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Actor Geoffrey Rush wins defamation case in Australia

Australian actor Geoffrey Rush attending the premiere of Disney’s and Jerry Bruckheimer Films “Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales”in Hollywood, California on May 18, 2017. AFP PHOTO

Academy Award-winner Geoffrey Rush won a defamation case Thursday against an Australian newspaper over reports that he behaved in an inappropriate sexual way to an actress.

A front-page story in 2017 claimed that the Sydney Theatre Company received a complaint that Rush had inappropriately touched a female co-star during a staging of “King Lear”.

A judge in Sydney ruled Thursday that the Daily Telegraph had produced a “recklessly irresponsible piece of sensationalist journalism” and awarded Rush Aus$850,000 (US$608,000) in damages.

“There are no winners in this case, it has been extremely distressing for anyone involved,” Rush said in brief remarks outside the court, calling the months-long legal case a “harrowing time”.

Justice Michael Wigney said that reasonable readers would assume from the reporting that Rush was a “pervert” from a series of reports that he ruled were mostly uncorroborated.

The judge said that actress Eryn Jean Norvill’s evidence was inconsistent and that she “was at times prone to exaggeration and embellishment.”

Wigney said he would assess further damages for lost earnings at a later date.

Australia’s defamation laws are notoriously strict and often favour the person accused of bad behaviour.

Rush won the Best Actor Academy Award in 1997 for his role in “Shine” and is one of the few stars to have also won a Golden Globe, an Emmy and a Tony Award.

The Daily Telegraph is owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

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