Brigitte Morten

Director
Brigitte Morten

Brigitte is admitted as a barrister and solicitor of the High Court.

She has over a decade of experience working in politics across Australia and New Zealand. She has a Bachelor of Law from Victoria University, a Masters of Law from the Australian National University, and a Graduate Certificate in Counter-Terrorism from Interdisciplinary Center (Israel).

Brigitte spent three years providing political and media advice to the Embassy of Israel in Australia, whilst dealing with a number of high profile events. She worked as a Senior Advisor in state politics and worked on a number of Australian state and federal election campaigns. Brigitte was a Chief of Staff to an Australian Senator, before returning home to be the Senior Ministerial Advisor to the Minister of Education in the last National Government.

She has worked extensively with clients in the private sector to help them establish and maintain relationships with government, lobby on important issues, and drive campaigns to raise public interest. Brigitte particularly enjoys working with grassroots and member based organisations.

Brigitte has extensive knowledge of law making processes, how to best utilise the Official Information Act, and how to coordinate public interest campaigns across multiple channels. She is particularly interested and experienced in firearms law, electoral law and large scale reforms.

She is a regular commentator for RNZ and Newshub, and writes a weekly column for NBR.

Brigitte
in the news
October 26, 2021

Director Brigitte Morten joined host Kathryn Ryan and Director of TalbotMills Research, Stephen Mills on Nine to Noon to discuss the week in politics. They discussed the Prime Minister's announcement of a vaccination target and new traffic light system, National's Back to Business plan, the joint housing announcement from National and Labour, and the Free Trade Agreement with the UK.

To listen to the panel, click here.

October 7, 2021

Overview  

Franks Ogilvie assisted the Council of Licenced Firearm Owners (COLFO) to advocate on behalf of their members against significant firearms law changes. 

Issue

Following the 15 March terrorist attack in Christchurch, the Government announced they were pursuing a significant reform of firearms laws and regulations. COLFO understood some change may be required but argued the nature and scale of the proposed reform would not provide the promised outcome– increased community safety.

What we did  

COLFO wanted to ensure their members’ views were understood and heard by Government. They wanted to play a constructive role informing the changes. COLFO recognised that to do so they would need support in multiple ways including legal advice on proposed changes, strategic political advice, media and PR support, and membership fundraising and communication.

Franks Ogilvie brought together a strategy team across all of these disciplines and led the Fair and Reasonable campaign over a period of approximately 18 months.  We provided legal advice on the numerous proposed changes to the law introduced throughout this period, including drafting submissions, providing detail to MPs, and advising on Parliamentary process.

In court, COLFO challenged the government’s decision on how to define newly prohibited ammunition and its decision to not provide compensation for prohibited ammunition handed in during the firearms buyback.  Franks Ogilvie acted as the solicitors in this challenge, working with barrister Jack Hodder QC.

Franks Ogilvie also assisted with responses to developing events such as security issues with the Police buyback register, the Auditor-General’s inquiry in to the firearms buyback, the Royal Commission Report on the Mosque Attacks, and Police enforcement of firearms issues.

During this period, COLFO provided up to date information to licensed firearm owners to make them aware of new legal requirements and helped them have their views heard by Parliamentarians. During the first COVID lockdown, Franks Ogilvie helped COLFO advocate for extended licence renewal periods.

By leading a multi-disciplinary approach, Franks Ogilvie helped COLFO make sure their communications and advocacy were accurate, timely and effective.

Outcome

In the judicial review decision, Justice Cooke, made significant statements that the government cannot confiscate an individual’s property without compensation. Ultimately, COLFO lost the case, but obtained recognition that the Government’s actions were not consistent with firearms owners’ property rights.

The issues COLFO raised regarding the firearms buyback were reflected in the Auditor-General’s inquiry and the Police made changes to subsequent buybacks as a result.

COLFO successfully advocated for significant changes to legislation including on important issues like search and seizure provisions, practical changes to the firearms registry, and leading a push for firearms administration to not be carried out by Police.

COLFO is now seen as one of the leading firearms advocacy groups in NZ and is represented on the newly formed Ministerial Advisory Group.

COLFO continues to be a client of Franks Ogilvie.

If you would like to understand more about this matter or similar work, please contact Director Brigitte Morten

October 5, 2021

Director Brigitte Morten joined Nine to Noon host Kathryn Ryan and Capital Relations Neale Jones to discuss the week in politics. Ahead of the Cabinet decision on changing restrictions for Auckland, they discussed the new Covid cases in the Waikato, immigration announcements, the National Party's plan and the vaccine rollout.

To listen, please click here.

Give the team a call

We’re likely to know who makes the decisions, why, and how politics or the law can compel you or trip you up.
If it takes less than 20 minutes we rarely charge.
There are not many specialist public lawyers. Even fewer have commercial experience. We start and end with commercial interests at heart.