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Lawyers disciplined over ‘offensive, demeaning' LGBTQ ‘joke' posted in elevators

Lawyers disciplined over ‘offensive, demeaning' LGBTQ ‘joke' posted in elevators

Two veteran barristers have admitted to posting an offensive 'joke' about the LGBTQ community in the elevators inside a Melbourne legal chambers building in 2022, which sparked an investigation and led to official disciplinary action.
John F. Perry, who has been a lawyer since 1979, admitted to emailing a letter to a colleague comparing gay, lesbian and transgender people to 'mud screwers' and suggesting LGBTQ lawyers were unfairly favoured for work, according to findings by the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal.
The colleague, barrister Robert G. Squirrell, then printed and posted the letter – which used a logo similar to the official Victorian Bar logo – inside four elevators in the Owen Dixon Chambers East building, where it was seen by legal professionals and members of the public.
Squirrell, who has also been a lawyer since 1979, also admitted to his conduct.
The admissions form part of the formal disciplinary action brought against Perry and Squirrell by the Legal Services Board and Commissioner, and VCAT found the pair had 'engaged in professional misconduct' that was 'conduct discreditable to a barrister'. VCAT found the pair's conduct had the hallmarks of a juvenile prank had it not been for the men's ages and their 'offensive' actions.
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In his email, Perry wrote: 'This is going in the lifts tomorrow.' The letter attached inside the email was headed: 'Establishment of LGBTQMS Review Committee' – an insulting play on the term LGBTQI.
'Member [sic] of the Bar identifying with one (or more) of the minority groups represented by the anagram above have expressed concerns that briefs from various large litigators both governmental and private have not been disproportionately directed to them,' the letter said.
'The letters 'MS' may require explanation. It refers to mud screwers, because, as the American Jewish comedian the late and great Lenny Bruce once said – 'Some guys would screw mud'.'
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The Federal Court found Mr Latham's tweet exposed Mr Greenwich, who is gay and a prominent LGBTQI community advocate, to a torrent of hateful abuse including death threats. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491

Leaked texts part of campaign 'to damage me': Latham
Leaked texts part of campaign 'to damage me': Latham

Perth Now

time16-07-2025

  • Perth Now

Leaked texts part of campaign 'to damage me': Latham

A former prime ministerial candidate turned state MP says a former partner's application for a court order has evolved into a campaign to damage him, with a potential parliamentary inquiry looming. Mark Latham has rejected allegations reportedly contained in a private application for an apprehended domestic violence order, which is yet to be heard in court. A report by The Australian outlined claims made by former partner Nathalie Matthews alleging a "sustained pattern" of abuse and manipulation, which Mr Latham has described as "comically false and ridiculous". The one-time prime ministerial hopeful turned NSW independent MP told Sydney radio 2SM on Wednesday that "basically none of it" is true. Messages between the pair reported in the Daily Telegraph lacked their full context and only revealed Mr Latham "had a private life", he said. "There's certainly a steady leak of material. "Some of the stuff we've got now ... it's got nothing to do with the AVO application, nothing to do with the court case." "This now goes to some personal or political campaign to try and damage me," Mr Latham said. The local court has refused to release the documents as they contain untested allegations. Ms Matthews referred AAP to her lawyer when contacted. Her private application for an apprehended violence order is scheduled to be heard on July 30. Premier Chris Minns said it was inappropriate for members of parliament to be "sexting" in the chamber, as the Daily Telegraph reported. "Your average voter would expect people to be focusing on whatever's being debated or voted on at the time and that's a pretty basic expectation," he told reporters. The government plans to call for an inquiry into Mr Latham over unrelated alleged abuses of parliamentary privilege. "This kind of behaviour that he's been up to for a long period of time is completely unacceptable," Mr Minns said. As then-Labor leader, Mr Latham ran against incumbent prime minister John Howard in 2004, who went on to win one final term. Mr Latham resigned from federal parliament in early 2005 and subsequently left Labor before being elected to the NSW upper house in 2019 as a One Nation member. He quit that party in 2023, becoming an independent. In a separate court dispute, Mr Latham was ordered to pay $140,000 to independent MP Alex Greenwich in September 2024. Mr Greenwich sued over a sexually explicit and homophobic social media post ahead of the 2023 state election. The Federal Court found Mr Latham's tweet exposed Mr Greenwich, who is gay and a prominent LGBTQI community advocate, to a torrent of hateful abuse including death threats. 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Lifeline 13 11 14 Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491

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