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AAP
National
William Ton

Ex-TV star must shadow Jewish leader over Nazi gesture

Damien Richardson will undergo "restorative justice" for a gesture that resembled a Nazi salute. (Nadir Kinani/AAP PHOTOS)

A former TV star who illegally performed a Nazi gesture must shadow a Jewish leader, pen an apology to the community and visit a Holocaust museum as part of his punishment.

Neighbours alum Damien Richardson, 56, will undergo a "restorative justice" process after he was found guilty in November of intentionally performing a gesture that resembled a Nazi salute at a ticketed event.

Richardson had been speaking at a gathering of the National Workers Alliance at Urban St restaurant in Melbourne's southeast in September 2024.

Melbourne Holocaust Museum (file)
Damien Richardson will also have to visit the Melbourne Holocaust Museum as part of his punishment. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)

He discussed how there was a "war on men" and "Western tradition, Western values" at the event, which was also attended by neo-Nazis and live-streamed to social media. 

The former actor complained about The Age masthead likening him "to Adolf Hitler" before performing the gesture which closely resembled a Nazi salute.

Magistrate Justin Foster on Friday sentenced Richardson at Moorabbin Magistrates Court to a process of "restorative justice". 

This included 10 psychology counselling sessions from Sydney, two of which would be done in person, and a day shadowing a member of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry. 

He will be required to write an apology to the Australian Jewish community, addressing the harm, fear and intimation of the Nazi salute and the historical and contemporary impacts of anti-Semitism.

Richardson must also undertake museum-based education, including visiting the Jewish Museum of Australia and the Melbourne Holocaust Museum.

Damien Richardson (file)
Damien Richardson knew what he did was illegal but did it anyway, the magistrate said. (Nadir Kinani/AAP PHOTOS)

"It is important that education is extended to you in this case because I still don't think you truly get it," Mr Foster said.

"Whilst you didn't show affiliation, loyalty or obedience to Hitler, you still made a salute saying things like, 'are they going to fine or jail me?'

"You knew it was against the law, but you still did anyway."

The magistrate chastised Richardson for a post on X, formerly Twitter, days after the guilty verdict where he labelled the ruling a "perverse outcome". 

"If you're hearing or reading to what he's writing, it's different to what he's telling the court," Mr Foster said.

"He's still playing cutesy games online where he's (saying he's) hard done by."

The magistrate said the Jewish community have had a tough week, after a terrorist attack left 15 people dead at Bondi in Sydney.

He also denounced those on the "far-left" who chanted slogans such as "from the river to the sea".

Damien Richardson, Guy Pearce and Joel Edgerton (file)
Damien Richardson (left) retired from acting in 2021 after appearing in several TV series. (Joe Castro/AAP PHOTOS)

"Jews are getting slammed from the left and right, and it's time it stops ... (It's time they) bloody educate themselves because it's horrendous," he said.

Defence lawyer Peter Monagle said Richardson did not perform the gesture with any venom or hatred to the Jewish community, but as a response to an article written about him by The Age.

"He knows how foolhardy these acts can be, how one little thing leads to another and then you've got death by a thousand cuts," he told the court.

"He is sorry and ashamed."

But the crown prosecutor said in the six weeks since the magistrate's guilty ruling, evidence of Richardson's contrition or remorse had not been seen in court, urging the magistrate to be guarded whether that remorse is genuine.

Mr Foster said if the conditions of the undertaking aren't met, the prosecution could bring the case back to court, where punishment could be a fine of up to $23,000 or 12 months' jail.

Richardson starred as Gary Canning in Neighbours from 2014 to 2020, and also appeared in Blue Heelers, McLeod's Daughters and Wentworth.

He retired from acting in 2021 and unsuccessfully stood as a political candidate in the 2022 federal and Victorian elections.

He stood as an independent in the Senate and then ran for the right-wing  Freedom Party of Victoria.

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