Lawyer amassed $650k for COVID legal claim

Georgie MooreAAP
Camera IconThe lawyer behind a class action for locked down public housing tower residents has cried in court. Credit: AAP

A lawyer collected more than $650,000 for a proposed class action promoting unproven COVID-19 treatments and against hotel quarantine, contact tracing and face masks.

Serene Teffaha was also behind a class action filed on behalf of Melbourne public housing tower residents subject to a hard lockdown last year.

She cried and claimed in Victoria's Supreme Court on Thursday the state's legal regulator was trying to "sabotage" her after it cancelled her certificate to practise law.

Court documents showed Ms Teffaha previously amassed $654,000 in a trust account held by her one-woman practice, Advocate Me.

That account was frozen upon application by the Victorian Legal Services Board.

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Ms Teffaha's website promoting the class action says a one-off payment of no less than $250 and no more than $2000 is required to join, but that it is "temporarily closed".

The class action, which has not been filed, says it is on behalf of people affected by "unlawful" measures including contact-tracing procedures, face mask and self-isolation requirements, and Australians put in hotel quarantine upon returning from overseas.

Among other things, it also says it will represent people who are required to get an influenza shot because of the nature of their job and who have not been able to access hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin.

The former is an anti-malarial and the latter an anti-parasitic drug. Neither are recommended to treat COVID-19.

In an email to donors, Ms Teffaha claimed the legal board's actions were "stand-over tactics and bullying", and that she would "continue to be a warrior activist and legal event manager for the current (class) actions".

The email, filed as part of an affidavit by the board, also said Ms Teffaha would seek to refund people's legal costs "and then approach you to continue to support us" as an "advocate".

The board sought an injunction against Ms Teffaha.

Barrister Nicole Papaleo told Justice Jacinta Forbes Ms Teffaha had refused to cooperate with a lawyer appointed by the board to look after her clients or say who her clients were.

"There's vulnerable people in the community who are being provided with representations that she's capable of protecting their interests when she's not," Ms Papaleo said.

Ms Teffaha denied this, cried and said she had been painted as "crazy" and a "witch" who had "put a spell" on her clients, which she said numbered more than 2000.

"The VLSB doesn't want to protect them (my clients), they just want to sabotage my national class action," she said.

The people involved in the public housing towers class action had since briefed other lawyers, she added.

Justice Forbes has given Ms Teffaha until the end of the month to supply information relating to status of certain client matters and about bank accounts linked with her practice as requested by the board.

The case is due to return to the court on April 30. Ms Teffaha initially said she could not make that date because she would be out of town to help with her friend's wedding planning.

Justice Forbes said "court dates trump social engagements".

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