Wagner family wins defamation case against Nine Network over 60 Minutes Grantham flood report
Queensland’s wealthy Wagner family has successfully sued the Nine Network over a 60 Minutes TV report that insinuated it was responsible for a 2011 flood in which 12 people died.
Crime & Justice
Don't miss out on the headlines from Crime & Justice. Followed categories will be added to My News.
A WEALTHY Queensland family awarded a record Australian defamation payout from Alan Jones and his employers for incorrect flood death accusations was also defamed by the Nine Network.
Toowoomba’s Wagner brothers sued over a 60 Minutes report from May 2015, with a jury on Friday determining it incorrectly insinuated they were responsible for the 2011 flood in Grantham which killed 12 people.
Alan Jones defamation case judgment handed down
The four-person Brisbane Supreme Court jury also found prominent journalist Nick Cater defamed the Wagners in comments he made in the report.
The court has now begun to determine damages, with a plaintiff Denis Wagner giving evidence before JusticePeter Applegarth.
Denis, John, Neill and Joe Wagner say the report by Sydney journalist Michael Usher insinuated the collapse of a wall of a Lockyer Valley quarry they owned caused a “man-made catastrophe”, in which a two-year-old girl died.
The report, entitled ‘The Missing Hour’, described the wall of water that fatally swept through Grantham as an “inland tsunami”.
The report does not expressly blame them for the deaths but the family believes it led people to believe they caused the disaster,sought to cover it up and refused to answer to the public.
The jury agreed with all of the Wagners’ claims.
Their barrister, Tom Blackburn SC, took issue with repeated statements by Mr Usher and Mr Cater, quoted as an expert, claiming it was an act of God turned deadly by the failings of men.
The report said there was a “cruel injustice” at play.
Mr Blackburn said the Wagners’ description as one of Australia’s wealthiest families who refused to take part in an interview prejudiced them as selfish and evasive.
Denis Wagner told the court on Friday Mr Usher and Mr Cater acted like “judge and executioner”.
He said he felt “disillusioned”, stressed and angry when he saw the report.
“It’s hard to describe. Gutted and embarrassed. Humiliated in some respects,” Mr Wagner said.
The respondents’ barrister, Rob Anderson QC, denied the defamatory insinuations were conveyed, saying the case against them relied on cherry-picking the report.
He said the Wagners were being sensitive.
A year ago, influential Sydney broadcaster Jones, his radio station 2GB and Brisbane’s 4BC were hit with a record defamationpayout of $3.7 million the same court.
The court found Jones and his co-defendants could not defend the defamatory comments that the Wagner family was responsiblefor the deaths.