The man who helped expose allegations Australian soldiers committed war crimes has lost a major appeal and subsequently flagged pleading guilty to charges of leaking classified information.
Former military lawyer David McBride faces five charges relating to providing classified information to journalists without permission.
The Defence Force documents led to news stories outlining potential war crimes committed by special forces troops in Afghanistan.
McBride was seeking to rely on an argument that his sworn defence force oath to “protect and serve” implied he could act in the public interest to disobey lawful military orders.
What constituted actions in the public interest was for a jury to decide, his lawyers argued.
But this argument was rejected by ACT Supreme Court Justice David Mossop who found there was no mention of the public interest in the oath.
McBride’s appeal of this decision was shot down by Chief Justice Lucy McCallum on Thursday.
“It is enough to say that His Honour’s ruling on that issue is not obviously wrong,” she said in her reasoning.
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Prosecutor Trish McDonald argued that military personnel following orders was a foundational part of their service.
Disobeying orders due to what they thought was in the public interest would be “the antithesis of service”, she said.
Chief Justice McCallum agreed there was “strong legal support” for the prosecution’s case that discipline in the military “is of central importance”.
She branded McBride’s...
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