Advertisement

Ministers ‘covering themselves’ after Higgins incident

Fiona Brown says she pushed back against two ministers wanting to go to the police over Brittany Higgins' rape claims.

Fiona Brown says she pushed back against two ministers wanting to go to the police over Brittany Higgins' rape claims. Photo: AAP

Brittany Higgins’ former boss says she fought pressure from two federal ministers to make a report with police before the alleged rape survivor chose to lodge her own complaint.

Senator Linda Reynolds’ former acting chief-of-staff Fiona Brown was working in Parliament House at the time Higgins was allegedly raped by Bruce Lehrmann in March 2019.

Brown told a court on Tuesday of meetings with Higgins after a security incident in which the junior media adviser and Lehrmann entered Parliament House in early on a Saturday.

In the week afterwards, Higgins told Brown that she had woken up to find Lehrmann on top of her, the Federal Court heard during a defamation trial.

In the aftermath, Reynolds and then-special minister of state Alex Hawke insisted that Brown notify the police about what had happened rather than waiting for Higgins to make a complaint, Justice Michael Lee was told.

“You were concerned that this was covering themselves, that’s all they were worried about?” barrister Sue Chrysanthou SC said.

“Yes,” Brown said.

She told the court she pushed back against the request, saying that Higgins needed to make a personal choice about whether a formal complaint should be filed.

There were also the lives of two 23-year-olds to consider, she told the court.

“You just can’t walk into a cop shop and do something like that,” Brown said.

Chrysanthou is representing journalist Lisa Wilkinson, who is being sued alongside broadcaster Network Ten for defamation.

Lehrmann says the alleged rape never occurred and that a February 2021 interview on The Project with Higgins destroyed his reputation.

Higgins claims she was sexually assaulted by her fellow Liberal staffer while she was intoxicated on Reynolds’ couch on March 23, 2019.

In her evidence, Brown insisted Higgins never made a direct allegation of assault during meetings in the week after the pair were spotted entering Parliament House after hours.

She said she was “blindsided” by a claim that Lehrmann had been on top of Higgins but added she had not been informed of any allegations that something criminal had occurred.

Brown was also told to provide Higgins with information about Parliament House’s employee assistance program and the national domestic violence and sexual assault hotline.

Lehrmann was dismissed after the incident, but that was because he had already been warned after an earlier security breach in which he left a classified document unattended on a desk.

Higgins was not terminated as there had been no previous problems with her behaviour, the court heard.

“She was fairly new, so it was taken on that basis,” Brown said.

Lehrmann’s trial in the ACT Supreme Court charged with raping Higgins was derailed by juror misconduct. Prosecutors abandoned plans for a second trial, citing concerns for Higgins’ mental health.

He has been charged with allegedly raping another woman twice in Toowoomba in October 2021 and remains before Queensland courts.

He has not yet entered a plea but lawyers have indicated he denies that allegation.

1800 RESPECT 1800 737 732

National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028

-AAP

Stay informed, daily
A FREE subscription to The New Daily arrives every morning and evening.
The New Daily is a trusted source of national news and information and is provided free for all Australians. Read our editorial charter
Copyright © 2024 The New Daily.
All rights reserved.