Rowena Orr

Australian barrister and judge From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rowena Orr is an Australian jurist who has served as a judge in the Court of Appeal of Victoria since 18 April 2024. From 2021 to 2024, Orr served as Solicitor-General of Victoria, and is best known for her role during the 2017–2019 Banking Royal Commission, where her performance assisting the commissioner gained her the moniker "shock and Orr".[1][2][3][4]

Preceded byKristen Walker
Succeeded byAlistair Pound
Born1973 (age 5253)
Quick facts KC, Judge of the Court of Appeal of Victoria ...
Rowena Orr
Judge of the Court of Appeal of Victoria
Assumed office
18 April 2024 (2024-04-18)
Solicitor-General of Victoria
In office
2021–2024
Preceded byKristen Walker
Succeeded byAlistair Pound
Personal details
Born1973 (age 5253)
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Orr was born in 1973 in Sydney. She studied law and economics at the University of Queensland, graduating in 1996.[3][5] Over the following years she worked as a judge's associate to Michael McHugh and John Murtagh Macrossan,[6] then as a solicitor at the Director of Public Prosecutions, before leaving Australia for England where she studied at St John's College, Cambridge,[3][5] attaining a Master of Philosophy in Criminology.[6]

In 2002 she became a barrister, with a focus on criminal, trade practices, and administrative law, often representing Victoria Police. Early in her career as a barrister, she was involved in the inquest into the murder of Jaidyn Leskie. In 2014 she was appointed senior counsel. By 2018, Orr's practice had shifted to a focus on competition law while still maintaining work across a broad area of law, unusual in an era when most barristers specialized.[3][5][6]

As of 2018, Orr lived in the Melbourne suburb of Clifton Hill with her husband, also a barrister, and their two children.[5]

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