Walter Sofronoff ‘unwise' but not ‘dishonest' when leaking documents to journalists during Bruce Lehrmann inquiry
Former Queensland judge Walter Sofronoff KC led the 2023 board of inquiry into the prosecution of Mr Lehrmann over the alleged rape of Brittany Higgins.
A subsequent investigation into Mr Sofronoff's conduct during that inquiry, in particular his decision to send a copy of the board's report to two journalists – ABC's Elizabeth Byrne and The Australian's Janet Albrechtsen – prior to its official release by the ACT government, was launched by the ACT Integrity Commission.
He also leaked documents, including witness statements subject to a non-publication order, drafts of the report, and notices of adverse findings about former director of public prosecutions Shane Drumgold – and two of Mr Drumgold's responses to those – to Albrechtsen.
The commission in March found that Mr Sofronoff had engaged in 'serious corrupt conduct'; however, he is seeking to have the commission's Operation Juno report overturned by the Federal Court.
Scott Robertson SC, acting for the ACT Integrity Commission, said Mr Sofronoff had intentionally, and secretly, disclosed confidential material in reports without informing those he knew would have an interest, namely Mr Drumgold and the Chief Minister.
He said Mr Sofronoff acted 'inconsistent' with the knowledge that certain material should be kept confidential other than to the board and relevant parties, including by giving Albrechtsen documents within the scope of a non-publication order with a note to say it was 'strictly confidential'.
Mr Robertson also referred to adverse comments about Mr Drumgold given to Albrechtsen, including a 'very serious' finding that was, and proved to be, 'apt to destroy Mr Drumgold's career'.
'As sensitive and confidential documents go, it's hard to identify a more serious example,' Mr Robertson said.
He used the examples to throw out arguments the commission had 'no evidence' to support findings that Mr Sofronoff acted dishonestly in making disclosures to Albrechtsen during the inquiry as well as giving the final report to Albrechtsen and Byrne after he handed it to the Chief Minister.
However barrister Adam Pomerenke SC claimed that while Mr Sofronoff's actions could be considered 'unwise', Mr Robertson had not established the 'leap' to dishonesty.
'(Mr Robertson) has not demonstrated dishonesty, and there is a difference between unwisdom and dishonesty,' Mr Pomerenke told the court.
'There is no evidence that Mr Sofronoff knew that Mr Drumgold or anyone else had an interest, a legal interest, in the nondisclosure of this material.'
Justice Wendy Abraham suggested to Mr Sofronoff's lawyers that Mr Drumgold would've expected material from the inquiry to be kept private and not shared with those outside the board while the inquiry was ongoing.
However, Mr Pomerenke held firm that there was a stark distinction between publication and disclosure.
'Even if (Mr Sofronoff) had by inference knowledge of a desire or an expectation on the part of Mr Drumgold, or even the Chief Minister, (that) the material not be disclosed, what is it that makes it actually dishonest to disclose it on condition it be kept confidential?' Mr Pomerenke said.
'It can be unwise … it's that leap (to dishonesty) that's not established.'
Mr Drumgold resigned from the DPP in 2023 following the inquiry into Mr Lehrmann's prosecution.
Mr Pomerenke on Monday argued that Mr Sofronoff genuinely believed he was acting in the public's interest to ensure accurate media reporting by sending out the report to the two journalists – an essential part of his role investigating a matter of public interest — and couldn't have had a corrupt, malicious or dishonest motive.
He also denied that Mr Sofronoff preferred the interests of journalists over Mr Drumgold and the Chief Minister.
'From the way it was put in the Juno report itself, there is no evidence or suggestion of conscious preferment of the personal interests of the journalists over Mr Drumgold or the Chief Minister … Mr Sofronoff's state of mind is uniformly that Mr Sofronoff thought he was acting in the public interest,' Mr Pomerenke told the court.
Mr Robertson rejected suggestions the former judge acted within the bounds of his role, and in the interest of accuracy in public discourse, when sending out the final report to the journalists.
He argued that Mr Sofronoff ceased to be the board of inquiry upon delivering the report to the Chief Minister, and he'd therefore committed an unjustifiable 'plain breach' of his nondisclosure responsibilities.
The Federal Court has found that Mr Lehrmann raped Ms Higgins on the civil standard of the balance of probabilities.
A criminal trial was aborted due to juror misconduct and a charge against him was dropped.
Mr Lehrmann has always denied the allegation and is appealing the Federal Court's finding.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

ABC News
14 minutes ago
- ABC News
Family of missing Alice Springs man Gach Top says 'it's a miracle' he was found alive
The family of a missing Alice Springs man who was spotted wandering near an Aboriginal homeland on Monday night say it is a miracle he was found alive. Gach Top, 26, had been missing for a week, his car abandoned 14.5 kilometres west of John Flynn's Grave Historical Reserve. He was found alive by his family near Jay Creek outstation, about 30 kilometres west of Alice Springs, close to where police had discovered items of his clothing. Authorities had suspended their search on Saturday and handed the matter to the Northern Territory Police's Southern Crime Division for further investigation. But Mr Top's family continued scouring the outback for him, along with a group of about 25 volunteers. Arrernte woman Tamara Campbell, who lives at the outstation, said she noticed a "figure walking towards the bush" soon after the sun set on Monday. "Me and my nephew went that way and my aunties came across from the other side of the road," she told the ABC. "I was getting a bad feeling and I walked over to have a closer look." Mr Top's sister, Nyaluak, and other members of his family had been in contact with residents of the outstation in their search. "We came here and I left my number with one of the ladies … we went to Hermannsburg to search for him, and when we were going back to [Alice Springs], she called me as soon as we got service," Nyaluak said. Mr Top's step-mother Nyawuor Kong said her family was rejoicing. "His siblings, the boys and girls, everyone is excited," Ms Kong said. "My eldest son was devastated, because he is close to his elder brother Gach, but when he heard the news that Gach is fine, he is smiling again. "Our family are happy again." She said she was grateful to the people who helped their family find Mr Top in the desert. "We are relieved now." In a statement, NT police said Mr Top was taken to hospital for assessment and thanked members of the public for their assistance.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
PM restates support for two-state solution in call with Palestinian leader
Anthony Albanese has restated Australia's support for a two-state solution in a phone call with Palestinian Authority president Mahmoud Abbas. The call comes amid mounting pressure on the Prime Minister to recognise a Palestinian state at the UN General Assembly (UNGA) next month. France, the UK and Canada have all conditionally said that they would. Mr Albanese has neither committed to nor ruled out doing so. 'Prime Minister Albanese reiterated Australia's call for the immediate entry of aid to meet the needs of the people of Gaza, a permanent ceasefire, and the release of all hostages,' according to a readout of a call with Mr Abbas. 'Prime Minister Albanese also reinforced Australia's commitment to a two-state solution because a just and lasting peace depends upon it. 'President Abbas thanked Prime Minister Albanese for Australia's economic and humanitarian support. 'The leaders discussed deepening co-operation across a range of areas and agreed to meet on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly.' France was the first major Western country to say it would recognise a Palestinian state at the UNGA. It did so condemning Hamas' October 7 attacks on Israel in 2023 and saying the Palestinian Islamist group cannot play a role in Gaza. The UK took a similar line, though its pledge to recognise Palestinian statehood was more of a threat to the Israeli government. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he would go ahead with recognition if Israel did not loosen its chokehold on aid flowing into Gaza, where the death toll from starvation has climbed to nearly 200, according to local health officials. Foreign Minister Penny Wong on Tuesday repeated the Albanese government's condemnation of Hamas and said there was an 'unique opportunity in the international community to isolate and diminish' it while giving life to a Palestinian state. 'Hamas is a terrorist organisation. We consistently condemn them. We have multiple sanctions on them,' she told the ABC. 'When you look at what the Palestinian Authority and the Arab countries have said, condemning Hamas and committing to Hamas having no role in the future of the governance of Gaza.' Senator Wong went on to say the 'best way to ensure peace and stability in the Middle East is for there to be two states'. 'And the reason for … the urgency behind this is that there is a risk that there will be no Palestine left to recognise if the world does not act.'

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Broome man declared unfit for trial on murder charge due to mental impairment
A West Australian man alleged to have stabbed his foster brother to death in the tourist town of Broome will not stand trial after a Supreme Court justice found he was unfit to do so. Ian Ralph Brooke, 23, was charged with murder after the death of a man at a Roe Place address in November 2023 and has been remanded in custody since. A 27-year-old man was found with critical stab wounds and died at the scene, with the WA homicide squad leading the police investigation. On July 30 this year, a WA Supreme Court hearing took place in Perth before Justice Amanda Forrester where Mr Brooke's fitness to stand trial was assessed. The court heard Mr Brooke had "a lot of anger and a grudge" against his foster brother since the pair were children. Justice Forrester said on the day of the man's death, it was alleged Mr Brooke assaulted the man with a crowbar before stabbing him multiple times with a knife. The court heard evidence from two psychologists who had interviewed the then-23-year-old in custody. The psychologists both asserted that Mr Brooke had a mental impairment and Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder, which would prohibit his ability to participate in a trial. Justice Forrester said she was satisfied under the Criminal Law (Mental Impairment) Act 2023 that he was unfit to stand trial. The act states nine reasons a person would be unfit to face trial, with five of those reasons applying to Mr Brooke. He was deemed unable to give instructions to a legal practitioner, follow the course of a trial, understand evidence, decide whether to give evidence, or be able to defend the charge. Justice Forrester said Mr Brooke's intellectual disability was permanent, meaning there was "no prospect" he would become fit to stand trial in the future. Justice Forrester said a special proceeding would take place to move the matter forward. This proceeding, which would operate as if Mr Brooke had pleaded not guilty, would decide a guilty or not guilty verdict based on the evidence available. Possible outcomes include the accused being released unconditionally, a community supervision order being made, or a custody order being enforced. Mr Brooke was remanded in custody until his next court date in September.