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Aussie PM Says Formal Process Needs to Run Its Course on Sexual Allegations Against Former High Court Justice

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NY State Senator Introduces Bill Banning State Employees From Using TikTok

New York State Senator Chris Jacobs has introduced a new bill proposing to ban state employees from downloading and using the Chinese video-sharing app TikTok on their government-issued phones. “On the surface TikTok appears to be a harmless tool for creating short videos with music when in reality it is a data mining instrument that violates our privacy and could threaten our security,”  Jacobs said in a June 22 press release from his office. He added: “It is just too easy for the information it collects to be accessed by the oppressive Chinese government waging a fierce economic war against our state and our country.” The bill, named “No TikTok on Government Devices Act” (S8600), was introduced by Jacobs last Thursday. It would add new language to section 103 of…

Aussie PM Says Formal Process Needs to Run Its Course on Sexual Allegations Against Former High Court Justice

Prime Minister Scott Morrison has called for formal processes to run its course on sexual harassment allegations regarding former High Court Justice Dyson Heydon. Meanwhile, three complainants have begun negotiating compensation with the High Court of Australia.

Morrison said the allegations of sexual harassment were “very disturbing and very concerning” while speaking to reporters on June 23 in Eden, New South Wales.

On Monday, the High Court released a statement saying a year-long investigation into allegations Heydon sexually harassed six former associates were concluded and the claims by the associates were “believed.”

Morrison said: “There will be a proper formal process that will be followed, I’m sure, in addressing those allegations.”

When questioned on whether Heydon should be stripped of his Companion of the Order of Australia in 2004, the prime minister said if the allegations were “upheld” then there is “a normal process for honours to be dealt with at that time.”

“But it’s not appropriate to presuppose those processes. That’s not the way these things should be handled,” he added.

Aussie PM Says Formal Process Needs to Run Its Course on Sexual Allegations Against Former High Court Justice High Court of Australia in Canberra, Australia. (Alex Proimos/CC BY 2.0 ept.ms/2haHp2Y)

On Monday, current High Court Chief Justice Susan Kiefel said in the statement she was “ashamed that this could have happened at the High Court of Australia.”

“The investigation, conducted by Dr. Vivienne Thorn AM, took some months to complete. We received Dr. Thorn’s report and have provided it to the six complainants and to the Justice (Heydon) in question.”

“We have made a sincere apology to the six women whose complaints were borne out,” she said.

Heydon released a statement to The Sydney Morning Herald via his lawyers, saying he denied “emphatically any allegation of sexual harassment or any offence.”

“In respect of the confidential inquiry and its subsequent confidential report, any allegation of predatory behaviour or breaches of the law is categorically denied by our client,” he said.

“The inquiry was an internal administrative inquiry and was conducted by a public servant and not by a lawyer, judge or a tribunal member. It was conducted without having statutory powers of investigation and of administering affirmations or oaths.”

Personal injury and compensation law firm Maurice Blackburn is representing three of the complainants and has begun negotiating compensation with the High Court. The matter is currently a civil claim and not a criminal matter.

Maurice Blackburn Principal Josh Bornstein said: “We will also be writing to lawyers for Dyson Heydon shortly to ask if they too are willing to engage in a similar process.”

“If they decline that invitation, I am instructed to lodge a claim in the Australian Human Rights Commission.”

Former Prime Minister John Howard has stood by his appointment of Heydon telling The Sydney Morning Herald on June 24, “I stand by all of the High Court appointments made by my government.”

Dyson Heydon served on the High Court from 2003 to 2013. He was known for his opposition to “judicial activism”—a practice where judges interpret the law based on current societal attitudes and trends.

Focus News: Aussie PM Says Formal Process Needs to Run Its Course on Sexual Allegations Against Former High Court Justice

House Will Debate the Great American Outdoor Act in July

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) announced Monday that the House will debate and may vote to amend the Great American Outdoors Act, which would inject billions to maintain neglected national parks and permanently fund land and water conservation efforts. “The House will consider the Great American Outdoors Act under a rule on the floor during the work period at the end of July.  This bipartisan bill, which passed the Senate by a vote of 73–25, will permanently fund the Land and Water Conservation Fund (LWCF) and address the maintenance backlog at our national parks,” Hoyer said in a press statement. The Senate passed the legislation with bipartisan support last week, and it also has bipartisan support in the House. Hoyer said he will bring up the measure under regular rules that…