Australia's most decorated living war veteran, Ben Roberts-Smith, on Friday lost his appeal of a civil court ruling that blamed him for unlawfully killing four unarmed Afghans. Meanwhile a veterans' advocate called on prosecutors to speed up their investigations of war crime allegations in Afghanistan that have left innocent soldiers under a cloud of suspicion.
Three federal court judges unanimously rejected his appeal of a judge's ruling in 2023 that Roberts-Smith was not defamed by newspaper articles published in 2018 that accused him of a range of war crimes.
Justice Anthony Besanko had ruled that the accusations were substantially true to a civil standard and Roberts-Smith was responsible for four of the six unlawful deaths of noncombatants he had been accused of.
Veteran says he'll appeal
Roberts-Smith later said he would immediately seek to appeal the decision in the High Court, his final appeal option.
''I continue to maintain my innocence and deny these egregious, spiteful allegations,'' Roberts-Smith said in a statement.
''Sunlight is said to be the best disinfectant, and I believe one day soon the truth will prevail,'' he added.
Tory Maguire, an executive of Nine Entertainment that published the articles Roberts-Smith claimed were untrue, welcomed the ruling as an ''emphatic win.''