Brittany Higgins is appealing elements of her costly defamation battle loss to her former boss, adding another chapter to the bitter legal saga.
Brittany Higgins is appealing elements of her costly defamation battle loss to her former boss, adding another chapter to the bitter legal saga.
Linda Reynolds sued Higgins over a series of social media posts the ex-Liberal senator believed damaged her reputation.
The Western Australian Supreme Court in August found the posts were defamatory and awarded damages of $315,000 plus $26,109 interest to Reynolds.
READ MORE: Trump fixated on 'so healthy, so beautiful' host
Higgins was also ordered to pay 80 per cent of Reynolds' legal costs, which are yet to be determined, in a judgment published last week.
The former political staffer is appealing the damages award and the costs order, according to documents filed in the WA Court of Appeal yesterday.
She's also seeking to challenge the finding that she breached a 2021 deed of settlement between the pair with an Instagram post referring to her being a defamation victim.
READ MORE: Jimmy Kimmel yanked off air over Charlie Kirk comments
Higgins previously apologised to Reynolds after the former defence minister emerged victorious from the duo's high-profile five-week defamation trial, which ended in September 2024.
Justice Paul Tottle found Higgins' social media posts carried an array of imputations.
They included Reynolds engaged in a campaign of harassment against Higgins, mishandled her rape allegation and engaged in questionable conduct during Bruce Lehrmann's aborted criminal trial for rape.
Justice Tottle's 360-page judgment made factual findings about the events involving Reynolds and Higgins, including her alleged 2019 rape and the events in the years after it.
Higgins made 26 false or misleading statements in media interviews after her alleged sexual assault, it said.
She alleges former co-worker Lehrmann raped her in the senator's ministerial suite.
A Federal Court judge overseeing a defamation case launched by Lehrmann against Network Ten found Higgins was, on the balance of probabilities, raped by her former co-worker in the office.
Lehrmann is appealing that finding.
He has always denied the rape allegation and his criminal trial was derailed by juror misconduct.
Support is available by calling 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) or National Sexual Abuse and Redress Support Service 1800 211 028.