Brittany Higgins hits back in her final day of evidence to Bruce Lehrmann rape trial

Courtney Gould and Perry DuffinNCA NewsWire
Camera IconBrittany Higgins and, inset, rape accused Bruce Lehrmann. Credit: The West Australian

Brittany Higgins’ final day in court was emotionally charged and tearful but her voice was unwavering as she singled out her alleged rapist Bruce Lehrmann with a pointed finger and a direct message: “Nothing was fine after what you did to me”.

Ms Higgins has also wholly rejected Lehrmann’s claims she invented her rape allegation against him, telling the jury she “knows” he physically violated her body.

Lehrmann, 27, has pleaded not guilty to sexual intercourse with Ms Higgins, without her consent and being reckless to her consent, in Parliament House on March 23, 2019.

Ms Higgins returned to the witness box on Friday to face questions from Mr Lehrmann’s barrister Steve Whybrow.

Mr Whybrow questioned Ms Higgins about the exact moment she divulged the alleged rape to her chief of staff Fiona Brown.

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“Because up until then I was holding it in, holding it in, holding it in, pretending like everything was fine and it wasn’t,” Ms Higgins told the court as her voice rose and she pointed a finger toward Mr Lehrmann.

“Nothing was fine, nothing was fine after what you did to me — nothing.”

The court broke every half an hour to give Ms Higgins a chance to rest, the young staffer cried into her hands as she walked toward the exit — before turning and bowing to the judge.

Mr Whybrow also questioned Ms Higgins about her first interactions with Mr Lehrmann in the days after the alleged rape.

The pair worked together until Mr Lehrmann was fired for breaching security, entering the Parliament late at night, his second infraction.

Camera IconBrittany Higgins has returned to the witness stand. NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia
Camera IconBruce Lehrmann has pleaded not guilty. NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia

Mr Whybrow said Ms Higgins’ interactions with Mr Lehrmann before he was fired were “cordial” and “normal”.

Ms Higgins disagreed.

“I think after a trauma you kind of go through a strange holding period of just an extended freeze,” she told the court.

“But yes, I was trying to maintain calm because he had a higher station in the office than me. I was trying to hold on. I don’t know, I was scared.”

Mr Whybrow put it to Ms Higgins that she was embarrassed after being found naked in Parliament House by a security guard after she and Mr Lehrmann returned there late at night.

“I was found naked because I was raped. I don’t know what more to say,” Ms Higgins told the court.

Me Whybrow suggested she had invented her claim she had been sexually assaulted to save her job.

“I’m not a monster,” Ms Higgins said, shaking her head.

“I would never do something like that. I cared about my job but I would never do that.”

Camera IconMr Lehrmann with his solicitor Rachel Fisher on day nine of the trial. NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia

Mr Lehrmann’s barristers claim that the last time he saw Ms Higgins, they had entered the ministerial suite of their boss, Senator Linda Reynolds.

Mr Lehrmann told police, in a recording played to the jury this week, that he had turned left to tend to documents while Ms Higgins went right, into the senator’s office alone.

Mr Whybrow, questioning Ms Higgins on Friday, suggested that she never saw Mr Lehrmann again that evening and he did not sexually assault her in the office.

“No, I obviously don’t agree — he raped me,” Ms Higgins said.

Mr Whybrow suggested: “He didn’t go into the minister’s suite at all.”

Ms Higgins replied: “He was in there, he was physically violating me, he was in my body.” She finished her answer with: “I know.”

Camera IconMs Higgins left court on day nine of the trial. NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia

The entirety of evidence heard in the court this week had been suppressed from publication until Ms Higgins completed her evidence.

Former Parliament House colleagues have given evidence about the time and words Ms Higgins first told them about the alleged rape.

One former staffer told the court that Ms Higgins was concerned about it becoming a story in the media, her ex-boyfriend made similar comments to the jury.

Ms Higgins, in her own evidence last week, said she felt she was “pressured” by her bosses in the Liberal Party not to go to the police and the imminent Federal election was part of the discussion.

On Friday, she clarified that she understood her bosses were concerned more about a leak, than the police process.

“If I reported it and it became a media story prior to the election, that was the issue,” she said.

Camera IconDefence barrister Steve Whybrow quizzed Ms Higgins about when she disclosed the alleged rape to her then chief of staff. NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia

ACT Director of Public Prosecutions, Shane Drumgold SC, asked Ms Higgins why she went to police and the media, in early 2021, at about the same time.

She previously told the court she had quit her job in Parliament and felt the two processes were in “lock-step”.

“Obviously one was about going through the justice system to see if I could have this day in court,” Ms Higgins said on Friday.

“The other was about the culture, the systemic culture in Parliament House that was so rife, is so rife and continues to be so rife.

“There are a dozen stories like mine.”

Mr Whybrow focused, through the week, on the moments that Ms Higgins told friends and police she was going to medical centres and doctors in the wake of the alleged assault.

Camera IconMr Lehrmann bought Ms Higgins a coffee in the days after the alleged rape. NCA NewsWire / Gary Ramage Credit: News Corp Australia

The barrister has previously heard there are no medical records from the immediate aftermath and Ms Higgins, in her evidence last week, told the court she was just too depressed to follow through on her appointments.

“I was depressed, I couldn’t get out of bed and confronting it with a health professional was a really big f...... deal for me,” Ms Higgins said on Friday.

“I wasn’t perfect.”

The trial will continue on Monday, with Senator Linda Reynolds expected to take the stand in the coming days.

Mr Drumgold has flagged the trial is running ahead of schedule and evidence could finish as soon as the end of next week.

Originally published as Brittany Higgins hits back in her final day of evidence to Bruce Lehrmann rape trial

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