Findings of fact
26 The focus of the evidence is on matters arising after the June judgment - although, as I will explain, the conduct of which the applicant complains commenced earlier.
27 On 5 June 2021, an article was published in The Guardian under the headline: Andrew Wilkie warns he will have 'a lot to say' in parliament about whistleblower's battle with ClubsNSW. On 15 June 2021, an article was published in The Sydney Morning Herald under the headline: 'Very disturbing': Gambling whistleblower ordered to pay legal costs of gaming lobby. On the same day, another article was published in The Guardian under the headline: ClubsNSW threatens to try to force media to hand over emails with pokies whistleblower.
28 The three articles referred to the principal proceeding against the respondents and contained reference to aspects of the June judgment, including the fact that the respondents were required to "hand over documents" and were ordered to pay costs.
29 As the June judgment makes clear, in April 2020, the parties agreed on a regime for the disclosure and production of documents by the respondents. On 22 April 2020, the Court was asked by the parties to put that regime into place. There was no contest about that matter. The Court was not called upon to make any adjudication in relation to it. It was simply asked by the parties to make orders by consent - which it did. It must follow that the respondents accepted that there was a sufficient legal foundation for the making of the orders.
30 I should add that the orders made on 22 April 2020 were supported by cross-undertakings. The undertakings given by the respondents were:
…
D. The Respondents will destroy or return (as directed by ClubsNSW) any physical documents in their possession, custody or control, including those in the possession, custody or control of the Respondent's solicitors, which contain or refer to information about:
(a) the Applicant's business, including but not limited to programs or activities conducted or superintended by the Applicant or in which the Applicant assists or acts for its members and clients, including but not limited to ClubSAFE, Liquor & Gaming Audits, compliance programs, business proposals and risk reports;
(b) its members and/or customers;
(c) current and former employees, contractors and other staff of the Applicant, including but not limited to staff turnover rates, salaries and bonuses,
(ClubsNSW Information).
E. The Respondents will not use or disclose any documents or information covered by undertaking D above.
31 It is important to understand that these were undertakings proffered by the respondents. They were not orders made by the Court against them, although, being undertakings given to the Court, the respondents are bound by them as if orders to the same effect had been made.
32 As events transpired, the respondents failed to comply fully with the regime to which they had agreed. This was part of the reason for the applicant bringing the interlocutory application that led to the June judgment. As the applicant was successful on that application, and as Mrs Stolz was unsuccessful on the other application that was then before the Court (Mrs Stolz's application for summary dismissal), the respondents, as the unsuccessful parties, were ordered to pay costs. Such an order, in such circumstances, simply follows the prima facie rule that costs follow the event. These circumstances are not brought to light in the articles.
33 The extent of Mr Stolz's involvement in the content of the articles is not clear. What is clear is that he had some input into their content. A number of quotes are attributed to him. What is more, the articles published in The Sydney Morning Herald and The Guardian on 15 June 2021 refer to and quote from correspondence sent by the applicant's solicitors to the respondents' then solicitors. I infer that this correspondence was provided to the authors of the articles by Mr Stolz himself, or by someone on his behalf.
34 Other correspondence in evidence shows that Mr Stolz is not averse to contacting journalists with a view to suggesting how they might report on the applicant's claims. For example, on 27 February 2020, emails were sent to two journalists using Mr Stolz's email account. The emails attached a letter that had been sent by the applicant's solicitors to the respondents' then solicitors.
35 The email to one journalist read:
Some media coverage on ClubsNSW blatant attempt to get square with the whistleblower, would be good.
36 The email to the other journalist (from The Sydney Morning Herald) read:
A blatant attempt to get square with the whistleblower, would be good.
37 These emails were sent before the principal proceeding was commenced, at a time when the applicant's solicitors and the respondents' then solicitors were engaging in without prejudice correspondence in relation to what the applicant regarded to be Mr Stolz's unauthorised possession and disclosure of ClubsNSW's property. On their face, the emails show that Mr Stolz (or someone using his email address) was providing material to journalists, with the suggestion that they should write articles with a particular theme - namely, that the applicant's claim against the respondents were being advanced by it simply as an act of retribution because Mr Stolz was a "whistleblower".
38 Returning to the articles published on 15 June 2021, one letter that is mentioned is dated 3 June 2021. The letter recorded the fact that the June judgment had awarded costs against the respondents. It noted that the respondents had listed their property at Wongarrah in New South Wales, for sale. The letter expressed the applicant's concern that the respondents might be taking steps to diminish the value of their assets in the face of the current litigation and that the proceeds from the sale of the property might not be available to satisfy the costs order that had been made. The letter requested the respondents to advise whether they would be prepared to deposit an amount of $150,000 into an interest-bearing controlled monies account operated by their then solicitors.
39 The respondents' then solicitors responded on 4 June 2021. The respondents said that, without acknowledging any obligation to do so, they would be prepared to deposit an amount of $50,000 from the sale of the property into such an account. In order for this offer to be considered by the applicant, the respondents said that they would not enter into any contract for sale with a settlement date of not less than 30 days from the date of the contract, and would provide the applicant with notice of any contract and its likely settlement date.
40 On 15 June 2021, after further correspondence from the applicant's solicitors, the respondents expressed their preparedness to increase the amount of the deposit to $60,000. Thus, as at 15 June 2021, negotiations were still taking place between the parties on what sum should be set aside in a controlled account. These matters are not referred to in the two articles.
41 The other letter referred to in the articles is dated 11 June 2021. This letter relates to one aspect of the respondents' failure to comply with the disclosure regime. It concerns a "Protonmail" account used by Mr Stolz to contact journalists, including a journalist from The Sydney Morning Herald, and a journalist from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
42 The evidence describes Protonmail as secure email based in Switzerland, which uses end-to-end encryption. Protonmail accounts can be set up anonymously, without the need to provide personal information.
43 The following is provided as further background to this correspondence.
44 On 15 December 2020, I made an order that the respondents serve affidavits containing login or other access details in respect of a number of email accounts which, on investigation by the independent expert, the respondents had failed to disclose as required by the disclosure regime to which they had agreed, including the Protonmail account.
45 In an affidavit made on 22 December 2020, Mr Stolz acknowledged that he had used the Protonmail account to contact journalists. He said, however, that he could not remember the password for the account and was unable to reset the password, despite having sent emails to the account as recently as 28 February 2020.
46 For reasons which I need not explain in detail (but which are addressed in the evidence), the applicant raised its concern that Mr Stolz had not made a genuine attempt to provide access to the Protonmail account, as he had been ordered to do.
47 In correspondence passing between the applicant's solicitors and the respondents' then solicitors, the respondents authorised the independent expert to reset the password to the account and create a copy of its metadata. However, for various reasons, the independent expert could not reset the password and the Protonmail account could not be accessed.
48 In the 11 June 2021 letter, the applicant's solicitors noted Mr Stolz's acknowledgement that he had used the Protonmail account to communicate with the two journalists. They asserted, on the applicant's behalf, an entitlement to investigate the extent of Mr Stolz's unauthorised disclosure of its confidential information, and to recover the information that had been disclosed. As to this, the applicant's solicitors said:
… ClubsNSW is presently considering invoking the Court's power to compel the Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation to produce their communications with Mr Stolz. We take it that your client will not object to this course of action in circumstances where he has admitted to providing the above journalists with our client's confidential information. Please confirm your client's position. …
49 In their letter, the applicant's solicitors stated that if compulsory disclosure became necessary (I infer, by subpoena), they proposed to provide the two journalists with any correspondence received on behalf of Mr Stolz to the effect that he did not oppose their compliance with the Court's process and had, in fact, consented to the issue of that process.
50 Although expressed in a somewhat roundabout way, the intent of the letter is clear. The letter was advancing a proposal and seeking Mr Stolz's assistance - namely, signifying, for the benefit of the two journalists, that he, personally, did not have objection to them producing the documents that he had given them. This assistance was requested in circumstances where, subject to the disclosure regime, Mr Stolz was required to produce the documents himself, but was apparently unable to do so.
51 The respondents' then solicitors only responded to this letter on 22 June 2021, one week after publication of the two newspaper articles to which I have referred. They disputed a number of matters, and concluded by stating:
6. In any event, the applications your client has foreshadowed against [the two journalists] are matters for it and it is not a matter that our client needs to comment upon at this stage.
52 While, as between parties to the proceeding, Mr Stolz did not choose to make his own comment, he did choose to place the applicant's solicitors' letter of 11 June 2021 into the hands of the two newspapers. I infer that he did so in the knowledge that the letters would provide material on which the two newspapers might themselves pass comment in their reportage.
53 The applicant submits that its proposal to resolve the issue of the Protonmail account by seeking to have the two journalists provide the documents, when apparently Mr Stolz could not (even though he was obliged to do so), was an entirely sensible one. However, rather than providing a timely and appropriate response by communications between solicitors, Mr Stolz took the deliberate course of providing his solicitors' correspondence to The Sydney Morning Herald and to The Guardian. The applicant submits that this was done by Mr Stolz with the object of the two newspapers portraying its proposal as an attempt by it to silence the media. This is certainly how Mr Stolz explained the letter to the media: see the quotation at [54] below.
54 In the article published by The Sydney Morning Herald, the author refers to aspects of the June judgment, and then, in relation to the two letters, states:
…
Since the ruling, Mr Stolz has received two letters from law firm Thomson Geer, acting for ClubsNSW, threatening further legal action.
One sent on June 3 says ClubsNSW will take him back to court if he doesn't pay a $150,000 deposit for the costs awarded against him after he listed his house in Woongarrah, on the NSW Central Coast, to fund the legal battles.
A subsequent letter sent on June 11 threatens to invoke the court's power to force journalists Nick O'Malley from The Sydney Morning Herald and Steve Cannane from ABC to hand over their communications with Mr Stolz after publishing reports that NSW pokie venues were breaking money laundering and terrorism finance laws.
"I've got to tell my kids, and my 19-year-old son with autism, that we've got to sell the house to keep fighting this," Mr Stolz told The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald.
"They want to use the court system to run me out of money. They're using ClubsNSW money against me, which is meant to be for the betterment of the industry.
"I never thought I'd have to sell my house for reporting criminal activity in clubs. I feel like I'm on my own."
…
55 In the article published by The Guardian, the author states:
New South Wales' powerful club lobby is considering using the courts to force two journalists to hand over email communications they had with a poker machine whistleblower.
ClubsNSW is also demanding that the whistleblower, Troy Stolz, set aside $150,000 from the sale of his house on the Central Coast to cover its court costs.
Stolz said the attempt to force journalists from the ABC and the Sydney Morning Herald to hand over their correspondence with him is a "disgrace", designed to cow the media into silence.
"It's a public interest matter that affects all communities," he told Guardian Australia. "It's a national security issue. They are trying to silence the media from reporting on the truth."
On Friday, ClubsNSW's lawyers wrote to Stolz asking that he give the group access to an encrypted Protonmail account, which he used to communicate with the ABC journalist Steve Cannane and the Herald journalist Nick O'Malley.
The letter, sent by the law firm Thomson Geer, warned that ClubsNSW may compel the two media outlets to hand over their correspondence with Stolz.
…
56 After reporting on other matters, The Guardian article returns to the June judgment, and says:
…
The decision also financially crippled Stolz. Costs were awarded against him, and the whistleblower says his legal bill has now hit $600,000.
In a separate letter, Thomson Greer said it had become aware that Stolz has sold a home in Woongarrah. It told Stolz he must put $150,000 from the proceeds of sale into an account controlled by his lawyers to cover ClubsNSW's costs.
"In the event a satisfactory response is not received, or your clients refuse to provide the above requested undertaking, ClubsNSW expressly reserves the right to approach the court to seek asset preservation orders."
Despite the mounting costs, Stolz said he would still have blown the whistle on something he saw to be in the public interest.
"I never anticipated I would be financially and reputationally ruined by reporting a crime to my employer, Asic and politicians," Stolz told Guardian Australia. "It is a public interest matter and due to affording criminals the opportunity to use NSW Clubs pokies as a vehicle to launder money obtained through organised crime, it's a matter of national security.
"I would have still done it, regardless of the damage to my health, family and financially. The public, the community deserve better."
…
57 On the following day, 16 June 2021, Mr Stolz published a Twitter post containing a link to The Guardian article, with the caption:
The importance of whistleblowing and parliamentary privilege in this Country is at risk. We need to protect both.
58 As I have previously made clear, the June judgment did not deal with, and made no findings, in respect of any question of parliamentary privilege. The claim that the documents were subject to parliamentary privilege was withdrawn. Further, as I explain in more detail below, the June judgment had nothing to do with "whistleblowing".
59 In a subsequent Twitter post, Mr Stolz again published a link to The Guardian article, with the caption:
To voice your complaint about the behaviour of ClubsNSW and its corporate bullying, call 1800 99 77 66 or 92683069 clubsafe@clubsnsw.com.au or enquiries@clubsnsw.com.au #bashwhistleblowers #moneylaundering #CorruptionBarometer #gamblingreform
60 On about 16 June 2021, Mr Stolz commenced an online crowdfunding campaign hosted by GoFundMe. In that campaign, Mr Stolz referred to himself as a whistleblower who "blew the whistle on the alarming scale of money laundering in NSW Clubs". He said that he has been "taken to court by ClubsNSW" because he is a whistleblower. He said that his legal battle had taken a serious toll on his mental health and finances, as well as affecting his family.
61 The GoFundMe page continues:
…
As a result of losing an interlocutory application for costs brought on by ClubsNSW, NSD 405 of 2020-Registered Clubs Association of New South Wales v Stolz [2021] FCA 576, I have had costs awarded against me in the vicinity of $150k to $300k., by Justice Yates in the Federal Court of Australia.
ClubsNSW has won the right to use documents that I, a "whistleblowing" former anti-money laundering compliance auditor, was made to produce in a confidentiality case before Justice Yates, in two other proceedings.
Judge Yates has ordered correspondence between a staffer in Andrew Wilkie MP [sic] Office and myself, who is not subject to privilege. It will be handed over to ClubsNSW.
ClubsNSW is meanwhile separately suing me and my wife in the Federal Court for allegedly breaching a confidentiality agreement by leaking a board document to independent MP Andrew Wilkie (see Related Article).
An application for summary judgment filed by my wife against ClubsNSW was dismissed by Justice Yates. The Judge has awarded costs, anticipated to be in the vicinity of $300,000 against me.
The whistleblower legislation has failed on this occasion to protect a whistleblower and is a farce.
My ex-employer has the right to access all communications of my medical records and reports in my workers compensation proceedings as well as all personal and private communications that I've had, with whoever.
Essentially, Justice David Yates has ruled any communication by a constituent, member of the public, a whistleblower reporting serious criminal activity to a Politician, is open slather and will be furnished to the person or entity who are committing the crime. They are entitled to all communications. Breach of confidentiality in an employment contract, over rides [sic] whistleblower protection.
As a result of litigation, I am now forced to sell my home. ClubsNSW are not entitled to receive their costs until the end of the proceedings, but are now seeking I put $150k into a trust account, to protect their costs order.
Please find some links below with some further information about my story and if you can donate anything, it would really mean a lot to me and the cause I am fighting for.
(Original emphasis.)
…
62 A number of statements on this page require correction. I will not attempt to address all of them, although the following matters are particularly important.
63 First, by omission, the GoFundMe page does not explain the reason why Mr Stolz was required to produce documents. By reason of the June judgment, the applicant had not "won the right to use documents". Put simply, the respondents were required to produce documents because they had agreed to produce them under a disclosure regime in respect of which consent orders had been made. The June judgment deals with the respondents' failure to comply with the disclosure regime, and thus the orders to which they had consented.
64 Secondly, the June judgment was not dealing with an interlocutory application for costs. I have described the matters dealt with by the June judgment at [8] - [19] above.
65 Thirdly, although, for the reasons explained in the June judgment, an order for costs was made against the respondents, no order was made quantifying those costs. To be clear, costs in the vicinity of $150,000 - $300,000 were not awarded against Mr Stolz. The amount of costs to which the applicant is entitled as a result of the costs order will, if disputed, be determined, if necessary, by taxation in the usual way.
66 Fourthly, I did not make an order, in terms, that correspondence between a staffer in the office of Mr Andrew Wilkie MP and Mr Stolz be "handed over" to the applicant. The orders I made were directed to compliance with the regime. That regime, in turn, was for the disclosure and production of documents that the independent expert, on analysis, believed to be confidential information or intellectual property belonging to the applicant, or which evidenced (in effect) the use of that information or property by the respondents.
67 Ms Fernandez has deposed (in her affidavit of 14 July 2021) that, of all the documents that have been produced following the June judgment, only five communications have been identified as being exchanged with Mr Wilkie and his office. I have not been taken to that correspondence; but if it is correspondence between a staffer in Mr Wilkie's office and Mr Stolz, it was required to be produced because of the respondents' agreement to do so in accordance with the disclosure regime put in place by the consent orders of 22 April 2020.
68 Fifthly, I did not make any ruling to the effect that any communication by a constituent to a parliamentarian, reporting serious criminal conduct, is "open slather and will be furnished to the person or entity who are committing the crime".
69 Sixthly, to the extent the statements in the GoFundMe page, referred to in [66] - [68] above, might be understood as conveying that, by the June judgment, the Court made orders overriding a properly articulated claim for parliamentary privilege, I repeat that no claim of parliamentary privilege was advanced by the respondents against the production of documents the subject of the June judgment. The claim of parliamentary privilege was withdrawn. As I have said, I can only conclude that the legal basis for initially making this claim was reassessed and that the considered legal view was taken that none of the documents in question was protected by parliamentary privilege.
70 Seventhly, the GoFundMe page refers to "whistleblower legislation" having failed. This suggests that, by dint of the June judgment, Mr Stolz was adjudged not to be a whistleblower. However, the respondents did not advance any whistleblower protection claims or suggest that their failure to comply with the disclosure regime was excused by any legislation, let alone whistleblower protection legislation. To be clear, the respondents' contention at the hearing leading to the June judgment was that they were not required to produce certain documents having regard to a particular construction they chose to place on the orders of 22 April 2021. I rejected their contention. The respondents' contention had nothing to do with the claim that Mr Stolz was a whistleblower.
71 I emphasise this matter because, in later correspondence, the respondents' then solicitors endeavoured to explain the statement:
The whistleblower legislation has failed on this occasion to protect a whistleblower and is a farce. …
as conveying that whistleblower legislation did not protect Mr Stolz because, unconnected with the June judgment, he does not fall within the relevant preconditions for the operation of that protection.
72 I do not accept that this is how this sentence would be understood when read in the context of the GoFundMe page. The GoFundMe page purports to explain Mr Stolz's need for funds because of the outcome of a legal proceeding in which he, as a whistleblower, was adjudged liable to produce documents, and suffered an adverse order for costs in the process. The only possible "occasion" referred to is the occasion of the court proceeding, as Mr Stolz chose to describe that proceeding. The GoFundMe page is not a discourse on the preconditions of legislative whistleblower protection. It is a discourse on the court proceeding. Seen in context, the sentence quoted above plainly suggests that an adverse finding on whistleblower protection was made in the court proceeding to which Mr Stolz refers, which decision made that protection, in Mr Stolz's case, a "farce".
73 Eighthly, I did not order that the applicant be granted access to all Mr Stolz's "personal and private communications … with whoever". Once again, the June judgment concerned the respondents' need to comply with court orders to which they consented, and with a disclosure regime with which they had agreed.
74 On 16 June 2021, Mr Stolz published a Twitter post containing a link to his GoFundMe page with the caption:
Troy Stolz VS ClubsNSW Legal Fund
75 On 18 June 2021, he published a Twitter post which included an excerpt from the applicant's solicitors' letter of 3 June 2021, with the caption:
Bash the whistleblower into submission. Intimidation, bullying. Doesn't look like a not-for-profit organisation to me. The ATO should have a long hard look at their financials. $17 million a year received from the joint 50% ownership of Keno.
76 In a letter dated 18 June 2021, the applicant's solicitors wrote to the respondents' then solicitors drawing attention to a number of misstatements on the GoFundMe page. The letter concluded by stating:
In light of its misleading contents, it is unconscionable to Mr Stolz to maintain the [GoFundMe page] in order to solicit funds from the general public.
We request that Mr Stolz immediately take down the [GoFundMe page] and return all funds donated to date to the relevant donors.
We await your urgent response confirming compliance with the above. Should Mr Stolz failed to do so by close of business on Monday, 21 June 2021, we will raise our concerns directly with GoFundMe and the Court. …
(Original emphasis.)
77 In response to the request to take down the GoFundMe page, the respondents' then solicitors sent the following letter dated 22 June 2021 (formal parts omitted):
Stolz & Anor ats The Registered Club Association of NSW
1. We refer to your correspondence of 18 June 2021 with respect to our client's GoFundMe Page.
2. Our client rejects your allegations and your request to take down the Page.
3. In any event, the judgment of Judge Yates is readily and publicly available to all members of the public on the internet. There is no basis to allege that members of the public can be misled.
4. In any event, in order to alleviate your client's concerns, our client intends to publish your correspondence in full on his GoFundMe Page so that those existing and potential donors can form their own views in relation to your client's protest.
78 The applicant's solicitors objected to their letter being published in this way. The respondents' then solicitors replied by stating that only the paragraph under the heading "Your response" in the applicant's solicitors' letter of 18 June 2021 would be reproduced on the GoFundMe page.
79 I do not know whether this paragraph of the letter of 18 June 2021 was reproduced on the GoFundMe page. If it was, I question the appropriateness of publishing the applicant's solicitors' correspondence to the respondents' solicitors, or any part of it. But even if it was reproduced, it would hardly stand as a meaningful correction. Further, I do not think that it was an adequate response for the respondents' then solicitors to say that the June judgment was publicly available on the Internet. This did not deal with the terms in which the GoFundMe page was, itself, expressed. This has the appearance of turning a deaf ear to important and seriously raised concerns. Mr Stolz was obviously content to leave the GoFundMe page substantially uncorrected in respect of those aspects which the applicant had identified as misleading.
80 On about 23 June 2021, a commentator published a Twitter post containing a link to the GoFundMe page, with the caption:
Am hearing that the charmers at Clubs NSW are sending legal threats demanding that @TroyStolz take down his Go Fund Me page and refund the money. Another strong reason to get behind this noble Davis vs Goliath [sic] whistleblower cause: gofundme.com/f/troystolz?ut … @Nick_Xenophon @WilkieMP
81 This post appears to be referring to the applicant's solicitors' letter dated 18 June 2021. Mr Stolz, or someone on his behalf, must have informed the commentator about the request to take down the GoFundMe page, and to return the funds that had been donated in reliance on the statements that had been made. But I infer that the commentator was not apprised of the concerns that the applicant's solicitors had raised. Had those concerns been known, they would have given reason to pause before making this post. Mr Stolz re-tweeted the post.
82 On 24 June 2021, an article was published in The Guardian under the headline: ClubsNSW demands pokies whistleblower stop crowdfunding for court case. This article referred to the fact that Mr Stolz had received a letter from the applicant's solicitors demanding that he take down the GoFundMe page and return the donated funds. It is clear that the letter of 18 June 2021 had been provided to The Guardian, because the article quotes passages from it. The article contains the following:
Stolz told the Guardian the threat regarding his GoFundMe page showed "the extreme lengths that ClubsNSW will go to, to punish a whistleblower".
"Not only are they suing me in the federal court, they have previously demanded that I put $150,000 aside from the sale of my house to pay their legal costs and now they want to deprive my supporters of the opportunity to help me through the GoFundMe page", he said.
83 The applicant subsequently received abusive correspondence, the sending of which they attribute to Mr Stolz's public statements about the proceeding. Three examples of such correspondence, received by the applicant on 25 June 2021, are in evidence.
84 The first example is:
Your blood sucking organisation is just a parasite. I hope that the people that fight to take money off those who can't afford it have your consciences pull you out of restful sleep for the rest of your lives in a cold sweat and a soiled bed.
85 The second example is:
Way to go being utter gutter trash. You tax the poorest, target the weakest and then throw a strop when you get outed. Your actions portray your intent. I donated to the other guy.
86 The third example is:
"ClubsNSW demands pokies whistleblower stop crowdfunding for court case"
You people simply practice legal thievery - best thing you could do is close all gambling activities.
87 The content of the last two examples indicates that at least these communications were sent as a consequence of public statements made by Mr Stolz, or of statements made by others based on Mr Stolz's statements, about the proceeding. I accept that the sending of these particular examples must have been motivated by the statements made by Mr Stolz on the GoFundMe page.
88 On 25 June 2021, the applicant's solicitors again wrote to the respondents' then solicitors. In that letter, they outlined the applicant's concerns in relation to Mr Stolz's media campaign - namely, that Mr Stolz was representing to the media, and to the world at large, that the applicant:
(a) has bullied, and is continuing to bully, Mr Stolz;
(b) was trying to silence the media;
(c) was misusing its funds in pursuing its present claim against Mr Stolz;
(d) was prepared to go to extreme lengths to punish a whistleblower; and
(e) was trying to stop Mr Stolz from obtaining financial support through his GoFundMe page.
89 On 2 July 2021, the respondents' then solicitors responded. They denied that Mr Stolz had engaged in a media campaign designed to pressure the applicant, and that he had misrepresented the June judgment. However, they advised that, without admissions, and on a without prejudice basis, Mr Stolz would make changes to his GoFundMe page, specifically that Mr Stolz would:
(a) state that it is his opinion that the costs awarded against him would be in the vicinity of $150,000 - $300,000;
(b) remove the following text: The whistleblower legislation has failed on this occasion to protect a whistleblower and as a farce. My ex-employer has the right to access all communications of my medical records and reports in my workers compensation proceedings as well as all personal and private communications that I've had, with whoever. Essentially, Justice David Yates has ruled any communication by constituent, member of the public, a whistleblower reporting serious criminal activity to a Politician, is open slather and will be furnished to the person or entity who are committing the crime. They are entitled to all communications. Breach of confidentiality in an employment contract overrides whistleblower protection; and
(c) post a link to the June judgment.
90 The respondents' former solicitors said that Mr Stolz would make these changes by close of business on 5 July 2021.
91 On about 5 July 2021, the GoFundMe page was updated to include a link to the June judgment. However, according to Ms Fernandez, the GoFundMe page remained the same in substance.
92 On 16 July 2021, a sealed copy of the present interlocutory application, and Ms Fernandez's affidavit of 14 July 2021, was served by email delivery to the respondents' then solicitors. The following morning (17 July 2021) an article was published in The Guardian under the headline: ClubsNSW seeks court order to stop pokies whistleblower speaking to media. This article inspired a number of posts on Twitter.
93 On 22 July 2021, an article was published by Crikey.com.au under the headline: ClubsNSW has made a bid to silence a whistleblower. Instead, it may have turned up the volume on corruption claims. The article contained the following:
ClubsNSW is today seeking a gag order against former employee and whistleblower Troy Stolz, who has spoken out against the "alarming" scale of money laundering in pokies rooms at local clubs and pubs across the state.
The lobby group is trying to stop him from speaking to journalists while it sues him for blowing the whistle on alleged money laundering through the state's poker machines.
Xenophon Davis, the law firm run by former South Australian senator Nick Xenophon and ex-journo Mark Davis, is now taking on the case in a sign of the growing momentum behind the whistleblower's cause.
"It's an honour to represent Troy Stolz, a person of great courage, who is up against the power of gambling and lobbying behemoth that is ClubsNSW," Xenophon told Crikey.
The legal battle between Stolz and ClubsNSW has been winding its way through the federal court for more than a year via multiple actions between both parties.
But the dramatic intervention risks elevating Stolz to a more prominent voice than when he initially spoke out last year.
…
94 The applicant's present interlocutory application does not seek an order restraining Mr Stolz from speaking to journalists about this proceeding. However, this article inspired a number of posts on Twitter, including from the respondents' current solicitors.
95 Correspondence in relation to the GoFundMe page continued in the period up to the hearing of the present interlocutory application. On 12 August 2021, Mr Stolz's current solicitors wrote to the applicant's solicitors, stating their understanding that, on 14 July 2021, Mr Stolz removed the following text from the GoFundMe page "on a without admission and without prejudice basis":
a. "My ex-employer has the right to access to all communications of my medical records and reports in my workers compensation proceedings as well as all personal and private communications that I've had, with whoever.
b. Essentially, Justice David Yates has ruled any communication by a constituent member of the public, a whistleblower reporting serious criminal activity to a Politician, is open slather and will be furnished to the person or entity who are committing the crime. They are entitled to all communications. Breach of confidentiality in an employment contract, overrides whistleblower protection."
96 Mr Stolz's current solicitors said, however, that they saw "no compelling basis" to remove the following statement which, they said, was "our client's genuine belief":
The whistleblower legislation has failed on this occasion to protect a whistleblower and is a farce.
97 This response is curious given that Mr Stolz's former solicitors informed the applicant's solicitors, on 2 July 2021, that this statement would be removed by close of business on 5 July 2021: [90] above.
98 On 19 August 2021, two business days before the hearing of the present interlocutory application, Mr Stolz posted the following on Twitter:
Here we go again. ClubsNSW bashing the whistleblower. Federal Court of Australia, NSW Registry. NSD405/2020 THE REGISTERED CLUBS ASSOCIATION OF NSW v TROY GRAHAM STOLZ & ANOR Monday 23-Aug-2021@10:15-Interlocutory Hearing-Justice Yates-Virtual Recorder Five, By Web Conf.
99 On the following day (20 August 2021), a replying Tweet was posted:
Wasn't Yates allegedly compromised at a judgement having a conflict of interest with the plaintiff in a case. [sic]
100 Mr Stolz retweeted this post.
101 I do not know what incident this post is referring to, or the basis for it. I raised the matter at the hearing of the present interlocutory application:
HIS HONOUR: Before you sit down, Mr Watson, Mr Withers did take me to page 252 of the court book - - -
MR WATSON: Yes.
HIS HONOUR: - - - where Mr Stolz re-tweeted what seems to be some allegation that the court was compromised by having a conflict of interest with the applicant to go about - - -
MR WATSON: Could I tell your Honour, we were sent this for the first time when I was already set up in this courtroom. I read it. I didn't like the look of it. I wish Mr Stolz hadn't done it. But in the first place it was done by somebody else altogether, and Mr Stolz shouldn't have [retweeted] it, but that's all he did. I don't know what it is, and we're not certainly - not suggesting anything of that sort involving your Honour, and if there's a - - -
HIS HONOUR: It was re-tweeted on Friday.
MR WATSON: I know. Your Honour, what can I say? That is something which when I saw it here this morning, in the way that White J would have put it, my response involved expletives. I just couldn't believe that Mr Stolz would be so silly as to do that. All I can say now is that his lawyers, I can assure you, knew nothing about it, and I haven't spoken to Mr Stolz, but I don't care what he says. I will say now he should not have re-tweeted that, we don't know any basis for it and it shouldn't ..... your Honour. I will ask Mr Stolz, if your Honour wishes, to provide his own apology or explanation for that and he can do it on affidavit. I just couldn't believe it when I saw it.
HIS HONOUR: But I'm not asking for an apology. That will be totally up to Mr Stolz as to what he thinks the appropriate thing to do is. That [referring to the re-tweet] clearly wasn't appropriate.
MR WATSON: I agree. Whether that's a basis for getting an injunction is another matter, as I said before, we accept. Well, your Honour's reputation of fairness and good judgment is well-known. We accept that and I just say on behalf of the lawyers, not having spoken to Mr Stolz directly about it, I apologise. I feel embarrassed standing here with the job of defending it; it shouldn't have been said.
HIS HONOUR: Yes, thank you, Mr Watson.
102 The post that Mr Stolz re-tweeted raises a serious and troubling allegation. Its sting lies in vague suggestion, the purport of which appears to be that this proceeding has not been, and will not be, conducted fairly, justly, and impartially and that it is being heard by a "compromised" Court whose decisions will favour the applicant. Counsel for Mr Stolz, Mr Watson SC, was correct to point out that Mr Stolz was not the author of the remark. However, it is apparent that Mr Stolz was prepared to endorse it, because he re-tweeted it and gave it his own public circulation.