19.3 C
Canberra
Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Google ordered to pay $715k to John Barilaro

Former NSW deputy premier John Barilaro has been awarded $715,000 in defamation damages from Google and his YouTube nemesis Jordan Shanks faces possible prosecution for contempt of court.

The now retired MP sued Google, the owner of YouTube, and commentator Shanks over videos titled “bruz” and “Secret Dictatorship” published on the friendlyjordies channel in 2020.

The videos included claims that Mr Barilaro was a corrupt conman who should be jailed, who committed perjury nine times and engaged in blackmail.

The now-retired MP settled his Federal Court case against Mr Shanks in November when he provided an apology, edited the videos and was ordered to pay $100,000 costs to Mr Barilaro.

Google initially defended the case but later withdrew all defences and conceded the widely viewed videos defamed Mr Barilaro.

On Monday in the Federal Court, Justice Steven Rares said Mr Barilaro was subjected to a relentless, racist, abusive and defamatory campaign on YouTube for over a year.

The judge said Mr Shanks repeatedly and vindictively used descriptions of him like “wog”, “greasy”, “greasy little scrotum”, “meatball” and innuendos linking him to the Italian mafia. 

Mr Shanks also engaged in cyberbullying trying to intimidate Mr Barilaro from bringing proceedings to court and to intimidate Mr Barilaro’s lawyers from acting for him. 

In a YouTube video called “bruz eternal” in May 2021, Mr Shanks said Mr Barilaro and his lawyers should have watched a video he published earlier about Clive Palmer, saying “it would have given you a preview into what threatening to sue me would look like for you”. 

Mr Shanks then told viewers that he had created and was selling a keychain, which he displayed with Mr Barilaro’s head in a Mario cap and a scrotum below it. 

“Google was part and parcel of this disgusting behaviour because it facilitated, published and kept up on YouTube this and similar videos,” Justice Rares said.

Days after his settlement with Mr Barilaro, Mr Shanks mocked it and threatened “we finished the defo suit, but make no mistake; this entire ordeal is far from over”. 

He repeated segments from earlier videos of his racist and offensive comments.  

Google did nothing to stop the conduct on its YouTube platform and Google’s conduct in this proceeding was improper and unjustifiable, Justice Rares said.

“That conduct aggravated the damage to Mr Barilaro’s reputation and the hurt to his feelings very considerably,” he said.

“In my opinion, it is necessary to award a substantial sum in damages to compensate Mr Barilaro for the harm that Google caused to him and to vindicate his reputation.”

Justice Rares has referred the conduct of Mr Shanks and Google to the court’s principal registrar to consider proceedings against each for “what appear to be serious contempts of court by bringing improper pressure to bear on Mr Barilaro and his lawyers not to pursue this proceeding”.  

The judge will also hear from the parties on what costs order he should make.

More Stories

US drug-decriminalisation U-turn: lessons for ACT, Liberals warn

Last month, the American state of Oregon ended three years of drug decriminalisation. James Milligan MLA says it is a "salutary experience" .
 
 

 

Latest

canberra daily

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CANBERRA DAILY NEWSLETTER

Join our mailing lists to receieve the latest news straight into your inbox.

You have Successfully Subscribed!