Michael Bradley was Crikey’s lawyer in Lachlan Murdoch’s case against Private Media.
It began at the daily editorial meeting, early morning on June 29 2022. Bernard Keane, Crikey’s prolific political editor, said he could write up the overnight revelations from the then-unfolding drama of the United States congressional investigation into the January 6 2021 insurrection at the Capitol. The editor-in-chief, Peter Fray, said cool, and Bernard went off to do his thing.
Later that morning the draft emerged and, with few changes (because Keane famously produces fast and clean copy for his grateful editors), the article hit the Crikey website and its daily email to subscribers.
The revelations in question emerged from testimony by Cassidy Hutchinson, a former aide to Donald Trump’s chief of staff, broadcast around the world, confirming some of the extent to which Trump had been an active and willing participant in the attempted coup of January 6.
Keane’s article analysed what we now knew of Trump’s direct involvement and its implications for America’s democracy. His conclusions were dire (but hardly exceptional), referring to “mountains of evidence of Trump’s treachery and crimes”.
Keane also drew the historic parallel between Trump’s actions and the Watergate scandal of the 1970s, but distinguished them partly because “Nixon didn’t have the support of the world’s most powerful media company, which continues … to peddle the lie of the stolen election and play down the insurrection Trump created”.
Then the punchline, which Keane has always maintained was a self-evidently hyperbolic statement of his own opinion (as opposed to an assertion of fact):
“If Trump ends up in the dock … as he should be, not all his co-conspirators will be there with him. Nixon was famously the ‘unindicted co-conspirator’ in Watergate. The Murdochs and their slew of poisonous Fox News commentators are the unindicted co-conspirators of this continuing crisis.”
The “unindicted co-conspirator” line was repeated in the article’s title, except that it rendered “Murdoch” singular rather than plural. Which Murdoch? It didn’t say, in keeping with what has been a global standard for many decades. Generally, when people say “Murdoch”, either they mean Rupert, or they have in mind a mythical Gorgon-like creature whose name evokes existential dread.
Whether or not anyone else thought, when they read “Murdoch” in the article, that it was referring to Lachlan Murdoch (as opposed to Rupert, or the Gorgon), apparently Lachlan himself did. His Australian lawyer, John Churchill, issued a defamation concerns notice to Crikey on June 30. It was the fourth time Murdoch (Lachlan, that is) had made such a legal threat to Crikey.
A concerns notice is a letter that the Defamation Act requires; if you don’t issue one and wait 28 days, you can’t sue for defamation at all. Its terms are also prescribed. Most importantly, it has to specify the “defamatory imputations” that the complainant alleges the subject publication conveyed to its audience about him or her. Imputations are not the words (or images), but their meanings.
Murdoch alleged 14 imputations arising from the “unindicted co-conspirator” line in Keane’s article. They cover a lot of ground, from the most benign — that Murdoch illegally conspired with Trump to overturn the 2020 presidential election result — to the most extreme — that Murdoch conspired with Trump to lead an armed mob on Congress, and should be indicted for treason.
Objectively, it’s fair to say that the imputations Murdoch’s lawyers chose were at the outer edge of the range of possible meanings one might claim Keane’s article inferred. This is a not-uncommon tactic in the Australian defamation context, or at least had been in the years before the new public interest defence came into existence. The tactical benefit was that, if you alleged defamatory imputations that could not possibly be proved as true, then you deprived a media publisher of their most potent (and often only available) defence: truth.
Whether that was the plan or not, Crikey like any publisher faced an immediate and urgent concern: the threat of litigation by an infinitely funded complainant who was apparently sincerely upset. Crikey’s first move was one of mitigation, buying it time to properly consider its position; it took the article down. Doing so does not undo the defamation, but it does reduce the harm (if there is any).
Maybe a few thousand people had read Keane’s article before it disappeared; Crikey is a small player in the Australian media landscape, and it’s safe to say that this had registered barely a blip. That would change on August 15, when Crikey republished the original article (with an additional note explaining why), and then on August 22 when it published Murdoch’s concerns notice and all of the subsequent correspondence between Murdoch’s and its own lawyers.
I should also note that, on August 14, The Sydney Morning Herald had run the first public report of Murdoch’s legal threat to Crikey. Obviously someone had told the reporter about the dispute, which was entirely private at this point. The source’s identity would be the subject of some controversy in the court case, ultimately remaining unrevealed (it wasn’t me).
During July and August there had been quite a lot of back and forth between the parties’ lawyers, none of which had resolved the underlying disagreement: Murdoch’s claim that he had been defamed, and Crikey’s insistence that he hadn’t.
The real point in issue would remain throughout the litigation: what exactly Keane’s article had conveyed to readers about Lachlan Murdoch. Crikey maintained that none of Murdoch’s 14 imputations could rationally be drawn from its article’s words. It went further, offering to publish a statement confirming that it did not believe any of those imputations to be true. Murdoch wanted the article taken down permanently, and a public apology for being defamed, without the imputations being repeated. It was a flat stand-off.
Another thing happened on August 22: Crikey published an advertisement in The New York Times (and The Canberra Times), basically asking Murdoch to sue it. The next day, he did, issuing proceedings in the Federal Court of Australia.
So, Crikey got the fight it had asked for. It published its reasons why, and Murdoch pleaded his alternative explanation (essentially, that the whole exercise was a cynical marketing campaign to get more subscribers). From a strictly legal standpoint, Crikey had a viable set of defences. The stage was now set for testing their strength.
Tomorrow: the claims made against Crikey, our defences, and the legal tussles that ensued.
Thank you for spelling out that the article referred to Murdochs. When I read the complaint by Lachlan Murdoch, I did not agree with his grievance that it was him the article was pointing to.
Good on yer Crikey.
I’ve been saying this all along. Who ever thinks of Lachlan? Unless you’re thinking about great Australian corporate disasters, of course.
Thanks for that great introductory article Michael and congratulations for the role that you played in this unedifying saga.
This truly is a nasty story but one that has a happy ending. This is something of a rarity these days.
Once again, “Congratulations” to Crikey and all those who played a role in securing this fabulous result.
The phrase “Fourteen Imputations” has a gloriously theological ring to it. What I’m looking forward to reading is how – even if a judge ruled that all alleged imputations were in fact conveyed – any of them could be said to have damaged the plaintiff’s reputation.
Indeed. For one’s reputation to be damaged, one must first have a good reputation.
Why let him off the hook?…………..
Discontinuance requires agreement by the defendant or with the leave of the court.
“U.C.P. Rules 2005 Reg 12.1
Discontinuance of proceedings
12.1 Discontinuance of proceedings
(cf SCR Part 21, rules 2 and 5; DCR Part 18, rule 1; LCR Part 17, rule 1)
(1) The plaintiff in any proceedings may, by filing a notice of discontinuance, discontinue the proceedings, either as to all claims for relief or as to all claims for relief so far as they concern a particular defendant–
(a) with the consent of each other active party in the proceedings, or
(b) with the leave of the court.
(2) A notice of discontinuance–
(a) must bear a certificate by the plaintiff, or by his or her solicitor, to the effect that the plaintiff does not represent any other person, and
(b) except where it is filed with the leave of the court, must be accompanied by a notice from each party whose consent is required by subrule (1) to the effect that the party consents to the proceedings being discontinued in accordance with the notice of discontinuance.
(3) If any such consent is given on terms, those terms are to be incorporated in the notice of consent.
(4) If any party has not been served with the originating process, the plaintiff must file an affidavit to that effect.
(5) For the purposes of this rule, proceedings on a cross-claim are taken to be different proceedings to the proceedings on the originating process and to proceedings on any other cross-claim.”
Force him to go to court and use the Dominion evidence against him.
He is hardly the sharpest tool in the box and would grill just nicely…………………
I am puzzled by the usage of the word, “inferred”. Surely it is the author who infers, and his article then implies. When most people say that an article infers something, we assume that they have bungled their English and really meant to say that the article implies. However this is a lawyer writing, and lawyers are famous for their precise use of words. So how does a lifeless document infer something, or is this usage of “infers” some sort of legalese that conflates the document and its author?
Our resident ambulance chasing shyster is infamously sloppy with word usage.
And basic legal principles. And ethics.
Is that you Lachlan?
You might want to read up on defamation, champ.
Sometime A/G Porter, Higgins/Lehrmann et al and many other occasions of prejudicial comments show no regard for the Golden Thread of jurisprudence – the duty inherent on the prosecution to prove the accused guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Straight to the nub of this otherwise unimportant issue.
What can you expect from the “awaiting for approval” website?
Unspecified Murdoch, a leader of the cancel culture s/he claims to abhor.