite critical of those who did not fact check and give Bruce Lohman the right of reply and things like that. So it's a good day for the kind of crashing boars who whine on about journalistic ethics and integrity. So does that mean on tomorrow's podcast we've got to have Bruce Lerman on to give his right of reply? I think Justice Lee gave him his right of reply for more than applications. But yeah, unfortunately, this means that next time you have one of your theories, you'll have to check whether it's actually true. And I mean, it doesn't apply to the submarine because they couldn't have had a right of reply. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:31 So that's annoying to have to worry about the journal. Journalism, lectures and ethics and stuff. Okay. What a bore. What a terrible day. Okay. I've changed my mind on this old judgment thing. It's a disaster for the kind of quality work we do here at the Chaser.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Oh, Charles, I must say my feelings of rapport of us have just suddenly evaporated. Can you pass me that white? We need another bump. Yep. Our gears from road. We're part of the iconocles network. And we'll see you back here on the 29th of April. And in the meantime, here's to journalism.
Starting point is 00:20:03 Oh, yeah. Charles, I've just realized it's in this frame of mind that you want to sue someone I'm going to sue Channel 10 Oh, that explains it all I don't care, I'm a sleeper man, no one can stop me

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