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Person
Le Sueur, Marg

Lawyer, Solicitor

Marg Le Sueur has worked as the Refugee and Immigration Legal Service Coordinator of the Refugee Family Reunion Program.

Person
McKevitt-Emerson, Carolyn Mary

Barrister, Lawyer, Solicitor

Mrs Carolyn Mary McKevitt-Emerson was admitted to the New South Wales Bar in the 1960s.

Person
Lewitan, Rachelle

Judge, Lawyer

Her Honour Judge Lewitan started her legal career at Corrs, where she was made an associate partner in 1975. When she came to the Bar, she
read with the late great Ron Castan and Peter Jordan. She was the first woman elected to the Bar Council and the inaugural convenor of the Women Barristers’
Association. She has been an inspiration for many young women at the Bar. Her Honour was appointed to the County Court in 2001. In 2012 Her Honour was named as a finalist in the 100 Westpac Women of Influence in the category of Diversity.

Person
Liddle, Lorraine

Lawyer, Solicitor

Lorraine Liddle is the daughter of artist Bessie Liddle and Arthur Liddle. In 1986 she became the Northern Territory’s first Aboriginal legal practitioner, travelling between communities as a bush lawyer in Central Australia. She was formerly employed by the Central Australian Aboriginal Legal Aid Service in Alice Springs (CAALAS) until a dispute in 1999. In 1993 Helen Chryssides wrote a book, Local Heroes, which included a profile of Liddle entitled ‘Lorraine Liddle: Bush Lawyer’.

Person
Lieder, Lillian
(1948 – 2001)

Barrister, Lawyer

The late Lillian Lieder QC and Betty King QC (later Justice King, Supreme Court of Victoria) joined the Bar in the mid-1970s. In 1992, they were the first women barristers practising in criminal law to take silk.

Person
Loban, Heron

Academic, Lawyer, Solicitor

Dr Heron Loban is a Senior Lecturer at the Griffith law School.

She is a Torres Strait Islander woman with family connections to Mabuiag and Boigu. She is admitted to practice as a solicitor in the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory, Supreme Court of Queensland and of the High Court of Australia. Her research interests are Indigenous legal issues and consumer law.

Her publications include:
“Inequities, Alternatives and Future Directions: Inside Perspectives of Indigenous Sentencing in Queensland”, (2013) Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, Vol. 20(6), pp. 812-823.

Person
Lovett, Linda

Barrister, Lawyer

Linda Lovett was the first Indigenous woman admitted to the Victorian Bar.

Person
Mangan, Mary

Barrister, Lawyer

Mary Mangan was admitted to the Victorian Bar in 1977.

Person
Marks, Lee

Barrister, Lawyer

Lee Marks was admitted to the Victorian Bar in the 1970s.

Person
Marles, Victoria (Vicki)

Commissioner, Lawyer

Victoria is currently the CEO of Trust for Nature (the Victorian Conservation Trust), a position she has held since late 2009. Prior to assuming this role, Victoria was Victoria’s Legal Services Commissioner and Chief Executive Officer of the Legal Services Board. As a lawyer, Victoria specialised in media and communications law and policy and was the Deputy Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman and prior to that the Deputy Director of the Communications Law Centre. Victoria has a background in the arts, having graduated in Drama from the Victorian College of the Arts. She has held various board positions with such organizations as the Arts Centre, the Victorian Women’s Trust and the Melbourne Writers Festival. Victoria was chair of the Circus Oz Board for 14 years and is currently a board member of the Consumer Action Law Centre and a Director of the Australian Advertising Standards Council.

Person
Marlow, Carmel

Barrister, Lawyer

Carmel Marlow was admitted to the New South Wales Bar in 1972.

Person
Martin, Carolyn Elvina
( – 2012)

Judge, Lawyer, Traveller

Carolyn Martin’s life was one of many firsts. So small and elf-like was the prematurely born Carolyn Hoare, her parents gifted her Elvina as a second name. Such prematurity however, did not impede Carolyn’s intellectual development: aged five, able to read and write fluently and already showing signs of extraordinary intelligence, Carolyn was immediately placed in grade two, having arrived in WA from the UK with her family only shortly before.

In Grade 7, a scholarship brought Carolyn to PLC, where she was a student for the next six years. Always conscientious, and excelling at history, Latin and chemistry, Carolyn later went on to graduate with honors from the University of Western Australia. A Master of Laws at the University of London followed.

Returning to Western Australia, Carolyn was first admitted to practice as a lawyer in 1977. After several years Carolyn joined the WA Family Court as a registrar, the first female appointee to that position.

Other firsts followed. In 1985, Carolyn became the first female stipendiary magistrate, and in 1996, the first female judge of the Family Court of Western Australia. Adoption law called Carolyn, who became the leading authority in Western Australia, if not Australia.

An inveterate traveller, Carolyn notched up visits to 100 countries, many with her mother, as the pair enjoyed exploring different cultures and cuisines on annual overseas trips.

The Hon Justice Carolyn Martin died on 1 October, 2012. A quiet courage and extraordinary concern for others marked out this journey. Her friends remember Carolyn as a person who made the most of every day; a woman whose laughter, vibrancy and zest for life gave her a singular capacity to light up every room she entered.

Person
Hooper, Beverley

Barrister, Lawyer

Beverley Hooper was admitted to practice in 1955, and came to the Bar in 1972.

Person
Kominos, Evangel

Barrister, Lawyer

Evangel Kominos was admitted to the Victorian Bar in the 1970s.

Person
Hribal, Mary-Louise

Chief Magistrate, Judge, Lawyer, Magistrate

Judge Hribal was appointed as a Magistrate in 2007 and was one of two magistrates appointed on a part-time basis – a legal first in SA.

Prior to her appointment as the Chief Magistrate, Judge Hribal presided over criminal and civil matters in Adelaide, suburban and country courts and was Regional Manager of the Criminal Division of the Adelaide Magistrates Court. As Chief Magistrate, Judge Hribal also has a key role on the State Courts Administration Council.

Person
Krejus, Lindis
(1955 – 2012)

Barrister, Lawyer

Lindis Krejus graduated LLB from the University of Melbourne and served articles with James Ryan. She was admitted to practice on 1 March 1979. She signed the Bar Roll on 24 May 1979 and read with John Dwyer (later QC). She developed a general practice including Contracts, Accident Compensation and Medical Negligence. She practised at the Bar for more than 26 years from 1979 until she transferred to the List of Retired Counsel in August 2005. Lindis served as a Legal Officer in the RAAF Reserves, attaining the rank of Squadron Leader. Throughout the 1980s, she lectured in Building Law at RMIT and in the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Melbourne.

Person
Hurst, Katharine
( – 1976)

Barrister, Lawyer

In 1953, Katharine Hurst became the first woman prosecutor in the British colony of Kenya where she prosecuted members of the Mau Mau secret society who were responsible for many deaths during the 1950s. According to the Sun Herald Hurst was an impressive figure in Court: “a woman barrister strode into the Githunguri Court with a revolver at her hip. Katharine Patricia Hurst, 34, wore a khaki drill skirt, mud
spattered nylons, a man’s white shirt and a cartridge belt holding the gun. Her barrister’s robe went on top of all that as she opened the Crown case against five rows of manacled East African natives in the biggest mass-murder trial in Commonwealth history.”

Person
Jackson, Maggie

Government lawyer, Lawyer

Maggie Jackson is the Head of the International Crime Cooperation Division, Attorney-General’s Department.

Person
Jenkins, Kate

Commissioner, Lawyer, Solicitor

Kate Jenkins was appointed to the position of Federal Sex Discrimination Commissioner in February 2016 while she was serving as Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights commissioner, a position she had held since 2013. Jenkins was educated at Tintern Grammar and Geelong Grammar School, followed by the University of Melbourne where she studied arts and law and graduated with double honours degrees. Between 1993 and 2013, Jenkins was partner at Freehills (now Herbert Smith Freehills); her areas of specialisation included equal opportunity and diversity. She is a current board member (and former director) of the Heide Museum of Modern Art and the Carlton Football Club; for many years she also served on the board of Berry Street Victoria, a charity which helps disadvantaged children, young people and families. In her role as Victorian Equal Opportunity commissioner, Jenkins conducted an independent review into sex discrimination and sexual harassment, including predatory behaviour, among Victoria Police personnel. She also convened a Victorian chapter of the ‘Male Champions of Change’ group, an initiative of former Federal Sex Discrimination commissioner Elizabeth Broderick which aims to advance gender equality and increase opportunities for women in the workplace by enlisting the assistance of men in positions of power in the workplace. In 2015, Jenkins was named in the Australian Financial Review and Westpac 100 Women of Influence Awards.

Person
Jenkins, Carolyn Frances (Lindy)

Judge, Lawyer

Carolyn (Lindy) Frances Jenkins was appointed to the Supreme Court of Western Australia on 2 February, 2004.

Born in April, 1959 in Sydney, NSW, Justice Jenkins graduated with a Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Laws from Macquarie University in 1981. She was admitted to practice in New South Wales in 1982, in the Northern Territory (1982), and in Western Australia (1989).

Justice Jenkins was Crown Prosecutor in the Northern Territory from 1982 – 89, including Acting Chief Crown Prosecutor (1988 – 89). She was a Legal Officer, Western Australian Crown Solicitor’s Office from 1989 – 2001, including Deputy Crown Counsel.

She was a member of the Law Reform Commission of Western Australia in 2000 – 2001.

Justice Jenkins was a judge of the District Court of Western Australia from September, 2001 till her appointment to the bench of the Supreme Court.

Person
Johnston, Elizabeth
(1920 – 2002)

Lawyer, Partner

Elizabeth Johnston was born in Adelaide on 1 October 1920. She was educated at Woodlands Church of England Girls’ Grammar School at Glenelg. During her student days at Adelaide University she was secretary of the Radical Club and on the editorial staff of On Dit. She was the first female secretary of a trade union in South Australia, the partner in the law firm Johnston & Johnston and the chair of South Australia’s first Sex Discrimination Board. She was an activist and member of the Australian Communist Party and was married to Justice Elliott Johnston QC. She died in 2002.

Person
Kelleher, Leonie

Barrister, Lawyer

In over thirty years of practice, Ms Kelleher has made legal history through her involvement with test cases in the High Court, Federal Courts, Supreme Courts and one of the last Privy Council cases. She has extensive experience as an environment, planning and local government law specialist.

Ms Kelleher enjoys an international reputation for her work in property restitution in the reunification of East and West Germany and is proficient in the German language. Admitted to practice as a barrister and solicitor in 1975 and qualified as a town planner, Ms Kelleher worked in one of Melbourne’s leading law firms before commencing her own practice. In 1981 she joined the first group of accredited specialists in environment, planning and local government law with the Law Institute of Victoria. In 1988 Ms Kelleher won a Bicentennial Women 88 Award.

In 1990, Ms Kelleher became one of the very few young women ever to be awarded an Order of Australia. In 2013, she completed a PhD examining the impact of regulatory change upon entrepreneurial opportunity, with particular focus on the Native Title Act 1993 and Aboriginal entrepreneurship.

In recognition of her expertise, Ms Kelleher has served on the Council of the Law Institute of Victoria, Heritage Council, Trust for Nature and the Land Valuation Boards of Review. She was also a member of professional associations including the Law Institute of Victoria, Royal Australian Planning Institute, Victorian Environmental and Planning Law Association and the Environmental Institute of Australia as well as being an Accredited Mediator. She is an Honorary Life Member of The Sovereign Hill Museums Association, President of LAMP (Lawyers for the Arabunna Marree People) and Board Member of Sentir, a Jesuit Academic body.

Ms Kelleher balances her successful career with her family responsibilities and takes enormous pride and pleasure in her four children.

Person
Kelly, Patricia

Judge, Lawyer

Justice Patricia Kelly was a Prosecutor at the South Australian DPP and took silk in 2002. Her Honour was appointed to the District Court of South Australia in 2003 and appointed to the Supreme Court of South Australia in 2007.

Person
Kiddle, Marcelle Allayne
( – 2003)

Barrister, Lawyer

Marcelle Allayne Kiddle completed two years of medicine at the University of Melbourne before her career was interrupted by marriage.

After a stint as a dancer, including a contract with the BBC, she enrolled at the London School of Economics (LSE) and graduated LLB (Hons) in 1956. Allayne or “Kiddle” (as she preferred to be known) read for the English Bar and was admitted to the Middle Temple in London, before returning to Melbourne. After signing the Bar Roll in 1959 (the sixth woman to do so), she read with Bill Kaye. She had hoped for a broad practice, but specialised in divorce.

During the 1960s, she returned to LSE to complete a Master of Laws. She appeared with Philip Opas QC at London’s Privy Council during the Ronald Ryan trial in the late 1960s.

Person
Kiefel, Susan Mary

Barrister, Chief Justice, Commissioner, Judge, Lawyer

Susan Mary Kiefel was appointed to the Court in September 2007. At the time of her appointment she was a judge of the Federal Court of Australia and the Supreme Court of Norfolk Island. She served as a judge of the Supreme Court of Queensland in 1993-94 before joining the Federal Court. She was admitted to the Queensland Bar in 1975 and was the first woman in Queensland to be appointed Queen’s Counsel, in 1987. Justice Kiefel served as a part-time Commissioner of the Australian Law Reform Commission from 2003 to 2007. She has a Master of Laws degree from Cambridge University. Justice Kiefel was appointed a Companion in the General Division of the Order of Australia in 2011. She was elected a titular member of the International Academy of Comparative Law in June 2013. She was elected an Honorary Bencher of the Honourable Society of Gray’s Inn in November 2014.

On 29 November 2016, Justice Kiefel was appointed Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia. She is the first woman to achieve the position, ending 113 years of men leading the nation’s highest court.

Person
Kilpatrick, Amy

Lawyer, Solicitor

Amy Kilpatrick was the first full-time Executive Director/Principal Solicitor of the Public Interest Law Clearing House in Sydney. She was formerly the Principal Solicitor at Consumer Law Centre in the Australian Capital Territory.

Person
King, Betty

Barrister, Judge, Lawyer

The Honourable Betty King is a former judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria. She joined the Victorian Bar in 1975. In 1986 she became the first female prosecutor in Victoria, later becoming the first female Commonwealth prosecutor. In 1992 she was appointed Queen’s Counsel. During the late 1990s she was a member of the National Crime Authority at one point acting as chair of the Authority. She became a judge of the County Court of Victoria in 2000 and a judge of the Supreme Court of Victoria in 2005 until her retirement in 2015.