on โ16-04-2014 10:15 AM
on โ16-04-2014 04:17 PM
on โ16-04-2014 04:23 PM
seeing as gillard and shorten aren't in the frame anyway i'm unsure what was meant anyway. they still hope the so called ''AWU affair'' has some traction. people like smith and pickering still claim there is an ''ongoing investigation'' when there isn't . sad critters.
on โ16-04-2014 04:28 PM
on โ16-04-2014 04:30 PM
haha
on โ16-04-2014 05:01 PM
So he has had his last "cabernet meeting" then.
on โ16-04-2014 05:19 PM
apparently. lol
on โ19-04-2014 04:02 PM
the plot thickens......
http://www.theage.com.au/nsw/job-offer-after-wine-gift-20140418-36wg1.html
Job offer after wine gift
Two weeks after receiving the bottle of Grange Hermitage that would lead to his resignation as premier, Barry O'Farrell was preparing to appoint the man who bought the extravagant gift, businessman Nick Di Girolamo, to a well-paid position on a government board.
A May 3, 2011, email from the director general of Mr O'Farrell's department, Chris Eccles, introduces Mr Di Girolamo to senior departmental officers as ''our replacement board member''. Attached is a biography and photograph of Mr Di Girolamo forwarded by Mr O'Farrell's then chief-of-staff, Peter McConnell.
When Mr Di Girolamo's name was raised for a board appointment in the May email, Mr O'Farrell had failed to declare that only two weeks earlier he had been the recipient of a $3000 gift from Mr Di Girolamo.
The email raises further questions about the former Premier's claim that he cannot remember the lavish gift, which the Independent Commission Against Corruption this week revealed was delivered to Mr O'Farrell's then Roseville home on April 20.
The name of the board to which Mr Di Girolamo was to be appointed in May 2011 is not known and he was not installed on a board that year. But documents show that by March 2012, Mr Di Girolamo was considered for a directorship of Sydney Ports Corporation.
Briefing notes to treasurer Mike Baird - sworn in as Premier on Thursday - reveal a selection committee which included the former Greiner government minister Robert Webster, then a senior executive at recruitment firm Korn/Ferry, ranked Mr Di Girolamo last out of six candidates.
He ''has legal experience but in relatively narrow areas of practice. Does not have relevant industry experience and does not fill the current skills gaps on SPC's board. Likely to be suitable for other smaller boards''.
on โ19-04-2014 04:09 PM
http://www.theage.com.au/nsw/icac-spotlight-turns-to-hartcher-20140417-36v0g.html
ICAC spotlight turns to Hartcher
The Independent Commission Against Corruption is probing allegations that former Australian Water Holdings (AWH) chief executive and Obeid associate Nick Di Girolamo arranged for the company to make "regular payments" to Eightbyfive โ an alleged Liberal Party slush fund set up by Mr Hartcher's former adviser Tim Koelma โ in exchange for favourable treatment from the former minister.
An inquiry into AWH, which concluded public hearings on Wednesday, heard allegations the company paid Eightbyfive more than $7000 a month, purportedly for "media, public relations and other services" from Mr Koelma.
The inquiry into political donations, dubbed Operation Spicer, is due to start public hearings on April 28. It is expected to reveal the source of the corruption complaint and air allegations of favourable treatment secured by AWH from Mr Hartcher. Mr Hartcher quit cabinet last year after ICAC investigators raided his central coast office.
The commission has heard Operation Spicer is also concerned more generally with "political fund-raising in the Liberal Party, and the way in which unscrupulous businessmen sought to buy political influence".
The inquiry will examine allegations Mr Hartcher, fellow central coast Liberal MPs Chris Spence and Darren Webber, Mr Koelma and Raymond Carter, "corruptly solicited, received, and concealed payments from various sources in return for certain members of Parliament favouring the interests of those responsible for the payments".
on โ19-04-2014 04:20 PM
on โ19-04-2014 05:07 PM
what a surprise...
http://www.theage.com.au/comment/icac-under-threat-of-being-silenced-20140418-36wg0.html
ICAC under threat of being silenced
The political attack on ICAC has begun.
The backlash was predictable. The resignation of former premier Barry O'Farrell from the top job sparked a wave of criticism of the Independent Commission Against Corruption over its alleged role in his political downfall.
Commentators and senior Liberal figures, publicly and privately, questioned whether the country's first anti-corruption commission had been afforded too much power to ruin reputations before allegations of wrongdoing were proven, and even where no allegations had been made.
''We may need to bring it back a bit,'' former Liberal minister Bruce Baird told the ABC of ICAC's powers on the day his son Mike was sworn in as the state's 44th premier.
As a minister in the Greiner Liberal government - which also lost its premier amid an ICAC inquiry, before the corruption finding was overturned by the Supreme Court - Mr Baird snr supported the 1988 bill setting up the commission but said on Thursday it ''trashes people's reputations''.
Herald journalist Peter Hartcher reported on Thursday that federal Coalition figures were furious, with one federal cabinet minister saying privately to colleagues: ''ICAC is a kangaroo court. It's destroying the lives of innocent people. The moment they're named in ICAC, they're finished, even though there is no accusation, no evidence, nothing.''
There are few witnesses who appear willingly before a corruption inquiry: the mere association with an investigation is unwelcome.
But legal experts are unsettled by calls in some quarters for ICAC to hold its hearings in private, as is the practice in some Australian jurisdictions, to spare witnesses the ignominy.
''If you're going to have an anti-corruption commission, you don't want it to go behind closed doors,'' said Adam Graycar, the director of the Transnational Research Institute on Corruption at the Australian National University.
''You'll end up in a Kafka-esque world where they can't name people or where they can't say what the evidence is. They're out there to test things.''
Professor Graycar said ICAC ''gets about 3000 complaints a year. Of those โฆ about seven-tenths of one per cent, virtually none, go to a public hearing''.
The commission makes ''a very clear judgment about what it decides to hear โฆ and it appears the NSW ICAC makes its judgment in terms of what it sees to be in the public interest and in terms of what it sees as its mission''.
Following Mr O'Farrell's shock resignation, the South Australian government reiterated its commitment to holding hearings in private at its Independent Commission Against Corruption, set up late last year.
As a rule, the Victorian equivalent, which goes by the unwieldy moniker the Independent Broad-Based Anti-Corruption Commission, also holds its hearings in private.
Anne Twomey, an expert in public and constitutional law at the University of Sydney, said it was important to bear in mind that one of the NSW commission's statutory objects was to educate public authorities, officials and members of the public about corruption (another is to expose corruption).
It was also important to remember that, as ''harsh as it may seem'', Mr O'Farrell had dug himself into a political hole.
''It's not a case of ICAC finding him to be corrupt or even suggesting he was corrupt,'' Professor Twomey said. ''The problem really lay with Mr O'Farrell saying things that turned out not to be the case โฆ and also by breaching the code of conduct and the pecuniary interests register by not registering the gift [of a $3000 bottle of wine].
''I don't really think that's a good reason for changing the rules in relation to how ICAC operates.''
The resignation of Mr O'Farrell, a vocal supporter of ICAC and who increased its funding to deal with its growing workload, raised the spectre that future Liberal and Labor governments would cut funding to the commission.