Explained: The Crikey v Murdoch Media court battle
Recent changes to defamation laws get a test run in Crikey v Murdoch
From July 2021, a number of changes to defamation laws have come into effect across Australia, with the exception of Western Australia and the Northern Territory. Since the changes are so new, many recent defamation trials have not been subject to the amendments...
One of the new requirements for those alleging defamation is that proof of serious or impending serious harm. So, for the purposes of the Crikey v Murdoch case, the question will be asked: has Lachlan Murdoch suffered serious harm because of the Crikey piece?
What was the catalyst?
On June 29 2022, Crikey published an article titled “Trump is a confirmed unhinged traitor. And Murdoch is his unindicted co-conspirator”. Lachlan Murdoch, the CEO of Fox demanded an apology, threatening legal action if the publisher of Crikey, Private Media did not publicly apologise. Crikey’s response to the threat was a full-page ad in the New York Times inviting Murdoch to sue the publication.
To this, Murdoch, co-chair of News Corp did not take kindly, swiftly launching a defamation suit against Crikey’s Australian publisher Private Media.