Cross-examination
133 Under cross-examination, Dr Morton was taken to an exchange of text messages she had with Dr Cook on 22 June 2015. Dr Cook said, "Hi. Have a car booked for tomorrow. Leaving ESP at 8 am". Dr Morton's response was:
Hi Matt,
I am not going to Bribie again until CSIRO resolve the fact that they are allowing someone who sexually assaulted me on that site. I refuse to be potentially exposed to my attacker, particularly at the site where I was attacked.
Additionally, I won't be at work tomorrow as I have an appointment with the Dr over the continuing psychologically damaging situation at work where I feel I am getting no real support.
134 Dr Morton's evidence was that when she referred to her "attacker", she was referring to Dr Glencross. She denied that she had never previously used the expression "sexually assaulted", but accepted that she might not have used the phrase "attacker" prior to that text message.
135 It was put to Dr Morton that it was not her idea to use the expression "sexually assaulted" in the text, and that it was not her idea to call Dr Glencross her "attacker". Her answer to both questions was "Yes. It was." It was suggested to Dr Morton that her partner, Mr Croft, had suggested that she use the language of "sexually assaulted" and "attacker". She denied that.
136 Dr Morton accepted that initially, her relationship with Dr Cook was very good, but denied that it remained good up until she sent that text message. She was taken to a text message exchange on 18 June 2015. Dr Cook had sent Dr Morton a photograph from "Jack Greene", a restaurant or pub in Hobart, with the message "Guess where I am?". Dr Morton accepted they had had several "work dinners" there in the past. Dr Morton responded saying, "Ha. Down the road. We're in St Helens, where I have sheep's milk, blue cheese and Shiraz".
137 Dr Morton accepted she knew that Dr Glencross had left CSIRO. She said that Dr Cook had suggested that one of the issues was that he would turn up unannounced at the Bribie Island site and not sign the visitor's book.
138 Dr Morton said that Dr Glencross had damaged her career at CSIRO and she blamed him for not securing any external funding for one of her projects. She agreed that she had published one article, a book chapter and some abstracts presented at scientific conferences in her time at CSIRO.
139 Dr Morton said that she first used the expression "sexually assaulted" in a discussion she had with Mr Casson in March 2015.
140 Dr Morton was taken to a series of text messages between her and Mr Croft. The messages were as follows:
Dr Morton
Thank you xxx
Mat sent me a text saying the car to Bribie leaves at 8 am. Do i just say ill be at the Dr as I dont feel well?
Will Croft
I'd say that you refusing to go to Bribie until CSIRO resolves the fact that they are allowing someone who sexually assaulted you on the site, AND that you have an appointment with the Dr tomorrow morning.
Will Croft
I understand you don't want to be blunt, but until you stop skirting the issue, they'll keep ignoring it. Because they are spineless cowards.
Dr Morton
Checked in & through security .. Still have to text Mat :(
Will Croft
Yeah, well, I'm sorry, but unless you shove it in their face they aren't going to take you seriously. Have a talk to Shane when you can and tell him that you want HSE to Intervene in the stupidity of the current situation--that it is entirely unreasonable of CSIRO that you be subjected to any potential contact with your attacker.
Dr Morton
I know .. I'll text Mat & tell him I don! feel confortable going to Br,b1e & I have adrs appt tomorrow ..
Will Croft
You know how uncomfortable you feel when I say sexual assault?
If you don't make them feel that discomfort they will maintain their cowardly comfortable status quo.
I'm sorry that it is upsetting, but "don't feel comfortable" is a let off for them.
Until you stop padding the comfort zone for them they won't do a damn thing and it won't stop being your discomfort and nothing will change. Slap them in the face with what they are doing to you. Take your power over the situation back.
Dr Morton
So how do I word it? xxx
Will Croft
I'm sorry about this, but I am not going to let you keep conceding your power. You are too Important for that. I'll send you a message you can copy and paste.
Will Croft
Hi Mat. I'm not going to go back to Bribie again until CSIRO resolves the fact that they are allowing someone who sexually assaulted me on that site. I refuse to be potentially exposed to my attacker particularly at the site where I was attacked.
Additionally, I won't be at work tomorrow as I have an appointment with the Dr over the continuing psychologically damaging situation at work where I feel I am getting no real support.
Dr Morton
Thank you for the message- I still don't feel comfortable but i do know what you are saying xxx
Will Croft
I know you don't and it tears me apart to be firm with you about this, but the sooner the better. It is important for you to tell the people who should be shouldering this that they have to take their burden and that you are going to accept having it dumped on you again.
You can't carry this burden, CSIRO has to own it and act appropriately.
Dr Morton
I know ... Just c&p it before I board :)
(Errors in the original.)
141 Dr Morton accepted that Mr Croft drafted the text message she sent to Dr Cook. She agreed that she copied and pasted the message drafted by Mr Croft, but said that the allegation remained true.
142 Dr Morton was asked if she had seen the riding crop before she was slapped with it. She said that she had noticed it momentarily in the room while she was setting up tubes. She agreed that she had not mentioned that in her evidence-in-chief. She said that she never saw the riding crop again after the incident.
143 Dr Morton agreed that the sampling day on 16 October 2012 was extremely busy, with double the usual number of tanks. She accepted that there were probably about eight people on deck to do the work.
144 It was suggested that it was virtually impossible that she and Dr Glencross could have been alone in the room. She said that they were alone. It was suggested that people would have been coming and going the whole morning and setting up. She agreed that people were coming and going and setting up, but said that she and Dr Glencross were alone for maybe only a minute or two.
145 Dr Morton said she did not see riding equipment in the back of Lauren Trenkner's car. She denied that she asked to have a look at Ms Trenkner's equipment. She denied that Ms Trenkner showed her the riding equipment.
146 Dr Morton denied that she brought the riding crop from the car into the sampling room. She denied that she started waving the riding crop around like she was riding a horse. She denied that Ms Trenkner started waving the riding crop around in the sampling room, pretending she was riding a horse. She did not recall any type of joking around in relation to the riding crop.
147 It was suggested that Dr Morton took hold of the riding crop and started going around the sampling room hitting people on the buttocks and thigh, with it. She denied this. She denied that she hit Ms Trenkner, Mr Blyth, and a number of other people in the sampling room.
148 Dr Morton maintained that the sample collection day was extremely busy, and a serious day, and there was no light-hearted joking around. It was suggested that Dr Glencross took the riding crop from her and gave her a bit of a slap. She denied that. It was suggested that Dr Glencross said, "That's enough of that. It's time to get back to work". Dr Morton denied that.
149 Dr Morton denied that Dr Glencross then put the riding crop on top of a shelf, saying that he would not be tall enough to reach the top of a cupboard or shelf in the room.
150 Dr Morton said that Dr Glencross had said nothing either before hitting her, or afterwards. She indicated that she also said nothing because she was rather dumbfounded and shocked by the event, and was speechless.
151 Dr Morton was taken to the written Grievance Document she provided to CSIRO on 16 January 2015. She accepted that she had foreshadowed with Ms Davis on 6 November 2014 that she would be preparing that document, and that it was prepared over a period of two months. Dr Morton accepted that Ms Davis asked her to include as much detail as she could. She accepted that her intent was to put down on paper, in as much detail as possible, all the claims she had in relation to her experiences at CSIRO. She accepted that Mr Croft assisted her with the preparation of the Grievance Document and attachments and helped with the proof-reading of the document.
152 Dr Morton confirmed that she felt she had been hit with a riding crop because Dr Glencross was upset with her, as she had corrected him in a comment he made about dominatrixes. Dr Morton said that she was of the view that they were linked, but could not be certain that they were. She acknowledged that she made no mention of any dominatrix discussion in her Grievance Document.
153 Dr Morton was asked about her comment in the Grievance Document that, "Ms Trenkner is a keen equestrienne and carries such equipment in her vehicle". She says she knew that from previous conversations with Ms Trenkner and did not know that from seeing the equipment in her vehicle on that day. She said she assumed that the riding crop that made its way into the sample collection room was Ms Trenkner's, and assumed that it had come from her vehicle.
154 It was pointed out to Dr Morton that she had said in the Grievance Document that "several staff made jokes about its use, but that her evidence suggested that there were no jokes that morning". She said she did not recall any jokes. Dr Morton later said that several staff may have made jokes about its use to help speed up sample collections. Dr Morton did not agree that there was a significant difference between her evidence, and what she said in her Grievance Document about staff making jokes about the riding crop.
155 Dr Morton agreed that she had made no suggestion in the Grievance Document that she was alone with Dr Glencross when he slapped her on the buttocks with the riding crop.
156 Dr Morton maintained that she had not been hitting people, and that she was shocked by Dr Glencross' behaviour.
157 She said that she was not participating in the joking because she took the sample collection days extremely seriously. She said some of the technical staff did make jokes on occasions, but that she did not participate in those jokes.
158 Dr Morton was asked whether her objective in the Grievance Document was to give as much detail as possible. She agreed, but said that it was a task that she found very overwhelming, so she may have forgotten some specifics. She agreed that she had told Mr Croft about the events, and that he had vetted the Grievance Document as well.
159 It was put to Dr Morton that she did not bother to put the discussion about a dominatrix in her Grievance Document. She said that, at the time she made the Grievance Document, she had not made that link. It took some time. One of the consequences of her psychological injury was that her brain did not work in the same way it used to, and sometimes it took time for those links to form, and that was one that occurred later. She said it just dawned on her one day, and she felt stupid for not realising it earlier.
160 Dr Morton said that she had told Mr Croft about the dominatrix discussion at the time she filed the Grievance Document.
161 Dr Morton agreed that she had not included Dr Glencross' question about her sexual preference, the prostitute comment, or the crows-feet comment in her Grievance Document. She said that she had told Mr Croft about each of those events. In relation to the prostitute comment, she said, "No. I apparently forgot that one, as well".
162 Dr Morton accepted that she made no reference to Dr Preston's reference to her as a "hussy" or a "dizzy blonde". She said that, at the time she was drafting the Grievance Document, she was not in the best of psychological conditions. She believed she had told Mr Croft about the "hussy" comment and the "dizzy blonde" comment.
163 She accepted that she made no complaint at all about Dr Cook in the Grievance Document. She said that, at that stage, she was trying to cope with just filing the grievance against Dr Glencross and Dr Preston. She believed that she had told Mr Croft that she was upset about three emails that Dr Cook had sent her.
164 Dr Morton was questioned about her dealings with Dr Glencross after 16 October 2012, the date she alleges he hit her with the riding crop. She was taken to a series of text messages with Dr Cook on the afternoon of 16 October 2012. They included the following:
Dr Morton: Ha ha…Just finished sample collection!! Not too shabby for 48 tanks :)
Dr Cook: That's because the bunny was there. It would have taken days otherwise!
Dr Morton: …Oh & the guys at Bribie are the laziest that the bunny has ever with…but the best part is that bunnikins said I can use my relocation money to fly myself to the uk :)
165 Dr Morton agreed that, the afternoon she was sexually assaulted by her attacker, she was referring to him as "bunnikins". Dr Morton had earlier said that "Bunny" was not necessarily an affectionate name, and was not always meant as a compliment.
166 She agreed that, if Dr Glencross had been angry with her about correcting him about his dominatrix comment, he must have calmed down by the time he agreed that she could use her relocation money to fly to the UK.
167 It was put to Dr Morton that she attended the dinner at the Norman Hotel on 16 October 2012 because she had not been sexually assaulted by Dr Glencross that day. She maintained she had been assaulted, and said she did not have a choice as to whether or not to attend the dinner.
168 It was suggested that Dr Morton decided to raise the alleged dominatrix comment in her outline of oral evidence given on 28 June 2018 because she wanted to give the riding crop incident a sexual flavour. She denied this.
169 Dr Morton agreed that during the dinner on 15 October 2012, she exchanged numerous text messages with Dr Cook between 7.40 pm and 9.27 pm. The exchanges included Dr Morton relaying parts of the conversation at the dinner. It was suggested that if a saucy topic like dominatrixes was discussed, she would have told Dr Cook. Dr Morton responded that would have depended if her phone had any battery, if it had been within her reach, and a number of other factors. She said she may have told Dr Cook in a phone conversation if she called him later. She said she did not know whether she called him, or if her phone had run out of battery.
170 Later, Dr Morton agreed that March 2015 was two months after she had filed her Grievance Document. She said that she did not use the "sexual assault" expression with Mr Casson, but that Mr Casson had used it with her.
171 Dr Morton said that it was expected that the entire senior staff attend the dinner on 16 October 2012. She said that Dr Preston had to leave the dinner early, and he requested that she put her credit card behind the bar and pay for the dinner.
172 It was put to Dr Morton that at the dinner, there was a discussion about a television show, "The Office". She did not agree. She said she had been talking to somebody who was seated to her left. She heard her name. She looked across and said "Sorry?". She said that Dr Glencross then repeated the statement regarding her cleavage and included her name. She said she was shocked, and she had not even been speaking to Dr Glencross prior to that. She said that he singled her out of the blue and made that comment. She did not hear any conversations regarding "The Office".
173 Dr Morton agreed that earlier in her evidence, she said that she did not believe that any other woman at the dinner was wearing a pendant. Under cross-examination, she said she did not specifically recall what any of the other women were wearing that day.
174 Dr Morton had said she went to the bar and bought a bottle of wine. She was asked why she returned to the table if she had just been denigrated. She said that it was her credit card behind the bar that was paying for the dinner, and she did not have the choice to leave early. She said that according to CSIRO policy, the most senior person present had to pay for the dinner and she was the most senior person there. She said that, at that stage, she outranked Dr Cook. When it was put to her, she agreed that Dr Glencross was senior to her.
175 It was put to Dr Morton that she had stayed until 1 am the next morning at the Norman Hotel drinking with Dr Cook and Dr Glencross. She said that Dr Cook was present at the conclusion of the dinner as he walked her home, but she did not recall what time Dr Glencross left, or who was drinking after dinner. She said she highly doubted that Dr Glencross would have been with her until 1 am in the morning, as she knew Dr Glencross had an early morning meeting and assumed that he would have left to prepare for that.
176 Dr Morton denied that at the dinner, she had offered to drive Dr Glencross to the airport the following day. She was taken to a text message exchange with Dr Cook on the morning of 18 October 2012 in which she said, "Meanwhile, bunny refused my lift to the airport & told me to go write my review!". Dr Morton was asked whether, at some point prior to sending that text message on 18 October 2012, she had offered Dr Glencross a lift to the airport. Dr Morton said that on that day, she had informed Dr Glencross that there was a car booked and someone would be available to drive him to the airport, and that he informed Dr her that he would be getting the train. She denied that she was offering to personally drive Dr Glencross to the airport, saying the reference to "my lift" was largely because she did the car bookings and had organised the booking. She said she had organised the lift, so she thought of it as being "mine" in terms of a product she had produced. She said she would have organised one of the other staff members to take him. She denied that Dr Glencross was telling her not to spend time driving him to the airport and that he wanted her to write up her review. She said that she believed that he was telling her not to be labelling samples to send to the laboratory and to write the review.
177 Dr Morton was taken to a chain of text messages she had with Mr David Blyth on 18 September 2012. They included, a text sent by Dr Morton at 8.33 am which read, "Meanwhile I'm at work (will be driving bunny to the airport!) & was up to 1 am drinking with him & Cook! Where is my social, financial & emotional support!!!". Dr Morton was asked whether she was, at that stage, anticipating that she would be personally driving Dr Glencross to the airport. She responded, "No. I can only assume that that's an issue with autocorrect because at 8.33 in the morning I would not have been driving. I would have been attending a meeting". Dr Morton agreed that "him" was a reference to Dr Glencross. She was asked whether, in fact, she, Dr Cook and Dr Glencross were drinking until 1 am. She answered, "There may have been other staff members there as well. I don't know what time the group from Hobart left to go back to their hotel". It was put to Dr Morton that she was quite happy to be drinking until 1 am with Dr Glencross because she knew that she had never been attacked and that he had never denigrated her that night. She denied this.
178 Dr Cook walked Dr Morton home following the dinner. It was put to her that she did not tell Dr Cook that she felt, as a woman, that she should not be subjected to such things. It was also put that she never raised with Dr Cook that she had been sexually assaulted the day before. She maintained that she had.
179 Dr Morton agreed that, in November 2012, she probably spoke to Dr Cook about the riding crop incident. She rejected the suggestion that she described the incident in a light-hearted and joking manner. She agreed that Dr Cook asked if she wanted something done about it and that she indicated that she did not. She did not accept that she told Dr Cook that she had found the riding crop in the boot of Ms Trenkner's car. She agreed that she did not tell Dr Cook there had been a discussion about dominatrixes the night before.
180 Dr Morton agreed that, on 25 November 2012, she sent an email to Dr Glencross, saying:
Dear Prof B
Hope the holidays are going well. We are taking the reduction in the number of emails as a sign you are backing away and are (gasp) relaxing and not working!!
…Enjoy your holidays. The trip for Tassie made me home sick for the UK, so very jealous.
181 Dr Morton agreed that she had shared something personal with Dr Glencross in that email.
182 She agreed that on 9 December 2012, she sent a text message to Mr Blyth, where she said:
Boogie hey. I would take a picture of our booze, but we are all too pissed. Now I am being teased about my slutty Santa bowl!!!…
I think the quote of the night is, 'Fancy a handful of my nuts'.
183 Mr Blyth responded, "I expect to hear a full report of what slutty Santa got up to by Monday". Dr Morton responded:
Bloody annoying, isn't it!!! Hmm...well I think Santa's antics could be construed as sexual harassment. Oh, according to Shaun there may be Elves and a very large present involved.
184 Dr Morton was asked whether she agreed that, within two months of being sexually assaulted and harassed, she was making a joke about sexual harassment. She responded that she was relaying to Mr Blyth what a mutual friend, Shaun, had said about the Santa Bowl. It was pointed out that she had written, "I think Santa's antics could be construed as sexual harassment", expressing her own view. After some prevarication, Dr Morton agreed that she was making a joke that involved sexual harassment, or the concept of sexual harassment, in that text.
185 Dr Morton agreed that on 13 December 2012, she sent a text to Dr Glencross saying "Prof B will be leaving ESP in about 5 minutes. Should be with you about 6.35". He responded, "No worries. Good to go now". She then sent an email saying, "Am here". Dr Morton explained that, when they were taking cars to Bribie Island, they would text him on the way to collect him so he could be out at the front of his house so as not to disturb his family.
186 Dr Morton agreed that, on 21 February 2013, she sent a text message to Dr Glencross saying "Out the front". She agreed that it was another reference to her going with Dr Glencross to Bribie Island.
187 On 18 April 2013, Dr Glencross sent a text to Dr Morton saying, "Train is delayed. Will be 10 minutes late". Dr Morton replied, "No worries. I will get the car and meet you out the front". He responded, "I will be needing my coffee and B&E muffin first". She responded, "Atkins says no to muffin ". He said, "But Glencross says yes to muffin". Dr Morton agreed that, on that day, and on the other days where she referred in text messages to picking Dr Glencross up, she would have been driving in a CSIRO car and picking him up to drive to Bribie Island.
188 Dr Morton was asked whether she would have been alone with Dr Glencross in the car on each occasion. Dr Morton responded, "Not necessarily". She was asked whether, on occasions, Dr Morton picked up Dr Glencross and drove the two of them to Bribie Island. She answered, "There may have been occasions, yes". She continued "I don't know specifically which dates".
189 Dr Morton was taken to a work diary entry for 13 December 2012, where she had written, "6.30 am pick up Brett". That entry was followed by an address. She agreed that it was a prompt for her to pick up Dr Glencross and drive him to Bribie Island that morning. She was asked whether that involved her being alone in the car with Dr Glencross. She answered "Possibly", but went onto say that it would be unusual that only two people from the eco-sciences precinct attended Bribie Island, and she did not know whether other people might have come with her. She agreed that if she was picking up other people she probably have noted it in her diary, but said it would depend on how frequently she picked them up and whether she knew where they lived. She said that if she picked up somebody like Dr Wade, she would not necessarily have noted his address, and if Dr Wade, or other people, had met her at the eco-sciences precinct at a particular time, she may not have noted that. It was suggested to Dr Morton that, if she was going to pick up Dr Wade, she would make a note that she needed to pick him up, and a note of the time. She said that would depend largely on what had been organised. She did not agree that it is more likely than not that she travelled to Bribie Island alone with Dr Glencross on 13 December 2012.
190 It was suggested to Dr Morton that on at least one occasion some months after 16 October 2012, she got the riding crop again and started flicking people in the sampling room, including Mr Blyth. It was suggested that she was doing it in a playful manner and she said something like, "Hurry up. Let's have a coffee". She denied this.
191 Dr Morton was asked again whether there were a number of times in late 2012 and early 2013 when she would have driven Dr Glencross alone to Bribie Island. She responded, "There may have been times that we were alone. I can't specifically recall who was in the CSIRO vehicle occasion that I drove to Bribie Island".
192 Dr Morton agreed that on 14 January 2013, she sent a text message to Mr Croft saying, "Had a chat with Brett. Got a bit more of an idea about the year and tasks, so that was awesome". She agreed that Mr Croft responded saying:
I am happy you were able to have a good chat with Brett about the future plans. It must be a good feeling, relief, to have more clarity. That's very good news.
193 Dr Morton agreed that in her work diary for 20 January 2013, she had noted, "Brett re lift to Bribie". She agreed that was another notation to pick up Dr Glencross.
194 Dr Morton was taken to her, "Position Details Document". She agreed that the document referred to attracting external funding and generating research papers for publication in quality journals. She agreed that these were important parts of her role.
195 Dr Morton agreed that she had referred, in her outline of evidence, to an email from Dr Glencross saying, "It's a girl this time, Sime", that she said was inappropriate in terms of its sexual content. She agreed that she had instructed her solicitors to put the email into the court book. She was taken to a chain of previous emails where Dr Glencross had mistaken a man called "Maxime" for a female. She was asked if she could understand why Dr Glencross had said, "It's a girl this time". Dr Morton responded that, "I am not really sure why several months later they would still be discussing the gender of an intern. I thought they would be more concerned with their CV".
196 Dr Morton agreed that she had spoken to Dr Glencross at a very early stage about the fact that she had a partner in Oxfordshire. When asked whether Dr Glencross knew that Dr Morton was heterosexual prior to 26 April 2012, she responded that she did not believe that Dr Glencross knew the gender of her partner. She said she did not generally refer to her partners by gender. When asked whether she never dropped into using a "he" or "his" when discussing her partner with Dr Glencross, she said, "I may have. I may have also used 'our' and 'we'", depending on the situation". She agreed that she may have talked about her partner by using, for example, his first name.
197 When asked whether Dr Glencross had ever indicated any sexual interest in Dr Morton, she responded, "I don't know how to answer that, because I was not looking for any, nor would I have been receptive or focussed on any, and I am not in is mind". She was asked whether she had noticed anything, and she responded, "I didn't notice anything, nor was I looking for anything".
198 Dr Morton was asked about her allegation concerning the discussion about an Asian student at James Cook University. It was put to her that she had asked Dr Glencross about what type of woman he liked. She denied this. She said that she had told Mr Croft about the incident, but that was not included in her Grievance Document. She agreed that the first time she raised this as allegation against Dr Glencross was when she filed her amended statement of claim, six years later.
199 Dr Morton maintained that she did mention the incident at James Cook University to Dr Cook. She said that she wanted Dr Cook to do something about that complaint. She said that, by January 2016, when she lodged her Grievance Document, nothing had been done about anything that she complained about. She agreed that she could have had a grievance against Dr Cook at that point in time. When it was put to her that she had put nothing in her Grievance Document about Dr Cook's conduct, she said, "In that grievance, no". She then agreed that there was only one grievance she filed. She accepted that she intended to cover everything to the best of her memory within that Grievance Document.
200 Dr Morton said that the crows-feet comment was made in the presence of Marty Philips, and the prostitute comment was made when Dr Glencross and Dr Morton were alone. Dr Morton was taken to the allegation in paragraph 1(A)(I)(b) of the amended statement of claim that, on 2 May 2012, Dr Glencross referred to the Dr Morton as a prostitute, referring to her dress and appearance. She was asked whether the comment was made in relation to the dress she was wearing at the time. She responded that she did not believe it was, and that she was wearing jeans at the conference. She accepted that the paragraph did not talk about a dress that she owned, but what she was wearing at the time. She agreed that it was pleaded that the comment was made in the presence of Mr Phillips, even though she said in Court that it was not made in his presence. She said she could only assume that it was an error that had slipped through the cracks. She denied that she was saying this now because she knew that Mr Phillips would give evidence in the case disputing a version of the facts. She said that she had no idea what Mr Phillips would say, but then accepted that she had looked at the outlines of evidence filed by CSIRO.
201 Dr Morton agreed that, in her Grievance Document of 16 January 2016, she did not mention the prostitute allegation. She agreed that the first time she raised the allegation was when she filed her amended statement of claim on 10 October 2018. She said she told Dr Cook about the comment at the time.
202 Dr Morton said that she told Mr Croft about the crows-feet comment that Dr Glencross made, but had not included that allegation in the Grievance Document. She agreed that it was first raised in her amended statement of claim. She said that she had told Dr Cook about the comment, and that she made references about crows-feet, in emails in reference to the comment.
203 Dr Morton was taken to an email she sent to Dr Wade, and copied to Louisa Valparto and Dr Glencross, in which she referred to a photograph of herself saying, "Naturally I look shocking in all of them, but he said he would Photoshop out my crows-feet". She said that the people in the email were all well aware of the crows-feet comment and that this was a pointed reference to it. It was put to Dr Morton that she was comfortable with, and frequently commented about her crows-feet. She responded that it was a pointed comment. She agreed that she had never met Ms Valparto, and had only spoken to her via email.
204 Dr Morton was also taken to a text message to Dr Cook on 13 February 2012, where she said, "crows-feet must have been the give-away". She was taken to an email from Dr Cook to her, on 13 February 2012 where he said, "Is that crows-feet?". She was also taken to another email from Dr Cook, where he said, "Ryan looks all of 10 years old". Dr Morton responded, "Maybe I need to give him my crows-feet". She denied that this was part of her playful banter and the way that she would talk about herself.
205 Dr Morton was asked about "hussy" comment, which she alleged Dr Preston had made. She agreed that there was no reference to that allegation in her Grievance Document. She said Mr Croft did not compile her Grievance Document, but assisted her with its preparation. She agreed that she would have mentioned it to Mr Croft before the date of the document.
206 Dr Morton was taken to her email to Dr Cook sent on 30 October 2012, where she said, "Oh, and the Pres said Ian is a gazillionaire right before he called me a hussy". Dr Morton said she had already informed Dr Cook of what had happened. She agreed that there was nothing in the email that suggested that the allegation was something they had discussed earlier. She denied that her intention in the email was to give the impression that Dr Preston calling her a hussy was related to his dealings with Ian, the gazillionaire. She said that Dr Preston's comment had been very left field.
207 It was pointed out to Dr Morton that her outline of evidence said, "Dr Preston said to the applicant in the presence of Dallas Donovan, you're just a hussy", referring to Dr Morton interacting with Mr Donovan. She agreed that the hussy comment had nothing to do with the way that she related to Mr Donovan.
208 Dr Morton denied that she had been trying to paint a picture of CSIRO trying to use her as some sort of honey-trap to get funds. When she was asked, "The idea that everyone egging you on to use your charms to get funding is complete nonsense, isn't it". She answered, "No, it's not".
209 Dr Morton agreed that she had not secured any external funding in the time that she was with CSIRO. She said that there were a number of reasons for this.
210 She agreed that she could not point to any email communication with Dr Preston that was inappropriate at a sexual level. She agreed that she had looked at the email chains between herself and Dr Preston and provided those emails to her solicitors.
211 Dr Morton was asked whether she had a relationship with Dr Cook where they would share confidences. She accepted that was the case for some of the time. She denied that they would share jokes of a sexual nature.
212 It was put to Dr Morton that she had never complained about any of the emails Dr Cook sent to her. She said that she did speak to him verbally about the emails. When asked why she did not respond with a return email saying that the emails were inappropriate, she said that there was a lot of pressure in CSIRO to fit in with the existing culture, and she tried to deflect as many inappropriate comments as she could, and get on with the job. When asked why that meant she was able to speak to him face to face, but not via email, she said that it was far more casual to be able to say to somebody, "I don't think that when you are hiring candidates that certain things should be sent around in email chains", rather than sending a formal email to everybody in the chain.
213 It was suggested to Dr Morton that on 7 May 2012, she had mentioned, in an informal way, to Dr Cook, that Dr Glencross had made a comment about her being a prostitute in the context of what she was wearing. She said that the comment was not about what she was wearing, but about what she said she could have worn.
214 Dr Morton was asked about the "surf porn under desk email" from Dr Cook on 26 July 2012. She denied that she had discussed with Dr Cook suspicions that an employee had been surfing porn on the internet. She agreed that they had discussed that the employee had been rorting ordering systems in order to gain freebies from the client and had been erroneously filling out his time sheets on weekends. She denied that her response to the comment from Dr Cook, "Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha", was her participating in the joke. She agreed she made no complaint about this email in her Grievance Document.
215 Dr Morton was questioned about the "dizzy blonde" allegation. She agreed it dated back to 9 August 2012, but that the first time it was raised was in the amended statement of claim, six years later. She agreed that she had sent an email to Dr Cook on 9 August 2012, saying, "PS Has Nigel told you what my nickname is? First rule of nicknaming, you have to tell the person!" She agreed that she had never heard Dr Preston address her by a nickname. She agreed Dr Cook's response was, "I think it's dizzy blonde????". It was put to Dr Morton that Dr Cook was telling her, "I am not even sure". She said she did not know if that was the intent of the question marks, but it could have been. Dr Morton agreed that her response was, "It wouldn't surprise me, the blonde bit".
216 Dr Morton was asked about the email from Dr Cook of 10 September 2012, attaching the table showing how people in science perceived each other. She agreed that this was not raised in her grievance, and was first raised in her amended statement of claim, nearly six years later. She agreed that her response in the email chain was:
Can I have an undergraduate too, please? Except I would like to request mine from the 2013 fireman's calendar. Ta.
217 She denied that she was participating in a joke. She said she was making a pointed comment.
218 Dr Morton was asked about Dr Cook's email of 12 September 2012, which said, "Is this what you mean by learing?", and attached a photograph of a woman with crossed legs. It was suggested that she and Dr Cook were, around this time, discussing the topic of where the line is drawn between people watching and people leering. When it was suggested that the email was sent as a joke, she answered, "No". She agreed that the first time she complained about this email was in her outline of evidence on 28 June 2018. It was put to Dr Morton that her evidence, that she was "upset and confused" about this email was a lie. She denied this. She said that there was no context to the email arriving and that it was never discussed again.
219 Dr Morton was taken to the email from Dr Cook of 16 October 2012, saying, "Imagine Nick and Brett in mankinis singing". The "Bunny Lovin'" lyrics were attached to that email. Dr Morton said that she found the email to be inappropriate and that it was unexpected. She accepted that she responded, "I owe you a coffee for that one!!! At dinner with the Bunny et al 3 Hendricks in and counting".
220 Dr Morton was taken to text messages between her and Dr Cook exchanged on 21 October 2012, five days after the mankini email. Dr Morton sent photographs of gingerbread men, which she described as "ninjabreads", to Dr Cook. She said that she and some friends had baked ninjabreads and that they had been decorated. One of the ninjabreads in the photograph was decorated as if it was wearing a mankini. The caption accompanying the photo she sent to Dr Cook was, "Recognise this one?".
221 Dr Morton accepted that, the following week, she brought the leftover ninjabreads into the office. She agreed she gave one to Dr Wade. She agreed that Dr Cook's previous email had talked about the idea of Dr Wade being in a mankini. It was put to her that she said she had found this highly inappropriate, but, within a couple of weeks, she was handing Dr Wade a ninjabread man in a mankini. Dr Morton's answer was, "The sexual nature of the song was inappropriate. I don't believe that a mankini as a piece of clothing is inappropriate".
222 Dr Morton was asked whether she handed Dr Wade a ninja gingerbread man in a mankini. She said:
I handed Dr Wade a ninjabread. What it was wearing, I do not know. I believe there will be a picture of it though.
223 Dr Morton was asked what she meant by her comment, "Recognise this one". Her answer was, "It appeared to be dressed in a gold mankini". Dr Morton agreed that she sent an email to Dr Cook on 22 October 2012 attaching a photograph of Dr Wade holding up a ninjabread. She agreed that the ninjabread had a mankini on.
224 It was put to Dr Morton that she had made no complaints concerning Dr Glencross of a sexual nature to Mr Brewer. Dr Morton responded that she recounted many of Dr Glencross' behaviours to Mr Brewer.
225 Dr Morton was taken to Dr Cook's email of 7 November 2012, where he attached a photograph of his "top two candidates". It was put to Dr Morton that she was participating in a joke. She denied that she was and said that she was trying to change the subject. She indicated that her comments, including, "Not suitable for those with no cleavage, so clearly CSIRO needs to fund my boob job", were sarcastic and pointed comments. She said that the reference to "no cleavage" was a reference to the comment Dr Glencross had previously made about pendants.
226 It was put to Dr Morton that Dr Cook's email of 8 November 2012 where he said, "mainly titty bars!", was understood by her to be a joke. She denied this.
227 Dr Morton was asked about Dr Cook's email when he referred to his system of classifying people's personalities and referred to someone as a "bitch". It was put to Dr Morton that she told Dr Cook that she liked this characterisation of the person as a "bitch". She denied this.
228 Dr Morton agreed that, in a text message to Dr Cook on 20 November 2012, she referred to Dr Glencross being unhappy and "jumping up and down about my barra health project and external money or more correctly lack of external money". She accepted that it was an ongoing issue that she was not getting any external money for the barramundi health project.
229 Dr Morton accepted that she had approximately 32 trips to Bribie Island in 2013.
230 Dr Morton was asked about the email from Dr Cook which ended with, "bend me over and slap me with a cold barramundi!". It was put to her that she had made up her evidence that she considered this to be a reference to the riding crop incident. She denied that she had made it up. She was taken to an email exchange two days later with Dr Cook, where they were exchanging light-hearted banter about drinking gin. She accepted that they had a friendly exchange, even though she said she was upset by his email.
231 Dr Morton was taken to a text message from Mr Croft of 15 May 2003, where he said "your thoughts when you are coming home to me are about the scales", and "the one thing I know stresses you out the most". She accepted that he was saying that the most stressful thing in her life was worrying about her weight. She was asked whether that was the truth of the situation, and denied that it was.
232 Dr Morton accepted that on 1 July 2013, she sent a text message to Mr Nicholas Bourne indicating that Dr Glencross was going to Bribie Island, "in the car with me".
233 Dr Morton agreed that she commenced consulting a general practitioner, Dr Tucker, on 30 March 2013, about issues she was having with anxiety. It was suggested that she told him the principle reason for her anxiety was that she was worried about her weight. She said she did not believe it was the principal reason, but believed it was one of the reasons. She also told him that she was finding work stressful. When it was put that she had never raised with Dr Tucker that she had been sexually assaulted, she answered "Not specifically. No.".
234 Dr Morton agreed that she had asked Dr Tucker for a referral to a psychologist, Angela Pavlov. She agreed that she had significant food issues at that time. In mid-October 2012, she started having significant gastrointestinal issues with food, bloating, constipation and other issues. She agreed that she had told Dr Tucker that she had been morbidly obese and was 160 kg some years ago. She had undergone a lap banding procedure in 2007 and plastic surgery some years later.
235 Dr Tucker issued a medical certificate indicating that he had seen her on three occasions and that she had voiced some anxiety about work stressors contributing to her anxiety. She accepted that she had previously received a low dose anti-anxiety medication in the lead up to moving to Dubai for a two to three month period.
236 Dr Morton agreed that on 19 April 2013, she had a meeting with Mr Bourne and Dr Tony Worby. At the meeting, she said she felt that Dr Glencross had unreasonable expectations of staff. She said there were a number of discussions that she and Mr Bourne had with Dr Worby about Dr Glencross. She said that she raised complaints of a sexual nature with Dr Worby at a later meeting.
237 Dr Morton agreed that, between 30 April 2013 and 7 September 2013, she consulted Ms Pavlov. She agreed that she spoke to Ms Pavlov about anxiety she was having regarding her weight. She spoke to Ms Pavlov about some general and some specific work issues. She said that she spoke to Ms Pavlov about issues with Dr Glencross changing goals on projects and the stress that was causing and other similar issues. She agreed that she had ten consultations with Ms Pavlov. When asked whether she raised any matters with Ms Pavlov regarding Dr Glencross of a sexual nature, she said that without seeing notes, she did not specifically recall whether she had mentioned the cleavage comments or the riding crop incident, or if she said that he was just generally sexist.
238 Dr Morton accepted that she told Ms Pavlov that she had been judged negatively in the past because of her weight. She accepted that she told her that she had been bullied as a child because of her weight. She told Ms Pavlov that she was angry that her gastric band was not working, and that she had difficulty controlling her worry and ruminations regarding her weight and body image.
239 Dr Morton told Ms Pavlov that she was experiencing stress because her partner was drinking every night, she had been made redundant, and had brought a grievance regarding bullying allegations. Dr Morton accepted that she did not make any allegation against Dr Glencross of a sexual nature during the ten sessions that she had with Ms Pavlov.
240 Dr Morton was asked whether she had invited Dr Glencross to a party in September 2003, to celebrate Mr Croft's redundancy from CSIRO. Dr Morton said that she believed she would have invited the entire group, but did not recall exactly who was invited. When taken to her email of 6 September 2013, she agreed that an invitation had been sent to Dr Glencross. She agreed that she would have consulted with Mr Croft as to who should be invited. She said she normally sent invitations to most of the people in the group, although there were a few people she had forgotten. When asked whether she agreed that she did not need to invite Dr Glencross unless she wanted to, she answered that she used to invite most of the group and it was set up as an email list on her computer. She agreed that, within a year of her sexual assault, she and her partner had invited her attacker into their home.
241 Dr Morton was taken to a text message exchange with Dr Glencross on 12 September 2013. He had slept through his alarm and asked Dr Morton to swing passed his home to pick him up. Later, she said, "Out the front with coffee :)".
242 Dr Morton accepted that, on 21 November 2013, she sent a text message to Mr Croft saying, "Just dropping Brett off. Home soon." She later sent another message to Mr Croft about a restaurant saying, "Poppolo is good, according to Brett".
243 Dr Morton agreed that she had a Christmas party at end of 2013, and that she had invited Dr Glencross to the home that she and Mr Croft shared. Dr Morton agreed that she sent an email to a number of persons, including Dr Glencross, on 25 November 2013, advising of a change of date for her Christmas party. Then she referred to having a "mega-blonde moment" by double-booking.
244 Dr Morton stated that, in 2013, she was downsizing her wardrobe and the way she did that included through consignment stores and selling clothes on eBay.
245 Dr Morton maintained that in late 2013, she complained about matters of a sexual nature to Dr Wendy Barron. She agreed that she sent an email to Dr Cook on 3 December 2013 referring to an interesting conversation with Dr Barron. She agreed that the email referred to a discussion about Dr Worby mentoring and coaching Dr Glencross and other matters, but made no reference to any conduct of a sexual nature by Dr Glencross. Dr Morton said that this was not an email discussing the entirety of what she had spoken to Dr Barron about. It was put to Dr Morton that if she was intending to raise matters of a sexual nature with Dr Barron, she would have told Dr Cook that. She said that was not necessarily so, as the discussion she had with Dr Barron covered a number of aspects of Dr Glencross' behaviour, not all of which were discussed with Dr Cook in that email.
246 Dr Morton said that the reason she stayed at the dinner on 17 October 2012 until the end was that Dr Preston had specifically asked her to pay for that dinner on her work credit card.
247 Dr Morton accepted that in 2013, she made some 25 trips to Bribie Island. She agreed that on 7 February 2014, she had sent an email to Dr Glencross about various items of work. Dr Glencross responded on 25 February 2014 saying, inter alia:
Profile needs some work. Need to focus on what YOU do, not what the group around you does. Most of those claims are actually my work, not yours?
…
Student projects isn't this your core role here though? So if we farm these bits out to students then what do we need Katherine Morton for?
248 Dr Morton accepted that she went with Dr Glencross to Bribie Island on 27 February 2014.
249 She agreed that she was off work between 31 March 2014 and 15 April 2014 with surgery for a twisted and perforated bowel.
250 She was taken to Dr Cook's email of 19 March 2014, saying, "Richard can't move past [an applicant]" and that Richard had pinned her picture up in the office. It was put that all the exchanges, including her own, were simply attempts at humour. Dr Morton said, "There is humour in these exchanges. Yes. You will also note that none of the humour of mine has anything to do with a sexual reference".
251 Dr Morton was taken to a chain of emails between her and Dr Cook on 4 April 2014. In an email, Dr Morton said:
I have discovered that cyclists have a phrase, bonking. Which seems quite different to the reproductive biologists' usage. This made me giggle uncontrollably, drug induced, and now my abdo hurts.
252 Dr Morton said that "bonking" was a term used in cycling. She agreed that she was also raising the word which otherwise referred to having sex. Dr Morton said that the reason she brought this up with Dr Cook was that he was an avid cyclist and she thought it was quite amusing that cyclists had adopted a word that clearly had other connotations.
253 Dr Morton was taken to an email she sent to Dr Cook and Dr Coman following the role clarification meeting where she said that Dr Preston had called her in and suggested that she think about where her career was heading and where she wanted it to head. Amongst other things, she said that she was unable to progress the scientific side of her career within the aquaculture nutrition sphere. She said that the only two options that would allow her to progress her career would be for Dr Glencross to carve off an area, for her to work in and make her own or focussing more on developing her management skills". She said that the second option was her preference.
254 Dr Morton was taken to her annual performance agreement for 2013/2014, where she explained that she had developed three project proposals, but that the economic climate had meant that no funding body had been able to meet the costs of the projects and they remained unfunded.
255 Dr Morton wrote an email to Dr Glencross, Dr Cook and others on 25 July 2014, referring to surgery and issues she had with infections, wound healing, and mobility. She indicated that she would work from home and return to the office around 11 August 2014.
256 On 26 August 2014, Dr Glencross sent Dr Morton an email telling her not to get too distracted on operational things, and saying that they needed to have her focussed on getting some tangibles and outputs. She agreed that he referred to external funding and publications and reports.
257 Dr Morton agreed that, by September 2014, she was experiencing anxiety. She denied that the biggest issue for her, in terms of her anxiety, was her fear of putting on weight. She accepted that she feared going back to being morbidly obese. She said that when she started having gastrointestinal issues, she suddenly started to gain large amounts of weight - three to five kilograms overnight.
258 Dr Morton agreed that she sent text messages to Mr Croft on 1 September 2014 where she referred to being in a bad place with the bloating and her weight.
259 She was asked about her meeting with Dr Preston on 9 September 2014. She maintained that Dr Preston said there was a project that required a Level 3 Lab Technician, that they did not have one, that she was available, so she had to do that work. She said that in her Grievance Document, she had raised this allegation in the context that Dr Preston had said that the lab work was at Bribie Island and that she needed to assure him that her health was up to it, in reference to travelling there. She agreed that there was no reference to this allegation in her further amended statement of claim, or her outline of evidence. She agreed that, at the meeting, she was told that the project was the Huon project.
260 In an email to Dr Cook, Dr Morton said, "Any chance you could fill me in about the project tomorrow at Bribie? Nigel has already asked me if I had made a decision about it". It was put that the way she described it was not as a "take it or leave it" type of proposition. Dr Morton said that, at that stage, she had received no details about the project, and the choice she had essentially had been given from Dr Preston was to take the project, or become vulnerable to redundancy.
261 Dr Morton was taken to an email she sent on 19 October 2014 to Dr Preston and Dr Cook. In that email, she said that she still considered management to be the direction in which to pursue her long-term career and that the best course for developing her career was an MBA.
262 A meeting was organised with Dr Preston and Dr Cook for 22 October 2014. Dr Morton agreed that Dr Preston may have said, "There is no precedent for CSIRO for such a request to be approved". She agreed that Dr Preston said that an MBA would be a distraction to her science. She denied that he said that an MBA would not be appropriate for the role that she was currently performing, that CSIRO needed her to continue concentrating on the job she had been hired for, and that she needed to be focussing on scientific research. Dr Morton accepted that Dr Preston said that she had not achieved the science outputs in agriculture and nutrition, and that she had a low level of publications. She maintained that Dr Preston said that she did not have any scientific ideas. She accepted that Dr Cook said that what they needed to do, as managers, was to help her move to externally funded projects. She agreed that Dr Preston was concerned that she was under-allocated, and said that they would look for further ways to use her skills. She denied that Dr Preston said that, if they could not assist her to realise her potential, they would be having a different conversation in 18 months' time. She denied that Dr Cook said, "Is there anything more we can do to assist you health-wise?".
263 Following that meeting, Dr Morton sent an email to Dr Preston, copied to Dr Cook, on 25 October 2014. In that email, she said that, in her time at CSIRO, she had been subjected to behaviours that were unacceptable, referring, as examples, to the riding crop incident and the cleavage comment. Dr Morton agreed that she referred only to those two events. She was asked whether she agreed that she had not pursued those two allegations. Dr Morton's response was, "No. Beyond telling Dr Cook of those, I had not formally pursued them". It was put to Dr Morton that she had not described the riding crop incident as a sexual assault, did not say that Dr Glencross was involved, and did not mention that the night before there was a discussion about dominatrixes.
264 Dr Morton denied that after the meeting on 22 October 2014, Dr Cook told her that she would initially be doing work at less than a Level 6 level, but would eventually be running the project. She said that Dr Cook said that initially, she would be doing work at a Level 3 or Level 4 level, and that until the Huon project had been officially signed off, the exact path of the project was unknown. She said that at no time did Dr Cook mention leaving the project to her.
265 On 28 October 2014, there was an exchange of text messages with Mr Croft where there was a reference to her dispute with Dr Glencross about the editing of the manuscript. She agreed that Mr Croft had said:
Go to HR with the emails and inform them of everything. Then when they tell you to bring the topic up with him send the whole thing through to Nigel. Let him know you have been to HR, and ask him what he is going to in relation to Brett's appalling treatment of you.
266 Dr Morton agreed that nowhere in the exchange did she or Mr Croft talk about her being the victim of a sexual assault by Dr Glencross.
267 Dr Morton agreed that there was a meeting on 29 October 2014 involving her, Dr Cook and Dr Glencross after the manuscript dispute had come to a head. She said that Dr Cook said that she and Dr Glencross would not be attending meetings without a third person present and that they would not be working together in the future. She accepted that Dr Cook saw her privately at the end of the meeting and reassured her of her value and importance to CSIRO. She accepted that was the end of her direct dealings with Dr Glencross.
268 Dr Morton was asked about her meeting on 30 October 2014 with Ms Sturton. It was put to Dr Morton that she made no complaint of inappropriate sexual conduct about Dr Glencross. She said that she believed she told Ms Sturton that he was both rude and sexist. She agreed that she made no complaint about Dr Preston or Dr Cook at that point.
269 Dr Morton agreed that, at her meeting on 6 November 2014 with Ms Sturton and Ms Davis, she did not raise any allegations of a sexual nature. Dr Morton agreed she did not feel that would have been appropriate to raise in a coffee shop where there were a lot of CSIRO staff.
270 Dr Morton said that, at her meeting with Dr Lehnert on 26 October 2014, she mentioned the cleavage comment made by Dr Glencross. She accepted that she may not have mentioned anything else of a sexual nature.
271 Dr Morton agreed that, on 24 November 2014, she was successful in securing a team leader role for the Agriculture flagship, with a 10% allocation. Dr Cook and Dr Elliot were on the panel that appointed her.
272 Dr Morton agreed that the Huon project commenced its first phase on 25 November 2014 and that her initial allocation was 50%. She maintained that in December 2014, Dr Cook made the comment about taking a blonde to Tasmania. She agreed that she made no allegations at all in the Grievance Document concerning Dr Cook. She said that she had told Mr Croft, prior to lodging the Grievance Document, that the comment had been made. She agreed that this allegation was not in her original claim in the Federal Circuit Court, and that it was raised for the first time in her amended statement of claim filed on 6 March 2018.
273 Dr Morton agreed that on 3 December 2014, she had an exchange of text messages with Dr Cook, where he said, "Do you want to meet at 7.45 and head to the Jam Bar for breakfast", to which she responded, "Sounds good :)". She agreed that there was no hint from her exchanges with Dr Cook the day after she felt quite disgusted and humiliated, that she was upset with him. She said, "Not in the text messages, no".
274 Dr Morton was asked about her allegation that just prior to the trip to Huon Agriculture, Dr Preston told her to make friends anyway she could. She agreed the allegation was not made in her amended statement of claim, or in her outlines of evidence.
275 Dr Morton was asked about her meeting with Ms Davis on 5 December 2014, which Mr Croft attended. She said:
We discussed the need to put everything in writing, and the documentation. I explained I had a lot on as team leader, and with the Huon work, which is why it would not be done until January. We then - we discussed a number of issues. The upshot of that meeting was that I would put the documentation in writing which is what led to the documentation that was submitted in January.
276 Dr Morton was taken to some of her Facebook posts for 2014. On 5 January 2014, she posted:
Seriously productive day today. Meal prep organised, washing done - well two loads to go, new sheets on the bed, eBay listings done, took advantage of 100 free listings, eBay parcels posted and hair washed. Now to put my feet up and have a well-deserved coffee before packing 10 kgs of plates that just sold on eBay.
277 Another post, made on 8 January 2014, stated:
Had a wonderful shopping trip this morning. Got the most amazing haul including a few designer treats and a book I have been after. Some days you are really in the right place at the right time.
278 On 12 January 2014, Dr Morton posted:
Another super productive day. Washing done, eBay, other parcels packed, boxes gone through, charity shop donations organised, cake for the sick in the oven, and about to start on home-made pate. Still to do ironing, sorting out three more boxes, picking a new hairstyle.
279 On 9 February 2014, Dr Morton posted:
Lazy Sunday morning. Coffees consumed and antique furniture being polished while listening to ABC Radio. Life doesn't get any better.
280 Dr Morton agreed that, in early 2015, she started an MBA at the University of Queensland. Dr Morton was asked whether she had tried to give Dr Rees the impression that the MBA was a pretty easy course. Dr Morton denied that she tried to give the impression that it was an easy course, but said that, in comparison to her PhD studies, she found it easier.
281 Dr Morton said that there were a number of students in the MBA course she spoke to who did not have university degrees. She denied that she told Dr Rees that the course was largely attended by people who did not have undergraduate degrees. She said she did not know why Dr Rees used the words "largely attended by". Dr Morton agreed that the University of Queensland had represented its MBA program as ranked No. 1 in Australia and the Asia Pacific, and that it was ranked 16th worldwide by The Economist in 2017.
282 Dr Morton denied that, by telling Dr Rees that, "exams were open book and there was use of a calculator allowed", she was trying to create an impression that the course was easy. Earlier, she had been asked whether she could understand that, if the MBA was quite demanding, it could say something about her work capacity. She said, "Yes, and with respect, one of my MBA subjects, the final exam was a 30 multiple-choice question exam". She continued, "well you are trying to claim that an MBA course is demanding and I don't consider that a 30 multiple-choice question exam is particularly demanding". She was asked whether that was the entire mark for the course, and responded that it was the final exam for the course.
283 Dr Morton was taken to the Course Information for the 12 subjects comprising the MBA course and asked whether those descriptions were consistent with her experience. She said that all the courses but two, Financial Management and Integrated Strategic Analysis, were inconsistent with her experience.
284 The assessment for the subject Financial Management was described in the Course Information as consisting of a team assignment, a mid-semester exam, and a final exam. The subject required attendance at a series of seminars and tutorials, and required various readings to be done. Each of the exams was 120 minutes long. The assessment for the subject Integrated Strategic Analysis consisted of a case study, a presentation, and peer assessment. The subject required reading of various articles and book chapters.
285 For each subject in the MBA course, a grade of 5 (a credit) required, "Demonstrates substantial understanding of fundamental concepts of the field of study and ability to apply these concepts in a variety of contexts; develops or adapts convincing arguments and provides coherent justification; communicates information and ideas clearly and fluently in terms of the conventions of the discipline". A grade of 6 (a distinction) required, additionally, "Frequent evidence of originality and defining and analysing issues or problems and in creating solutions; uses a level, style or means of communication appropriate to the discipline and the audience". A grade of 7 (high distinction) required, additionally, "Consistent evidence of substantial originality and insight in identifying, generating and communicating competing arguments, perspectives or problem solving approaches; critically evaluates problems, their solutions and implications".
286 Dr Morton agreed that, in a Facebook post on 31 March 2015, she said:
So, I have been selected to attend to the "Emerging Leaders Forum" to be held in Adelaide later in April.
Naturally, its squeezed a Management Group assignment (presentation) on the Tuesday night (when I should be flying out), the Strategic HR in-class presentations and exam, as well as Anzac day…
On the upside, it's in Adelaide :D
287 Dr Morton agreed that she posted on 11 April 2015:
Another week survived!
Now to the weekend: two-full days of 'Strategic HR Management', a night in the lab with my amoebae & a lot of thinking about work…
288 Dr Morton was asked whether she was effectively working and studying seven days a week. She agreed that was the case for some weeks, but said the university subjects were not on every weekend. She explained that on the particular weekend referred to in her post, she would go into the lab, check on the amoebae, walk to the university, attend classes from 9 or 10 to about 4, walk back, go to the lab, check on the amoebae and then walk home.
289 Dr Morton was taken to Facebook posts for 13 April 2015, where she referred to "12+ hr days at uni and work over the weekend", and to "Early as in to finish work after 12 hours instead of the 15+ you were anticipating". She was taken to her Facebook post of 14 November 2015. She was in Hawaii and said, inter alia, "We are having an awesome time!"
290 Dr Morton accepted that, during the six months when she consulted a psychologist, Dr Van Vuuren, she did not raise any issue of a sexual nature as being a source of stress or anxiety. She said she was seeing Dr Van Vuuren for food issues. She was seeing Dr Hand, another psychologist, primarily for the work issues. She mentioned and specifically raised, the sexual issues with Dr Hand, rather than Dr Van Vuuren, in the period from 27 November 2014 to 14 May 2015. She said that she mentioned to Dr Van Vuuren that there were stressors at work, but did not go into great details about those stressors because they were being dealt with by Dr Hand.
291 It was suggest the Dr Morton had not begun seeing Dr Hand until 3 March 2015, so that there were four sessions she had with Dr Van Vuuren prior to seeing Dr Hand. She accepted that. She agreed that on 14 May 2015 she told Dr Van Vuuren that her work stress had reduced and her coping was improving.
292 Dr Morton agreed that on about 12 May 2015, she told Dr Hand that she was now back at work and feeling in more of control of her situation.
293 She agreed that her Facebook post of 30 May 2015 showed that she had been for a "Lazy 10.5 km walk", and that she was "getting back to her uni assignments". On the next day, she recorded that she had, "A relaxing 7 km stroll to a festival and then went home to her assignment". She described it as "An absolutely perfect day!".
294 Dr Morton agreed that she and Mr Croft went on a holiday to Tasmania on 6 June 2015. She agreed that in her evidence-in-chief, she had said that, as at June 2015, she was feeling stressed and depressed.
295 She confirmed that one of her complaints was that Dr Manners had never provided her with the finalised outcome of the investigation of her grievance. She was taken to an email from Dr Manners of 12 June 2015, where he said:
In addition, I would like to meet with you when I am in Brisbane at the ESP next week to discuss the outcome of the recent investigation with you and to provide you with a letter confirming the outcome. We can discuss your concerns then. Would you be available on Friday, 19 June 2015? If so, I can arrange for Dominica to meet with you at a suitable time.
296 Dr Morton agreed that there was an autoreply from her email saying that she was on leave and out of the office, returning on 23 June 2015. She agreed that Dr Manners wrote back on 12 June 2015, asking if she was free on 25 June, when he was next in Brisbane. Dr Morton agreed that she forwarded an email to Ms Bev Rose, Dr Manners' EA, declining a meeting request and commenting that she would not be available for work activities until after 6 July 2015. She agreed that no meeting was eventually sorted out.
297 Dr Morton was asked whether she was somewhat dishevelled in her grooming when she spoke to Dr Mathew via Skype on 3 July 2018. She said that she did not know if she was dishevelled, but she was as she normally is every day. She was asked whether she appeared clean and appropriately dressed when she was seeing Dr Shaw, her general practitioner. Dr Morton said that she did not know what Dr Shaw's definition of clean and appropriately dressed was, and she would have been wearing what she normally wears.
298 It was put to Dr Morton that when she spoke to Dr Mathew, the only allegations she made of a sexual nature were against Dr Glencross. She said she did not recall exactly what she and Dr Mathew had discussed.
299 It was put to Dr Morton that she did not make any allegations at all, sexual or non-sexual, in nature, against Dr Preston, when she spoke to Dr Mathew. She agreed that she may not have. She said that she would have spoken to Dr Mathew about the Comcare case, and, as there were no allegations about Dr Preston of a sexual nature in the Comcare case, she did not think they would have spoken about it.
300 It was put that Dr Morton did not make any complaints at all about Dr Preston, of any kind, when she spoke to Dr Mathew. She said she did not believe so. She said that she believed the majority of the conversation would have been about the Comcare claim, which was centred around Dr Glencross' behaviours.
301 She was asked whether she told Dr Mathew that Dr Glencross had told her to wear a short skirt. Dr Morton said she believed there was one instance where Dr Glencross had mentioned wearing a short skirt in a meeting to attract funding and that she may have mentioned that to Dr Mathew. She agreed that she had never, prior to speaking to Dr Mathew, revealed, in any document, that Dr Glencross said anything of that sort. She agreed that this allegation was not pleaded, was not in her Grievance Document, and was not in her outline of evidence. She denied that she was making it up.
302 Dr Morton was taken to a text message exchange with Mr Croft on 23 June 2015, when she was attending her general practitioner. She agreed that Mr Croft said:
Apart from the other stuff, make sure you tell him part of the reason for needing more time off is about the Comcare psychiatrist stuff and that CSIRO aren't doing anything to remove you from these people. Particularly they have tried to make you go to Bribie today (where you were assaulted and your attacker is still allowed to have free range).
303 Dr Morton said the primary purpose of the visit to the general practitioner was to secure a referral to a psychiatrist. She denied that the text message represented part of her and Mr Croft's strategy for setting up the Comcare claim.
304 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook entry for 25 June 2015 where she said:
So today I receive an email from the MBA social club. It seems our next networking event will be sponsored by UQ, known colloquially as an open bar. Just another plus to the MBA really…".
She agreed that this was posted less than two weeks after she saw Dr Rees on 6 July 2015.
305 Dr Morton was taken to text messages sent to Mr Croft on 29 June 2015 where she said:
Yes…except I have a 1000 word case study due at 9 am on Thursday and I signed up to go to workshop for career planning tomorrow night eeekkk…And the printer is being annoying (but it is working now)…(sigh)…
…
I think that Marketing Management will be the downfall of my GPA!
…
Thanks…I know I will do okay, well I am pretty sure I will - these week long courses are INTENSE! So I will be having a HUGE glass of wine on Friday night.
306 It was put to Dr Morton that the MBA she was doing was very demanding. She said:
Week long courses, yes. They could be quite intense. There were a number of different course offerings in the MBA. Some were offered as semester-long courses that were done on weeknights. Some were offered as weekend options and some were offered as a week-long intense course. And not having a background in marketing, a lot of the terms were unfamiliar. And I did find it a challenge, I have to admit.
307 Dr Morton accepted that, on 2 July 2015, four days before she saw Dr Rees, she sent a text message to Mr Croft saying:
So I may have accidentally pitched a research proposal to my marketing lecturer…talk to you about it tonight but it may be quite advantageous to my career transition :) I think we need a SWOT analysis on my career plan over happy hour at Apple Tango?
308 Dr Morton agreed that she saw Dr Rees on 6 July 2015, and that he had issued her with a certificate declaring that she was unfit for work for three months. She was asked whether she told Dr Rees that she could not concentrate. Dr Morton replied, "I told Dr Rees about the issues I was having in the workplace, yes". She agreed that she told him she lacked confidence. She said she did not know whether she used the phrase "no initiative". She was asked whether she gave Dr Rees the impression that she was incapable of working from home on a computer using the internet. She answered, "I explained the symptoms and what was happening to Dr Rees. I don't know if he formed that opinion".
309 Dr Morton accepted that, when she spoke to Mr Blyth at work, she did not mention to him that anything of a sexual nature had occurred during her employment. She agreed that she did not complain to Mr Blyth about Dr Preston or Dr Cook.
310 Dr Morton agreed that she sent a text message to Mr Croft on 1 August 2015, saying:
Dinner with Sam was lovely and then I walked home. Today I have been pottering around the house - submitted my marketing assignment, organised my eBay parcels and now getting my uni notes organised. Basically relaxing and getting a few things done. Just about to have another coffee, watch a movie and do some knitting.
311 Dr Morton was asked about her telephone call with Mr Drury in March 2015. She denied that he discussed with her that CSIRO had an early intervention policy. She maintained that Mr Drury was quite clear that he had very senior contacts within Agriculture and that if she did not lodge a Comcare claim, he would ensure that she received the treatment she needed. She agreed that there was no reference in her pleading or in her outlines of evidence, to Mr Drury knowing very senior people.
312 Dr Morton was asked about another telephone call from Mr Drury on 8 July 2015. She said Mr Drury told her she had to make herself available to begin a return to work process within the next couple of weeks and that involved returning to the CSIRO site to have meetings. She said she asked Mr Drury why she had to make herself available to return to work within a few weeks, when her doctor had written her off for three months. She said that Mr Drury then stated three months off would not do her career any good. She asked what authority he had to say that, and he said he was a clinician.
313 Dr Morton was taken to an email to Mr Drury sent to her on 8 July 2015, where he encouraged her to go to the Comcare website. Dr Morton said he was emphasising the employee obligations under the SRC Act. She agreed that Mr Drury had said that he would be arranging for an assessment in the coming weeks by an independent doctor and would organise a case conference to discuss her return to work plan.
314 Dr Morton was taken to her email to Mr Drury of 23 July 2015, attaching a number of medical certificates where she referred to a sexual assault. It was put that she was now using the expression "sexual assault", rather than the expression she had used in the past, of "slapped on the buttocks". She agreed that she was, in the context of being under medical treatment for a psychological injury caused by bullying, harassment, sexual assault and sexual harassment.
315 Dr Morton received an email from Mr Drury on 24 July 2015, advising that he had arranged an appointment, pursuant to s 36 of the SRC Act, with a Dr Evelyn Timmins. The examination was said to be, "to establish Dr Morton's capacity to be engaged in a rehabilitation program and establish a robust RTW plan in-line with medical advice".
316 On 29 July 2015, Dr Morton made a complaint to Ms Pickering, whom Dr Morton understood to be Mr Drury's line manager, about his conduct. In the email, Dr Morton referred to him, "reducing sexual assault and harassment with longer term bullying and harassment by the same perpetrator…". She agreed that she was now referring to the person who she used to call "Bunny" as the "perpetrator".
317 Dr Morton was sent an email by Ms Campbell on 3 August 2015. In that email, Ms Campbell said that she had spoken to Mr Drury and read their email exchange and clarified a number of points. Dr Morton was asked whether she had discussed the certificate that Dr Rees had issued for three months off work as if it were a direction to her that she could not work. Dr Morton disagreed, saying that there was a direction from Dr Rees not to begin the return to work processes until she had been cleared to do so, and that the correct process was to get a s 36 assessment done by an Independent Medical Examiner, who would then make a determination as to whether she was fit to begin return to work process. She said that the appointment had only just been booked, so for Mr Drury to state, in early July, that she needed to make herself available at the CSIRO site to begin planning a return to work within the next few weeks was jumping the gun quite considerably.
318 Dr Morton agreed that when she got the three months' certificate from Dr Rees, her view was that the certificate was writing her off for three months.
319 She agreed that, on 10 July 2015, she sent a text message to Mr Croft saying, "It's cold & raining so don't think I'll go to the MBA meetup. it's on a rooftop bar!"
320 Dr Morton was cross-examined about her allegation that, while she was away under sick leave certificates, her team leader role was taken away from her. She agreed that if someone who normally performs a team leader role is away, there might be a need for someone else to temporarily cover the role. She maintained that her team leader role was improperly taken away from her.
321 Dr Morton agreed she had received a letter from Dr Manners dated 28 August 2015, saying that Comcare had advised that, on 19 July 2015, a decision had been made to revoke the previously accepted liability for her claim and that she was no longer eligible to receive compensation. The letter noted that she had provided medical advice stating that she was unfit for work until 9 October 2015 and her absence would be entered as sick leave from 20 August 2015 until that leave was exhausted. She was advised that, as her sick leave balance was not enough to cover her absence, she had the option to access recreation leave, or access leave without pay. She was asked to advise Dr Cook about this matter.
322 Dr Morton agreed that she did not respond to Dr Manners' letter at all. She said that it would have depended upon when she checked her email. She was not checking her CSIRO email on a daily basis, as she was on medical leave. She had earlier said that she would log on periodically onto the SAP system, but not daily.
323 Dr Morton was taken to an email sent to her by Ms Davis on 1 September 2015. In that email, Ms Davis said that, in the absence of a response to Dr Manners' email, it was decided that recreation leave would be entered instead of unpaid leave, so as not to have an impact upon Dr Morrison's next pay. The email said that if that was not her wish, she should let Ms Davis know immediately so she could correct it. An email said that sick leave had been entered on her behalf from 27 August to 3 September and recreational leave from 4 September to 2 October. She noted that Dr Morton had entered recreational leave from 3 to 20 November and asked whether she wanted to withdraw that entry and make use of that leave following 2 October 2015. When asked whether she responded to Ms Davis' email, Dr Morton said "I don't recall. I don't think so".
324 Dr Morton was asked whether she agreed that there were a lot of people chasing her for clarification about how to manage her leave. She replied, "With respect, I was on medical leave and Dr Rees told me to minimise my contact with the organisation".
325 When Dr Morton was asked about wanting to go to an MBA social function, except for the weather, but not being able to send an email back to Dr Manners or Ms Davis to clarify the situation about her leave, she answered:
There is a great deal of difference between dealing with an organisation where you feel extremely vulnerable and stressed, and a group where it is a learning environment. The atmosphere is far more positive and encouraging.
326 Dr Morton was taken to her email of 19 September 2015 sent to the HR Service Centre, in which she asked that attached forms be completed by CSIRO in relation to loan protection and income protection insurance. Ms Lynne Gaal responded by an email dated 21 September 2015, in which she asked whether Dr Morton wanted her recreation leave from 3 to 20 November brought forward to 5 October to cover her continued absence. When asked whether she responded to Ms Gaal's request, she said, "I don't recall. Possibly not". She said, "I didn't wish the leave to be moved so I wouldn't have told her to move it".
327 Dr Morton was taken to an email sent by Mr Croft to Ms Davis, using Dr Morton's CSIRO email address on 25 September 2015. The email said that Dr Morton's psychiatrist had advised her not to engage with anyone from CSIRO. It went on to complain about CSIRO logging Dr Morton's leave as it saw fit. It said, inter alia, that she had made her wishes regarding other people entering her leave clear by requesting a reversal of the sick leave that was logged without her knowledge during the accepted claim period. The lengthy email went on to make various complaints about management of her leave, the investigation of Dr Morton's grievance, and Mr Drury's conduct, amongst other things.
328 Dr Morton accepted that, on 23 September 2015, Ms Davis had asked for a response to her query about her leave balance, and the best method of communication with her. She said that she believed Mr Croft responded clarifying the situation regarding leave. She said that Mr Croft had made it clear that Dr Morton did not want anyone logging leave on her behalf, that the November leave had already been booked, and that, in the absence of any instructions, the default position would have been to leave it as it was.
329 Dr Morton acknowledged that, on 1 October 2015, Ms Davis responded to an email from Mr Croft providing updated medical information for Dr Morton. Ms Davis had said that she was uncomfortable engaging in communications with Mr Croft on matters pertaining to Dr Morton's employment with CSIRO, and asked that, if Mr Croft was acting on Dr Morton's behalf, Dr Morton provide signed consent authorising him to do so.
330 Dr Morton agreed that sometimes she would sit next to Mr Croft while he was on the computer typing up his emails, and sometimes she would log him into the system. She said she did not provide the written authority requested, as she did not need to. That was because she had already provided the authority in a number of ways: she had said that Mr Croft was her support person as part of the grievance; he was her emergency contact; and she had logged him into the system. She asked if Mr Croft did not have authority to discuss matters of her employment with CSIRO, then why was Ms Davis sending emails to Dr Manners, who was to provide Ms Croft with a response in due course.
331 Dr Morton agreed that Dr Manners wrote an email to Mr Croft and to her on 27 October 2015. In that email, Dr Manners said, inter alia:
As previously advised by Ms Davis, CSIRO requires consent from Katherine for us to communicate with you in matters relating to her employment. The consent can take the form of a signed letter or statement by Katherine to me.
…
CSIRO's Information Security Procedure…states that the use of a CSIRO employee's users account or password without appropriate management authority is an unacceptable use of CSIRO's information technology and communication's systems. Given this, if Katherine wishes for you to communicate with CSIRO on her behalf you will need to do so using your personal email address. Can you please provide this to me?
332 Dr Morton agreed that Dr Manners also addressed her, saying:
Please pass the message below on to William, and hopefully we can get the requisite approval from you as required by our policies…
333 Dr Morton agreed that Mr Croft sent an email to Dr Manners, on 8 November 2015, from his personal account. She agreed that she would probably have seen the email before it was sent. She agreed that Mr Croft said, inter alia:
As already stated Katherine has advice from her psychiatrist to have no contact with anyone from CSIRO, she will be following her treating practitioner's advice. Katherine will not be responding to you and she certainly won't be jumping through anymore of your hoops either.
…
Frankly, your only option is to communicate with Katherine through me, because I am her emergency contact…so John, deal with the legal requirement that you have that even if you refuse to communicate with me, you must still act upon the information you received from me…
334 Dr Morton agreed that the subject matter of her leave was not an emergency issue. She agreed that, in the email, Dr Glencross was again referred to as the "perpetrator". She agreed that the email was alleging that the assault was a criminal matter, and agreed that no signed authority was ever provided by her.
335 Dr Morton disagreed that she was paid out all her recreational leave when she left CSIRO.
336 She agreed that, on 23 September 2015, she sent a text message to Dr Croft, saying:
I've been drafting an email to the lawyers listing everyone to issue a summons to - I'll send that through to you sometime today…I paid the electricity bill (on the dining table). Feel like BBQing the rump steak with some more onions tonight? And I can whip up some mash potatoes (unless you want BBQ ones) and beans? with some wine :)
337 Dr Morton agreed that, around the end of September 2015, Dr Rees issued another certificate writing her off for a further six months.
338 On 22 October 2015, Dr Morton made a Facebook post, saying:
Another subject done - Innovation, with a final mark of 90%!
Now officially 1/3 of the way through the MBA with an average mark of 87.15 but an average grade of 6.75 (grrrrrr)…
339 Dr Morton accepted that, on 26 June 2016, she had made a post indicating that she had received the Dean's commendation for academic excellence for Semester 2, 2015.
340 She agreed that, on 2 November 2015, she posted that Mr Croft and her were heading off to Hawaii the following week, where they would be for Veterans' Day, her birthday, their anniversary and Pearl Harbour Remembrance Day. When asked whether there were a number of activities planned, she said that those were all events that occurred, rather than events. She said she was not particularly planning to engage in celebrations for all those activities. She said that Veterans' Day and Pearl Harbour Remembrance Day were not things to be celebrated, but to be remembered. She accepted that they did go out for dinner for her birthday and would have gone out for dinner on their anniversary, but she would have to check. She went to Hawaii for a holiday from about 11 November until 8 December 2015.
341 Dr Morton agreed that, on 2 December 2015, she posted on Facebook that her Semester 2 MBA results were three high distinctions and two distinctions. She said, "Some celebrating in order when we return to Oahu :)".
342 Dr Morton agreed that she posted on 14 November 2015, saying, inter alia, "We are having an awesome time!".
343 Dr Morton agreed that, on 11 February 2016, Dr Rees wrote her off for a further 12 months. On 11 February 2016, she posted, "Today I've learnt that doctors can write medical certificates spanning a year". She denied that she felt that she could get Dr Rees to do pretty much whatever she wanted.
344 Dr Morton was taken to the email from Ms Somerville to her dated 26 February 2016, in which Ms Somerville said:
CSIRO are confident we can provide a safe work environment for you to return to and look forward to working with yourself and Dr Rees to facilitate this in the near future. To clarify the two individuals named in your complaint no longer work at CSIRO and no longer reside in Australia.
345 Dr Morton denied that she knew that Dr Glencross had moved to Scotland in January 2016, and denied that she knew that Dr Preston had moved to Penang in October 2015.
346 She agreed that she had shown Dr Rees an email from Andrew Chalmers of CSIRO dated 3 February 2016, saying that Dr Preston had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and was about to commence chemotherapy treatment over the next five months, to be followed by surgery. The email continued:
He will be continuing his role with WorldFish until the end of March and may have an Australian based role with WorldFish, but this is yet to be determined.
347 It was put that Dr Morton showed the email to Dr Rees to justify her position that she could not return to work at CSIRO. She denied this and said that she explained to Dr Rees that she was shocked that someone who was supposed to be in charge of her returned to work and her case, would not know such a simple thing.
348 In respect of Mr Chalmers' email, Dr Morton was asked about her evidence that she would have a panic attack if she saw communication from CSIRO, and whether that was why she wanted her partner to deal with leave issues. She said:
I didn't have a panic attack every single time. On occasion I would, yes…I still have to deal with a lot of the other issues like Ms Somerville's emails. Regardless of whether or not I had a panic attack, those emails still had to be printed and the letters taken to Dr Rees and dealt with.
349 It was put to Dr Morton that she was telling Dr Rees that one of the reasons she could not go back to CSIRO was that Dr Preston had come back from Penang to get cancer treatment. She responded, "That was my understanding of the situation". She agreed that it was on the basis of Mr Chalmers' email that she accused Ms Somerville of being deliberately false when she wrote the letter to her.
350 Dr Morton accepted that, on 1 March 2016, she posted that, "Financial Management mid-term results: Highest mark was 92% (awarded to me)".
351 Dr Morton maintained she had a conversation with Ms Katie Wise, where it was said that they would have difficulty ensuring that she did not bump into Dr Glencross. She said that, basically, there was nothing they could do to stop Dr Glencross attending the site without notice. She said the conversation may have taken place in April or May of 2016.
In a report addressed to Ms Somerville dated 11 February 2016, Dr Rees said that it appeared the barriers preventing Dr Morton from returning to work were associated with the elements within her workplace and that, "Specifically, Dr Morton tells me that the personnel involved in the alleged sexual assault remain working within her work environment". Dr Morton agreed that was what she told Dr Rees. When asked what she was referring to there, she said:
I was referring, when we had been discussing the fact that I had started seeing Dr Rees, that Dr Glencross was still there, and there were also a number of other issues in the workplace. It was not the only barrier returning to work.
352 Dr Morton agreed that she now knew that Dr Glencross had left for Scotland in 2016, but said she had been away from the workforce for quite some time, and when she had left the workplace, Dr Glencross still had free rein at the Bribie Island site.
353 Dr Morton agreed that, on 19 April 2016, she posted on Facebook that, "I figured a 4-hour walk today would keep me out of trouble". She accepted that on 20 April 2016, she posted that she was "headed for eight hours of economics".
354 Dr Morton was taken to an email sent from Dr Manners to all staff at Agriculture, dated 26 April 2016, in which he asked any staff member who thought that a VRS may fit with their personal plans to speak with the HR team, to help to reduce the number of involuntary job losses. Dr Morton sent an email to Ms Walsh dated 17 May 2016, saying, inter alia:
With great disappointment in CSIRO and the appalling handling of my grievance and injury, I am asking that you place me on the voluntary redundancy substitution list.
355 Dr Morton disagreed with the suggestion that she asked for a VRS because she knew that her own position was not going to be made redundant. She said the reason was that Dr Rees remained persistent in his belief that she could not return to CSIRO and had discussed his belief that severance would be more beneficial for her recovery in the short term. She also said it was about lacking a safe working environment.
356 When asked whether there was no point in applying for a VRS, if she thought her position was going to be made redundant, Dr Morton answered:
At this stage, when I applied for it, I could not see a path back to a career at CSIRO because of the way anything had been handled. I had already been deallocated from my roles. My grievance had been appalling handled, as I started, and for a number of medical reasons, Dr Rees and I had discussed severance from the organisation being beneficial in the shorter term for my recovery.
357 Asked the question again, she answered:
In other circumstances, yes. In these circumstances, I don't think that would be considered normal.
358 Dr Morton received an email from Ms Walsh on 24 June 2016, saying that CSIRO was able to accommodate her request for a VRS and that, while they were unable to find a suitable swap for redundancy of her position had been approved.
359 Dr Morton agreed that she made a Facebook post on 25 June 2016, saying:
Nothing like multiple coffees to aid in recovery after celebrating until 3 am. Note to self: possibly getting a little old for that.
Then again, it is not every week you finish the 11th MBA subject (of 12), receive a redundancy & have a four month break until subject number 12! So, another coffee it is :D
360 Dr Morton said that it was a very big week. She said she had done the Operation Design exam and that was a subject she found particularly challenging. She was looking forward to a four month break. She referred to a Facebook post she had made on 23 June 2016, where she said:
Ops Design exam done!
Celebrated with kebab meat pizza & Shiraz. Kebab meat pizza is awesome, thanks gorgeous man for suggesting it…
361 Dr Morton was taken to a post she had made on 21 June 2016, where she referred to making pizza dough, and having carrot cake muffins in the oven. When asked whether she was baking - doing one of the things she loved to do - she answered, "Well, with respect, I was actually procrastinating for studying for the Ops Design exam because I found that a bit stressful".
362 Dr Morton agreed that she sent an email to Ms Walsh on 30 June 2016 thanking her for her email and information and saying she would like to hear about the next steps.
363 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 6 July 2016, saying:
Today marks a year off work (work injury) & the release of Uni Results (all high distinctions this semester).
Me thinks the Uni marks need celebrating - get that champagne in the fridge… :)
364 Dr Morton agreed that she and Mr Croft would have shared a bottle of champagne that night.
365 She agreed that Ms Walsh sent her an email on 15 July 2016 saying that she had added Dr Morton's name to the redeployment register and asking for a copy of her CV to use, in the event that any redeployment opportunities were identified. Ms Walsh also asked her to confirm the locations that she wished CSIRO to consider for relocations and asked whether she would be prepared to consider any positions at a lower level.
366 Dr Morton accepted that she did not provide Ms Walsh with a copy of her CV. She agreed that the purpose of the CV was to assist Ms Walsh in identifying redeployment opportunities. She said that she was aware that when positions came up at CSIRO, they were advertised on the intranet. Dr Morton said that she did not check the CSIRO intranet for suitable roles for redeployment.
367 Dr Morton sent an email to Ms Walsh on 19 July 2016. The email dealt, inter alia, with inaccuracies in the cessation estimates prepared by HR. Dr Morton went on to say:
As you would be aware, I am medically unfit to work at CSIRO and my psychiatrist has already elucidated the inability of the organisation to provide a safe working environment for me. As such, there are no locations within the organisation that would be suitable for me to be relocated to. Also, I would not consider a position at a lower level given my education and professional experience…
368 Dr Morton agreed that, around 30 July 2016, she was on a panel of speakers at a women's conference. She agreed that, on 30 July 2016, she made a post on Facebook, saying:
Conference today was amazing - so wonderful to see so many people & hear their ideas & thoughts…a snap shot of why diversity is so crucial in all aspects of life…
Great discussions were had in 'women in STEM' panel revolving around why/how we chose to work in STEM fields & our experiences as women in those fields.
369 Dr Morton accepted that, during the entire deployment phase, she did not apply for any positions. She agreed that part of her case was that she should have been given, as part of the redeployment process a position as a Senior Research Scientist in Hobart. She agreed that she did not apply for that position.
370 Dr Morton received an email from Ms Walsh advising that the redeployment period had ended on 14 September 2016. Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 10 October 2016 saying:
Second week of Nov equals MBA finished + US election + being made redundant + my birthday.
And they say good things come in threes!
371 Dr Morton said that was a sarcastic remark because there were four things listed there. She said that there were a number of mixed emotions. She said her point was that there were four things mentioned there, not all of which were good. She said she had a lot of mixed feelings about redundancy. There had been a lot of discussions with Dr Rees about possible improvement after separating from the organisation, and she had some hope that her mental health would improve. She was upset and distressed about the loss of her career. It was a mixed and hard time.
372 Dr Morton received an emailed letter from Ms Walsh on 28 October, giving a choice of a fast track or slow track cessation of her employment. She agreed to take the option involving receiving an early cessation payment of eight weeks pay if she did not contest the redundancy. She sent an email on 6 November 2016 to Ms Walsh saying:
I agree to cease employment with CSIRO on 11 November. I will be taking the lump sum benefit option.
373 Dr Morton agreed that on 8 December 2016, she received her MBA and a 2016 Academic Excellence Award. She posted that she was going to the MBA awards dinner at the Sofitel Hotel.
374 Dr Morton said that she did not know how the ranking system for the MBA worked. She said that there were a number of the printed pieces of paper awards, but the top ranked students got carved glass awards. She said that she was not at the top of the class. She agreed that she was probably in the top 10% of students. Dr Morton posted a picture of herself at the graduation ceremony on 23 December 2016.
375 Dr Rees had given evidence that he had diagnosed Dr Morton with Agoraphobia, apparently from 24 November 2016, a month prior to her graduation. Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post of 17 January 2017. She agreed that the post showed a photograph of the cruise ship she was just about to go on. Her post also said, "It seems the cruise bar doesn't open for another 15 mins…". Dr Morton said that the Cruise Bar was a very small bar next to the boat and was relatively empty at the time. On 27 January 2017, Dr Morton posted saying, "Back in the real world, after 10 days cruising the south pacific sans internet…". She agreed that she had in fact gone on a cruise for 10 days to the South Pacific.
376 Dr Morton agreed that she had told Dr Rees that she was experiencing a great deal of anxiety going out in public. It was put that she knew that this was not true, but she said that it was. She was asked whether the boat could have 4,000 or 5,000 people crushed into a small space. She answered, "Presumably. Yes." She said that she went on the cruise with her mother and various other family members. She said that one of the ways she managed her anxiety getting onto the cruise ship was to take Valium and that she and her mother had a couple of bottles of Prosecco before boarding. She said she spent the majority of the cruise in the cabin, and did not spend a lot of the time socialising on the boat.
377 Dr Morton agreed that, on about 6 February 2017, she and Mr Croft bought a new Land Rover.
378 She was asked about an entry on her Facebook post on 27 January 2017, which said, "Sydney CBD sales equals disappointment…". She was asked whether she went to the CBD sales. She said she had got off the boat at 5.37 am and had gone from there, through the CBD to the airport. She said that, though she had seen the window displays, and nothing was open at that time of the morning, that her post was a humorous reference to the fact that nothing was open She agreed that the time of the post was 12.19 pm, and that would have been the time when she arrived at the airport. She agreed that, if she was worried about being in public, the last thing she would have wanted to do was fight her way through crowds going for the sales. She agreed that a post at 5.02 pm showed a picture of a drink she had at the airport. It was suggested that she was at the airport at around 5 pm. She said she was at the airport for a long time that day.
379 Dr Morton accepted that on 16 March 2017, she flew from Tasmania to Brisbane for a wedding. She said she was accompanied by Mr Croft. She said she had a number of discussions with Dr Rees about her anxiety and about attending the wedding of one of her closest friends. She agreed that at the time, she was telling Dr Rees that she was basically only leaving the house for medicine, groceries, and doctors' appointments. Dr Morton said that she sat at the end of the bridal table in the corner. It was put to her that, as maid of honour, she had a central role in the wedding. She denied that.
380 Dr Morton was cross-examined about the injury to her right wrist in 2017. She said that on 17 April 2017, she was pulled over by her dog and had a sore wrist afterwards. She agreed that she went to the rural health facility in Tasmania on 17 April 2017 and she told the person she spoke to that she had fallen two weeks ago on her wrist, tripped by her dog. She accepted that she told the person that her dog had pulled her over, and that she had used her hand to break the fall.
381 Dr Morton agreed that Dr Shaw had given her a referral, on 31 August 2017, to a Dr Peter Van Winden regarding ongoing wrist pain three months after the initial injury. She was asked whether she had told Dr Shaw that she had punched a wall. Her response was, "If that was part of the injury, yes". It was put to Dr Morton that she told Dr Shaw that because she wanted to make out that she had anger problems. Dr Morton said that the injury was related to punching the wall and she did have anger issues. She said the dog lurched forward and pulled her over, but it was not a substantial fall. It was sore, but not a similar level of pain in the wrist she had experienced after punching the wall. Several months later, when she was still experiencing substantial levels of pain, she asked for a referral to a specialist.
382 Dr Morton agreed that the referral to the specialist made no reference to early injuries associated with tripping over her dog, and only referenced one incident of punching a wall. She said she did not know if Dr Shaw thought that the incident with the dog was significant.
383 Dr Morton agreed that when she saw a psychiatrist, Dr Walker, in July 2017, she told him that she had damaged her wrist out of anger, by banging it on a wall. She denied that she thought it would look better for her case if she could attribute the injury to her anger about CSIRO, rather than tripping over her dog.
384 Dr Morton was taken to an entry on 9 May 2017 in Dr Shaw's records which read: "Punched wall x 2. Sore right arm since two weeks ago". She was asked whether "two weeks ago" took her very close to 17 April 2017, when she went to the Rural Health Facility. Dr Morton's response was, "Does it?". She was asked whether she was fibbing to Dr Shaw about punching the wall twice. She denied that she was fibbing.
385 Dr Morton was asked whether on 28 September 2017, she went to Dr Shaw and said that she could not fly. She said she believed she had just had wrist surgery, and had tried to contact a specialist who was on leave. She said she did not know if she could fly, having had the surgery. She agreed that Dr Shaw refused to issue the certificate. She agreed that she was asking for the certificate to show that she couldn't attend a mediation with CSIRO in person.
386 Dr Morton was asked whether, on 10 October 2017, she had started threatening Dr Shaw's staff. She denied this. She said that, after an issue where Comcare had failed to fax a medical report to Dr Shaw for her to collect, she made the comment "Fucking Comcare". She said Dr Shaw then raised his voice and started yelling at her, indicating that they did not tolerate abusive and threatening behaviour, and that she would have to find medical treatment elsewhere. She said she did not believe that her statement threatened staff.
387 Dr Morton was asked whether she always made an effort to present herself in a clean manner when seeing Dr Shaw. She responded that she did not recall every single appointment she had with Dr Shaw, or what she had been wearing to them.
388 Dr Morton agreed that Dr Shaw had urged her to transfer her treatment from Dr Rees, to a local psychiatrist and psychologist. She agreed that she had refused to see a Launceston based psychiatrist. She said she subsequently located, and was in the process of beginning to see, a Tasmanian based psychologist. She said she did not want to change practitioners because she had been seeing Dr Rees for some time and they had an established patient and practitioner relationship. She felt comfortable with him. It was suggested that she did not want to change from Dr Rees because she knew he was writing her favourable reports. She denied this.
389 Dr Morton agreed that Dr Shaw told her that she should engage in a return-to-work rehabilitation program. She said Dr Shaw had discussed several generic programs at the Calvary Hospital in Launceston and she had asked how the general program would help her specifically. She said she asked him to define and specify what a work rehabilitation program was, asking for some details. It was put that she was resisting every suggestion she participate in a return-to-work rehabilitation programme. She denied this, saying she wanted some details. Dr Morton disagreed with Dr Shaw's opinion that she was not actively engaged in her own rehabilitation and seemed resistant to taking management steps he considered necessary for her recovery.
390 Dr Morton was asked some further questions about the cause of the injury to her right wrist. She said that on two occasions she had been pulled over when her dog moved forward and injured her wrist. She also said that on two occasions she punched a wall. She agreed that, on her version of events, in April 2017, she injured her right wrist four times. She denied that there were only two times when she injured her right wrist, both of those involving her dog.
391 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 7 April 2017 showing a photograph of her injured right wrist. She was also taken to a post on 17 April 2017, saying:
Monty lurched and pulled me over. I landed on my wrist and that was two weeks ago. Been saw as hell since.
Monty lurched again today and the pain was unbearable, hence the trip to the hospital.
392 Dr Morton agreed that she told Dr Rees that she hit a wall repeatedly at Easter. She agreed that Easter would have been April 2017. It was put to Dr Morton that she misled Dr Rees by making out that she had anger issues and was self-harming, when in fact she had simply tripped over her dog a couple of times. She responded:
No. I explained the situation to Dr Rees. I can't be in his head when he has written his notes.
393 When Dr Morton was asked whether she had told Dr Rees she had tripped over her dog twice, she responded:
Yes. Dr Rees knew that we had a dog and that we had to return the dog, and that was a hard decision for us. I don't know if that has been recorded in his notes.
394 It was suggested that Dr Morton had never mentioned anything about a dog. She responded, "Yes, we did".
395 It was suggested to Dr Morton that she never mentioned to Dr Shaw that her injury had anything to do with events associated with her dog. Dr Morton's response was:
I would have mentioned that the wrist had been sore. It was sore initially. It wasn't until after I had hit the wall that I had a great deal of problem with the rotation aspect of the wrist.
396 When Dr Morton was asked about her Facebook entry for 17 April 2017 again, and the extreme pain she said she was in, she said, "It was quite bruised and swollen".
397 Dr Morton said that she and Mr Croft have a rural property in Tasmania. They have animals on the farm. They had sold some lambs. She was taken to a Facebook post of 15 April 2017, where she was discussing the price of alpacas. She also posted photographs of her alpacas and their pet chicken. She posted photos of sheep, which she said were on agistment.
398 Dr Morton said that, on 16 July 2017, she was examined by Dr Walker, a psychiatrist, at the request of CSIRO. Mr Croft came with her to the appointment. She agreed that she and Mr Croft had secretly recorded the consultation. She was asked whether she knew that she was deceiving Dr Walker. She answered, "Yes".
399 Dr Morton was asked about a second consultation with Dr Walker. She was asked, "Did you secretly record that as well?". She answered "Yes".
400 Dr Morton was asked whether there was any reason she had disclosed, to CSIRO, the transcript of the first consultation, but not the second. She confirmed that she had never provided the tape of the second consultation with Dr Walker to her lawyers.
401 Dr Morton was asked whether, at the second consultation, Dr Walker specifically asked her to sign a document containing a term that the consultation was not to be recorded. Dr Morton agreed that she signed the document. She was asked, "And despite that, you proceeded, with Mr Croft, to secretly record that second consultation?". She answered "Yes".
402 Dr Morton also agreed that, prior to the second consultation with Dr Walker, she had asked, through her lawyers, whether Dr Walker would consent to the consultation being taped. She agreed that CSIRO's lawyers advised that Dr Walker would not consent.
403 Dr Morton was asked, "So you had committed, you would agree, a serious deception on Dr Walker in relation to that second consultation". Dr Morton answered, "Correct. No, I do not believe that Dr Walker stating he did not give his permission trumps my right for self-protection".
404 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 17 July 2017. She agreed that a company called "Wilkat Morecroft Pty Ltd" had been established on 1 July 2017, and was used primarily to agist livestock, to create a negatively geared situation for her property. Dr Morton was asked whether she had the organisational skills to establish a company. She responded that the company was established by her financial advisor and that she was not involved in its registration. She said that the financial advisor registered for GST and an ABN and sent the documents to her in the mail.
405 Dr Morton agreed that, around 23 December 2017, she purchased an investment property with Mr Croft. The house had eight bedrooms. She was taken to her Facebook post, where she was contemplating repairs that needed to be undertaken over the next 10-12 weeks. She said they engaged a project manager to look after those repairs.
406 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 24 December 2015, which referred to spraying thistles on her property. She said it was on the list of things to be done on the property.
407 Dr Morton agreed that, before she started at CSIRO, one of the things she liked doing was baking. She was asked whether she had continued that. She said she still did some baking, although nowhere near as frequently as she used to. She said she had been encouraged by her medical practitioners to try and keep in touch with various aspects of her pre-injury life.
408 Dr Morton's Facebook post on 1 September 2017 referred to, "A spot of light weekend reading". This was a caption to a photograph of three books, entitled "Animal Nutrition", "Barefoot Investor", and "The Veterinary Book for Sheep Farmers". She was asked whether they were books that she was reading at that time. She denied that.
409 When asked whether she was involved in making investment decisions, Dr Morton said she had discussions with her financial planner who urged herself and Mr Croft to look at sources of passive income, such as rental properties.
410 Dr Morton was asked if she was dealing with sheep at that time. She said there were sheep on the property and she had found some of her old university textbooks while she was unpacking, including an animal nutrition textbook. She said the 1 September 2017 Facebook post was a sarcastic one about reading two rather dry bio-chemistry based books over the weekend. Dr Morton said she had flipped through, and skim read, the "Barefoot Investor" over several months in 2017, but said it was largely "sort-of cartoon based". She said she was not reading it cover-to-cover.
411 Dr Morton accepted that, in her Facebook post on 25 April 2015 about lambs, she said, "The more I read, the more I am leaning towards a farming injury". She said she picked a book about injuries because she had found a particular sheep on her farm was unable to move.
412 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post of 26 September 2017, where she said, "And I read a review of the SRC Act by a QC (Hardy). Interesting, naturally shelved by Govt…". She was asked whether she had, in fact, read a review. She said that she had read a section of it. When it was put to her that the review was in fact by Peter Hanks QC, she said, "It may have been. I often get confused". When Dr Morton was asked whether she agreed that, in her post, she said that she read "a review", not part of a review, she gave a lengthy answer which included that she and the person to whom the post was directed, had been discussing the specific part of the SRC Act that referred to superannuation and the docking of incapacity payments. It was put to Dr Morton that, in September 2017, she was functioning at a very high level. She denied that and said she had been trying to find a specific section in the review, by searching if for specific words, like "superannuation".
413 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 3 February 2017. It said:
Busy week. I have survived the FWC conciliation conference, organised the move, bought a container, packed 70 boxes, made a gazillion appointments, various things, did the washing, caught up with amazing friends, bought a car and cooked spicy lamb patties. Maybe I really am a super woman.
She said that had been an exceedingly busy week.
414 Dr Morton agreed that, in her Facebook post on 7 February 2017, she said she had packed and stacked 91 boxes and said, "I am the Tetris queen". Dr Morton said she did think it was quite impressive to stack that many boxes in the spare room.
415 Dr Morton agreed that on 14 October 2017, she posted on Facebook that she had budgeted $300 per week for property management fees. When asked whether she was dealing with property management issues, she said she was attempting to put together a budget, and had epically failed. She was asked whether she was also looking through www.realestate.com. She agreed and said her mother had sent her several links for properties she thought would make good investments.
416 Dr Morton denied telling Dr Rees that she only went to town if she had to buy medicine. She said that she and Mr Croft went to the shops to buy groceries, attend doctor's appointments, to pick up prescriptions and to go to the vet.
417 Dr Morton agreed she told Dr Rees that, from time to time, she had suicidal thoughts. She agreed that, despite this, she and Mr Croft applied for firearms licences in early 2017. She said that she wanted a firearm to kill vermin and euthanize stock if required.
418 Dr Morton agreed that she posted on Facebook on 21 December 2017 about two rams and 25 wether lambs that she had for sale.
419 In respect of Dr Morton's allegation that she ought to have been named as a co-author of the article in the Aquaculture journal, Dr Morton agreed there was an exchange of emails with Dr Glencross on 25 November 2012. He said:
Don't worry about BAR-12-6. It is my burden to bear. I don't even think you have an allocation for the project. Focus on BAR-12-4 and BAR 12-8 and getting your own externally funded project off the ground. Any progress on the latter?
420 Dr Morton responded, saying:
Okay. Will do. I've got a 15% allocator on the Invovo Project. Wasn't that the one for BAR-12-6? Plus BAR-12-6 was on my to do list and my name was all over the protocol so I should be doing something.
421 Dr Glencross responded:
No, not really. I put you there more or less to tag along and learn how this stuff is done.
422 Dr Morton was taken to her email to Dr Glencross, Dr Cook, and others, dated 6 March 2014. She set out examples of the projects she had worked on. Under the heading "Experimental Management", she listed a number of projects, including BAR-12-6. However, she did not list that experiment under "Experimental Design". Dr Morton explained that under "Experimental Design", she had listed the experiments she was solely responsible for, not just those she had input into. When asked whether she had not made that clear in her email, she said she was merely highlighting some examples, and was not providing an exhaustive list of everything she had done since starting at CSIRO. She agreed under the "Data Analysis" and "Reporting and Manuscript Preparation" sections, she did not refer to BAR-12-6. She said that was because she was not the primary scientist doing the analysis and drafting. She said the email only referred to experiments she had a primary involvement in.
423 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post of 11 February 2018, which she agreed was an example of some of the baking she had done. She said it was a disaster.
424 She was taken to her Facebook post of 28 February 2018, where she said:
But I have been pondering the job scene in and around Launceston for professionals. I don't see many jobs advertised, so wondering if it is who you know especially when it comes to business consulting, etc. I did notice that KPMG office in Launceston, and oddly enough DOD Research Base in Scotsdale, apparently in nutrition.
425 Dr Morton was asked whether she was surveying the potential job market for herself. She said she was musing about what professionals did in Launceston, as the north-east of Tasmania is one of the lowest socio-economic areas in the state. She agreed part of her skill set was research and she had specifically referred to the Department of Defence Research base. She was asked whether, by mentioning "apparently in nutrition", she was talking about a potential role in research in the nutrition space. Dr Morton answered, "Are you suggesting that I would be deployed in packing meal replacements for soldiers?".
426 Dr Morton was taken to her Facebook post on 1 May 2018. It referred to:
Scanning almost 200 pages of legal docs, retrieving an egg from 10 cm under the roof of the hay shed, discussion about menopause and human follicle populations in relation to age, genetic and environmental factors, tracking down two missing parcels for the peacock coop, syringing electrolytes into lambs mouths several times, spotted another cat on our walk.
427 Dr Morton was asked if that was an example of a busy day in 2018. She gave a lengthy answer explaining what she did. She said that day was an extraordinarily busy day.
428 Dr Morton was asked whether the scanning of 200 pages of legal documents was the tip of the iceberg in terms of preparing her case. She answered:
I've had to scan a lot of documents, yes. We have a - I think they called a multifunction device, and then you put them in the auto-feeder, and then I hit the scan button. And then I email them to my legal representatives.
429 Dr Morton was asked about a report where Dr Glencross acknowledged her contribution. She agreed that there was often no clear line between when someone is an author and when someone gets an acknowledgement.
430 Dr Morton agreed that on 12 March 2018, she launched a Facebook page styling herself as "The Sexually Assaulted Scientist". Dr Morton responded, "I have been receiving contact from journalists on my personal page, so, yes, I separate it out". Dr Morton said that she had not used Facebook since 15 May 2018.
431 Dr Morton agreed she asked her lawyers to ask if her consultation with Dr Walker on 9 July 2018 could be taped. She agreed that, on 27 June 2018, CSIRO's solicitors said:
Dr Walker does not agree to record the assessment, and we do not consider Dr Morton's participation should be conditional upon the assessment being recorded and a transcript provided. Can you please confirm by midday tomorrow that Dr Morton agrees to attend the assessment on 9 July without having it recorded.
432 Dr Morton agreed her solicitor responded by email on 28 June 2018, saying:
We confirm our client is prepared to attend the further assessment of Dr Walker on 9 July 2018.
…
Given the above, our client is left with little choice but to attend the assessment with Dr Walker at the date, time and place and otherwise in the terms required by him.
433 Dr Morton accepted she agreed, through her lawyers, to be assessed by Dr Walker on his terms, and that she would therefore not record the assessment. She was asked whether she did not disclose the tape she made on 9 July 2018 to her lawyers because she knew that they, on her behalf, had agreed she would not record the assessment. Dr Morton answered:
With respect, it was actually Mr Croft that recorded the assessment and I found out afterwards, and, no, at no time had I disclosed the recording to my lawyers, no.
434 It was put to Dr Morton that it was not true Mr Croft recorded the assessment without her knowledge. Dr Morton said, "Mr Croft recorded the assessment, and I found out about it afterwards. Yes."
435 Dr Morton was asked about a photograph taken by Mr Croft before she attended her consultation with Dr Walker on 9 July 2018. She agreed the photograph was tendered to show the way she normally looked. She denied she knew Mr Croft was going to take the photograph and denied she was directly posing for it. She denied she deliberately dressed down for the appointment. Dr Morton was asked whether, as at July 2018, she was quite capable of grooming her hair properly. She answered:
With respect, there is a difference between capability and motivation to do so. I haven't lost the physical capability to use a hairbrush. I have largely lost a lot of motivation and care and feelings of self-worth.
She was asked the question again, and answered, "Physically capable, yes, mentally capable no".
436 Dr Morton said she presented to Dr Mathew in her normal attire and normal state. It was put to Dr Morton that she did not tell Dr Mathew that, in 2015 and 2016, she had successfully completed an MBA. She responded:
I don't recall if Dr Mathew asked. He had access - or to my knowledge he had access to all of the documents from my treating medical practitioners which included Dr Rees, and Dr Rees certainly knew of the MBA because it was a topic we had discussed on a number of occasions.
437 Dr Morton continued:
If he had not asked me specifically about it, then I don't think it would have come up. I was answering questions that he specifically asked.
438 Dr Morton agreed that when she started at CSIRO, there was stress involved because she was working outside her usual domain. There was a lot of work to get her head around, and existing projects to catch up on. She found Dr Glencross' inappropriate behaviours extremely stressful. She found it stressful that her career was not advancing at CSIRO. She found the reasons for not getting external funding very stressful and concerning. She experienced some small pockets of stress in respect of her relationship with Mr Croft. She also experienced small pockets of stress in dealing with her body image. She said dealing with Mr Croft's own health issues had been stressful. She accepted there had been stressors associated with her weight, related to gastrointestinal issues.
439 Dr Morton agreed she had not tried to find another job since leaving CSIRO. She was asked whether it had been purely her choice as to whether she sought other employment. She answered, "No. I have been written off work with medical certificates that state I am unfit for work".