Trolls Face Bankruptcy After Having To Pay 150 000 To Wedding Planner

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Two trolls who were ordered to pay $150,000 to a wedding planner after badmouthing her business online are now facing bankruptcy. 
Tristan Moy, 33, from [/news/brisbane/index.html Brisbane], moved to [/news/indonesia/index.html Indonesia] in 2014 to run a business arranging weddings in Bali for Australian tourists. 
But she suffered 'hurt and humiliation' when two Australian women began posting salacious comments about her and the business on Facebook in 2017 and 2018.
Those women were makeup artist Stacey Lee Isaac, 33, from Notting Hill in Victoria and single mother of-two Kellie Maree Smith, 32, from Mount Tambourine in [/news/queensland/index.html Queensland].
The pair were earlier this month ordered to pay the huge sum after a defamation trial where a magistrate agreed they had defamed Ms Moy. 
Wedding planner Tristan Moy, 33, (pictured) has won a court case against keyboard warriors who made defamatory comments about her business on social media between 2017 and 2018
Ms Isaac was ordered to pay $100,000 for her four posts, while Ms Smith was made to pay $50,000 after sharing seven defaming posts.
But the pair didn't have to be staring down the barrel of life-ruining bankruptcies -  they could have settled out of court for just $2,500 each. 
Ms Moy offered both women to settle the case for barely anything, but the pair chose to defend their posts in court, the [ ] reported. 
On another occasion, the women were offered to pay $7,500 and $1,250 to settle, but again refused.
Magistrate John Smith then ordered Ms Isaac and Ms Smith to pay the legal fees of the wedding planner.
Ms Smith told the publication she offered Ms Moy $2,000 and a public apology but Ms Moy suggested to her what to write. 
Stacey Lee Isaac (pictured) was the owner and administrator of a bridal Facebook page with more than 1000 followers where most of the defamatory comments were made
Single mother of-two Kellie Maree Smith, 32, (pictured) from Mount Tambourine in Queensland was ordered pay  $50,000 plus $9750 interest for defamatory comments
Ms Isaac also said she offered the wedding planner a public apology but the pair could not agree on a settlement. 
Ms Moy was seeking $285,000 from the two women over the posts that suggested she was unprofessional, bullied her clients, and kynghidongduong.vn would try ruin their weddings.
Ms Isaac was a makeup artist and owner of a bridal Facebook page with more than 1,000 followers, which is where most of the defamatory comments were made. 
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She worked as a makeup artist in Melbourne and ran three businesses 'tour bali giá rẻ Edge', 'Illuminating Moments Bali' and Bali Snaps Photobook' - and shared a post criticising Ms Moy's business. 
'I know I for tour bali giá rẻ sure wouldn't hire someone to plan my wedding day who would sabotage another brides wedding day,' she wrote. 
She also implied the wedding planner had gotten Ms Isaac deported from Bali.  
While a post by Ms Smith directly accused Ms Moy of ruining her own wedding, by trying to get the venue cancelled.
That was despite Ms Smith not having used Ms Moy's wedding planning services.  
Tristan Moy, 33, from Brisbane, moved to Indonesia in 2014 to run a business arranging Bali weddings for Australian tourists
Ms Moy had been seeking $285,000 from the two women over the posts that suggested she was unprofessional, bullied her clients and would try ruin their weddings 
Ms Smith said there was no way' she could afford to pay the $50,000 plus $9,750 interest for her part in the saga.  
She said it would send her bankrupt.
While Ms Isaac said she 'felt sick to her stomach' after hearing she had to pay $100,000 in damages over the incident.
Ms Isaac plans to appeal the ruling after admitting the harsh penalty would make her lose everything. 
Ms Moy's solicitor, Australian Law Partners' Duke Myrteza, said the case is a warning to keyboard warriors about what they say online. 
'I expect there will be many more cases involving Facebook posts before our courts in the future,' he said. 
'This case is a clear warning to everybody who uses Facebook or other social media platforms that anything defamatory you post online can have serious consequences.' 




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