Between June and December 2010,
Hobart schoolteacher Nicolaas Bester repeatedly sexually abused a 15-year-old student named
Grace Tame. Following his release from prison, Bester posted a comment on social media website
Facebook bragging about his offending. In 2017, social commentator
Bettina Arndt interviewed Bester for her
YouTube channel about attempts to bar him from postgraduate study at the
University of Tasmania. Tame condemned the interview as giving "a platform to a paedophile". Because of the wording of the Evidence Act, media outlets were forced to quote Tame as "Jane Doe". Wanting to speak publicly, Tame enlisted the help of the End Rape on Campus (EROC) campaign, journalist Funnell and the publisher of the city's main newspaper,
The Mercury. She sought a court order under s. 194K allowing her name to be published. Only two victims had previously won such orders in Tasmania, among them Beyond Abuse Chief Executive Steve Fisher. Although ultimately successful, the process was difficult, all the more so since by then Tame was living in the United States. The complexity of the process, Funnell later wrote, "exacerbated pre-existing feelings of powerlessness and injustice". Tame observed that “Journalists, commentators, and even my perpetrator have all been able to publicly discuss my case. I’m the only one who is not allowed to. It’s not just illogical, it’s cruel.” The
Supreme Court of Tasmania granted Tame's application in August 2019 after two years and $10,000 in legal costs. She appeared on the front page of the
Hobart Mercury on 12 August above the headline "My name is Grace Tame and I am Jane Doe". == #LetHerSpeak campaign ==