The City of Canning mayor has won $250,000 in damages after the Supreme Court found a ratepayer published a fake Facebook post falsely portraying him endorsing a Federal MP, as part of an “obsessive” smear campaign to paint him as corrupt.
In a decision delivered on Wednesday, WA Supreme Court Justice Marcus Solomon found Richard Clive Aldridge published ten defamatory publications about Patrick Hall between September 2021 to September 2022, most of them via Facebook.
A fake endorsement Aldridge shared with regulators.Credit: WA Supreme Court
The judgment traced the origins of contempt to a long-running dispute over Shelley Beach Park, an off-leash dog beach on the Canning River foreshore where Hall supported a cafe proposal, which Aldridge opposed.
Justice Solomon found Aldridge turned his focus to Hall endorsing Canning council candidates via his mayoral Facebook page.

City of Canning Mayor Patrick Hall.Credit: Facebook
The judge said “the volume and persistence” and some content within Aldridge’s complaints and applications “bordered on the bizarre”.
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“I have concluded that Mr Aldridge’s lack of objectivity and obsessive contempt for Mr Hall is so entrenched and pervasive that his evidence cannot be relied upon unless it is corroborated by contemporaneous documentary evidence,” Justice Solomon found.
The most serious publication was a fake advertisement of Hall endorsing former Liberal MP Ben Morton using his mayoral title, which Aldridge had included in complaints to authorities.
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