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Linda Reynolds has initiated a lawsuit against Higgins due to a series of social media posts that the former Liberal senator claims tarnished her reputation.
In August, the Western Australian Supreme Court determined that these posts were defamatory, resulting in Reynolds receiving 5,000 in damages, along with an additional ,109 in interest.
Higgins was also ordered to pay 80 per cent of Reynolds’ yet-to-be-determined legal costs, but is appealing elements of the judgment.
She is challenging the damages and costs orders, and the finding that she breached a 2021 deed of settlement between the pair by referring to herself as a “defamation victim” in an Instagram post.
Reynolds confirmed today that she has filed a creditor’s petition in the Federal Court, claiming Higgins “failed to comply” with a bankruptcy notice issued to her several weeks ago.
“It is unfortunate that I have to take this step in this long-running saga,” the former parliamentarian said in a statement.
“As I have said, this is conduct which comes as no surprise to me however what should be plain now is that I am committed to seeing this through to the end.”
Federal Court records show the former senator filed the bankruptcy proceedings against Higgins on Friday.
Higgins’ husband David Sharaz has also been served with similar bankruptcy proceedings by Reynolds.
The ex-political staffer apologised to Reynolds following the former defence minister’s high-profile five-week defamation trial victory in September 2024.
The trial centred on a tweet Higgins and her husband published in January 2022, which carried imputations that Reynolds pressured Higgins not to proceed with a sexual assault complaint and that she was a hypocrite in her advocacy of gender equality and female empowerment.
Justice Paul Tottle found Higgins’ social media posts were defamatory after they implied 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.
The 360-page judgment made factual findings about events involving the pair, including Higgins’ alleged 2019 rape and that Higgins made 26 false or misleading statements in media interviews.
She alleges former co-worker Lehrmann raped her in the senator’s ministerial suite, a claim he has always denied.
His criminal trial was aborted due to juror misconduct.
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 colleague in the office.
Lehrmann is appealing that finding.