Queensland magistrate suppresses identity of man with ‘high public profile’ in extortion case
The Guardian World ·

A Queensland magistrate has suppressed the name of a man with a “high public profile” during an ongoing extortion case in Cairns. …
A Queensland magistrate has suppressed the name of a man with a “high public profile” during an ongoing extortion case in Cairns. The man – referred to in court as MM – is not a party to the case, which was back before the Cairns magistrates court on Monday. MM’s conduct was allegedly used as the basis of an extortion attempt against a far north Queensland woman by her former partner. Sen Sgt Maynard Marcum applied for the suppression order to protect MM on behalf of the Queensland police commissioner, Brett Pointing. The magistrate Gelma Meoli ordered the court to be closed, except for accredited media. Barrister Andrew O’Brien, representing media organisations, opposed the broader order suppressing identities beyond the alleged victim of the attempted extortion and the alleged perpetrator. O’Brien argued that naming MM would not reveal the woman’s identity. He argued the magistrate lacked the power to make an order protecting any other party, citing a string of previous cases which he said found that a suppression order could only be made by “necessity”. Suppression orders were only necessary to protect the alleged victim’s identity, the court was told on Monday. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email “In a blackmail case, the complainant and the defendant share the guilty secret, whereas in an extortion case, it’s different; it’s one person revealing another person’s guilty secret, to which they’re not both a party,” O’Brien said. …
Original source: The Guardian World