
The 鈥渟loppy鈥 use of a child鈥檚 name during an interview about the use of vaccinated blood in life-saving surgery has cost a lawyer $15,690.
Nelson-based lawyer Sue Grey has been fined $1500 and ordered to pay $14,190 in costs and reimbursements associated with proceedings brought against her, after she referred to a child whose identity was suppressed.
Grey hit national headlines during the Covid pandemic and the rise of anti-vaccination activism.
Grey was the spokesperson for the parents of a baby at the centre of a standoff over the use of vaccinated people鈥檚 blood in what doctors argued was necessary, life-saving surgery.
Grey made mistakes during two online interviews.
The first interview was with former broadcaster Liz Gunn, livestreamed on a social media platform.
On two occasions, Grey realised she had used an abbreviated form of the mother鈥檚 name inadvertently.
The second interview was the next day with a Canadian interviewer when Grey mentioned the baby鈥檚 shortened name four times.
It attracted a complaint from lawyers for Te Whatu Ora/Health NZ, which landed Grey before the tribunal that oversees lawyers' conduct.
The New Zealand Lawyers and Conveyancers Disciplinary Tribunal found last year that Grey鈥檚 action amounted to unsatisfactory conduct in that it fell below an expected standard, but it was not deliberate.
It followed similar action the year before when Grey鈥檚 comments about Covid-19 vaccines did not amount to misconduct because they were made as a private citizen.
In a penalty decision released this month, the tribunal emphasised the importance of practitioners upholding court orders regarding the suppression of names and identifying details, and had Grey deliberately breached the order, there would have been a finding of misconduct.
The tribunal found that Grey had endeavoured to comply with suppression and the slip occurred in the course of long interviews and in one case, the late hour in which it was conducted.
It said that by the end of the two lengthy interviews, Grey had become somewhat 鈥渟loppy鈥 and let down her guard, thereby entering into professional error in breaching the suppression orders.
鈥淲hile we accepted that Ms Grey had deliberately taken on the role of family spokesperson because of her fear that her clients might themselves breach the suppression order, given their keenness to make the public aware of their situation and the reason for the stand that they were taking, we noted that in adopting this role, Ms Grey had made herself vulnerable to the sorts of errors which occurred,鈥 the tribunal said.
It also said among a list of mitigating factors that Grey鈥檚 clients supported her and it was relevant they did not wish to see her disciplined for her errors, as was the fact that the family鈥檚 names and that of the child were already in the public domain, and that there had been a photograph of the family in the NZ Herald.
Grey said at the hearing that at one level it was a case of 鈥渢he horse having bolted鈥, given the frenzied interest in the family鈥檚 plight and public protests outside a court that included photos of the child鈥檚 face on placards.
The tribunal responded then by saying the suppression order aimed to stop what was already in the public domain from travelling further, for the sake of the child in the future.
The tribunal said in deciding on a penalty that it did not consider that full indemnity costs were appropriate in this matter, and ordered a 鈥渟omewhat reduced contribution鈥 to the Standards Committee costs, which came in at a little over $25,000.
Grey was fined and ordered to pay a $10,000 contribution to the committee鈥檚 costs and $4190 in tribunal costs.
九一星空无限 has approached Grey for comment.
Tracy Neal is a Nelson-based Open Justice reporter at 九一星空无限. She was previously RNZ鈥檚 regional reporter in Nelson-Marlborough and has covered general news, including court and local government for the Nelson Mail.
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