• ZagorathOP
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    164 days ago

    A woman in Australia has annulled her marriage after realising that a fake wedding ceremony she took part in for a social media stunt was in fact real.

    What an absolutely wild story this was. Disappointed in the BBC’s reporting though. No mention of the groom’s side of this. Not what he said to the court (or mention that he did not speak in court), nor anything he might have posted on social media later (surely the drama of all this would have been worth it for more clicks?), nor any mention of an attempt to reach out to him to comment on the story itself.

    Not that I think it would exonerate him even slightly, but I just want to see how he could possibly try to defend this. It would have added to the amusement, as well as just being basic good journalistic practices.

    • @[email protected]
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      44 days ago

      Here’s the link to the case should you be interested: http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdoc/au/cases/cth/FedCFamC1F/2024/674.html

      To be fair to the BBC, most of the questions you raise don’t have good answers. There doesn’t seem to be a lot of the other side of the story to report. The judge mentions at several points that the purported groom gave only vague and incomplete evidence, and that he failed to provide details about key issues.

      • ZagorathOP
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        44 days ago

        most of the questions you raise don’t have good answers

        I mean, that’s fine. But it’s a standard inclusion in an article, even if all you have to say is “the groom did not respond to our request for comment.” It makes it clear that you tried and he was not interested in explaining himself. As it’s written, it looks like they just couldn’t be bothered doing journalism.

        Anyway, thanks for sharing that. It’s a wild read.

        Minor side note:

        When giving their evidence either viva voce or by affidavit, the applicant and the respondent were duty bound to comply with the stipulations in Kuhl v Zurich Financial Services Australia Ltd[6] where the High Court held that a witness must tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth

        How is it that the citation for “a witness must tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth” only 13 years old

        It must not be overlooked that I am not required to accept evidence, even uncontroverted evidence, if that evidence is contrary to the way events are likely to have occurred

        Tell that to the High Court in Pell

        • @[email protected]
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          23 days ago

          …“the groom did not respond to our request for comment.” It makes it clear that you tried and he was not interested in explaining himself.

          For context, it’s standard practice in proceedings under the Family Law Act to use pseudonyms, so it’s not really possible to track this guy down and ask for his comment.

          It must not be overlooked that I am not required to accept evidence, even uncontroverted evidence, if that evidence is contrary to the way events are likely to have occurred

          Tell that to the High Court in Pell

          My reading of the Pell appeal was that is more or less what the High Court decided, albeit while applying the more stringent criminal burden of beyond reasonable doubt in relation to a jury trial. The Court fundamentally concluded that while the complainant’s evidence was credible, the compounding effect of unchallenged evidence from multiple other witnesses meant that there was “a significant possibility” Pell was not guilty of the charges.

          I should mention that I’m not a Pell apologist; it does appear from the Royal Commission on institutional abuse that he was complicit in covering up historical sexual assaults, and that is unforgivable. But for anyone that hasn’t read the full text of the appeal (http://www7.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdoc/au/cases/cth/HCA/2020/12.html), I thoroughly recommend it. I am not ashamed to say that I think the Court makes a convincing case for him not being guilty of those particular charges.

          • ZagorathOP
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            23 days ago

            it’s standard practice in proceedings under the Family Law Act to use pseudonyms

            Oh interesting. I saw that they had referred to a lot of elements in this text by obvious pseudonyms, like “suburb B”, but then saw that both the applicant and respondent were given real-looking names. So I had assumed that they were real.

            Still, in that case, “the groom could not be reached for comment” would be appropriate.

            the compounding effect of unchallenged evidence from multiple other witnesses

            That’s the thing though. The judge in this case said the finder of fact (in this case, himself, in the Pell case, that would be the jury) can decide for themselves whether to accept evidence, even if unchallenged, based on their own opinion of whether it was likely based on all the evidence presented.

            In Pell, the jury decided, beyond all reasonable doubt, that Pell’s testimony must have been wrong. Not an unreasonable conclusion, given how bad memories are over that long period of time, and given the strong incentive Pell would have had to either lie or conveniently misremember. But the high court decided that the convention of the triers of fact not being able to be overturned on their factual findings was irrelevant.

        • @topherclay
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          23 days ago

          I think they could have found older ones if they wanted to, and of course the argument that it’s the direct words of the witness oath that they swear to do so would of course be much older citation.

          But that 13 year old case was one where they could cite the judge directly stating that a witnesses oath mean they have to speak precisely.

  • @ladicius
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    4 days ago

    If that influencer idiot had forged her signature halfway convincingly the trial probably would have gone the other way.

    • ZagorathOP
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      34 days ago

      Maybe. I can see why you’d say that, since the judge did mention it. But I think not. There seems to have been enough other evidence (not the least of which is her own testimony and the specific timing of this filing) that it probably could never have gone any other way.