Amber Harrison slams Seven for 'brutal' legal battle
The former lover of Seven West Media boss Tim Worner has taken aim at the company.
Michaela Whitbourn is a former corporate lawyer who has reported extensively across politics, finance, business and law. In 2011, she was appointed the NSW political reporter for The Australian Financial Review and provided in-depth coverage of historic corruption inquiries into former state Labor ministers. She also exposed attempts by the O'Farrell government to mislead voters about the effect of the carbon tax on transport costs. In October 2013, she joined The Sydney Morning Herald as legal affairs and investigations reporter.
The former lover of Seven West Media boss Tim Worner has taken aim at the company.
It was her first opportunity to speak in court but the woman at the centre of a bitter legal battle with Seven West Media said little other than "Hello, Amber speaking" before the hearing was halted.
Seven West Media boss's ex-lover waged a "vindictive" and "arrogant" campaign to humiliate him, court hears.
Amber Harrison has walked away from her legal battle with Seven West Media and will consent to a permanent gag order preventing her speaking about the company and her affair with chief executive Tim Worner.
Former Credit Suisse vice-president cleared of procuring or encouraging his jogging buddy to commit insider trading.
A Sydney man convicted of insider trading has admitted he "fished" for information from an investment banker friend who went jogging with him in The Domain.
Simon Anquetil, one of the alleged conspirators in the $165m tax fraud, racked up $100k on strippers.
The former lover of Seven West Media boss Tim Worner has suffered a setback in her court battle with the company, after a Sydney judge refused to transfer the case to a court in her home state.
The prominent silk acting for the former lover of Seven West Media boss Tim Worner has been rebuked by a Supreme Court judge for claiming she is taking on "one of the country's biggest boys' clubs".
The corporate regulator's landmark case against Westpac over allegedly irresponsible home loan practices does not show customers suffered "any hardship", a court has heard.
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