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CFMEU inquiry day two: Union misconduct claims to be examined as inquiry continues in Queensland

Updated ,first published

Police union rejects claims of MOU with CFMEU

By Matt Dennien

Before we say goodnight, here’s one detail from today’s proceedings that has sparked a strong response from another Queensland union.

Just before lunch, CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson referred to what he described as a memorandum of understanding involving “the police association” and the CFMEU.

“It was almost that the police would stop at the boundary [of a work site], and that was something to do with the memorandum of understanding … I didn’t understand,” he said.

Queensland Police Employees Union president Shane Prior.Julius Dennis

Some thought this might be a reference to the Queensland Police Union, but its president Shane Prior said he was not aware of the existence of any such memorandum.

“I find it offensive and outrageous any insinuation suggesting police who have sworn an oath to disrupt and stop criminal behaviour would not act where required by law and jeopardise their own integrity,” Prior said in a statement.

“Police put their lives on the line every day and they are proud of their ethics. Mr Watson is wrong to suggest the QPU has signed any agreement with the CFMEU. I will forever defend the integrity and moral code of Queensland Police Officers.”

This wraps up our coverage for today. Please join us again for continuing coverage tomorrow.

Watson quizzed about his investigation. And that’s a wrap for today

By Matt Dennien

Ruth O’Gorman KC, counsel for ousted CFMEU officials Michael Ravbar and Kane Lowth, wraps up the last substantive part of today’s hearing with a brief cross-examination of CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson SC.

O’Gorman gleans some further detail from Watson about the nature and scope of the supporting documents behind his Queensland report – particularly around interviews.

Ruth O’Gorman is representing Michael Ravbar and Kane Lowth.News Corp Australia

Watson says he took handwritten notes, but did not make recordings to ensure those he spoke to did not “clam up”, and that these had all been provided to the inquiry via a summons.

Electronically typed versions of most of these interviews were also made.

With that, and some logistical discussion about future hearings when O’Gorman may seek leave to cross-examine Watson more thoroughly based on what further detail of his investigation may be shared, today’s session comes to an end.

The inquiry resumes tomorrow morning with evidence from CFMEU administrator Mark Irving KC.

Inquiry hears concern about ‘bad employers’ with bikie links

By Matt Dennien

CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson now tells the inquiry, after some questions from Commissioner Stuart Wood, that there is evidence of “bad employers” in Queensland with links to outlaw motorcycle gangs.

“I fear that a number of the worst of the delegates, I think you’ll find that they’ve been hand-picked by some of the organisers, and the contractors have been told to employ them,” Watson says, referencing Desmond Savage and Richie Atutolu, who were among those revealed in one of the reports tendered to the inquiry today.

“I think it would be incredibly rare that a decent employer would be putting on and keeping on with people who were misbehaving as employees.

“But there occasionally might be, I fear, of a couple of bad employers up here in Queensland. I didn’t know enough about this, and I looked into it, but only from the outside.

“There was a labour hire firm that [was] supplying labour, I think mainly to BMD, and there were reasons to doubt that labour hire firm.

“Can I just say, that was all AWU stuff. I only asked a few questions about it. I got unsatisfactory answers, and all I can say is, there are, there is evidence that there are some bad employers that may be run by bikies, who may be bringing in bikies.”

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Ingham wanted to make sure officials ‘didn’t tell me anything about him’: Watson

By Matt Dennien

CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson has told the inquiry that the likely reason that ousted assistant secretary Jade Ingham, or a relative since charged with murder, drove union officials to the investigation’s interviews was to ensure they “didn’t tell me anything about him”.

Watson said yesterday he had been told, but had not been able to substantiate himself, that Ingham or his “stepbrother or half-brother” Anthony Perrett had been involved in driving the officials to the meetings and giving them tape recorders to record the interviews.

Former CFMEU national president Jade Ingham with Cross River Rail workers.Dan Peled

Watson’s report into the Queensland CFMEU was handed down in July, three months before Perrett was charged with the torture and murder of Brisbane man Andrew Burow. His work was also conducted prior to the High Court ultimately rejecting a bid led by ousted union leaders which sought to return them to power.

“He’ll [Ingham] have to be asked about it, but my understanding was the travel transport arrangements were made by Mr Ingham,” Watson tells the inquiry during cross-examination by Chris O’Grady KC, counsel for administrator Mark Irving KC.

“Don’t think that a tape recording is being made of these events to keep me in check, it was to check up on the fellows … to make sure they didn’t tell me anything about him.”

Watson backs work of CFMEU administrator in face of ‘stupid’ political attacks

By Matt Dennien

CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson SC has given a spirited defence of the work of administrator Mark Irving KC and his team in the face of political criticism, saying he believes only Victoria remains a problem.

Proceedings have now shifted to a brief cross-examination of Watson by counsel for Irving, Chris O’Grady KC, who asked Watson to tell the inquiry what he thought about Irving’s work.

Here’s Watson’s reply:

Sorry, this gets my goat, because I saw something stupid in the Federal Parliament about a suggestion that pressure should be placed upon Mark Irving for doing this or doing that or failing in this respect.

It was by a particular politician who I don’t much respect. But, when I read it, I was sickened by it. I thought to myself, I wonder how you would operate where you are if you were under 24-hour guard because of credible, real death threats.

I can’t even tell you the detail of it, because it’s an operational matter, but they’re serious. Mark Irving has to do his work with somebody always in his eyeline.

O’Grady’s questioning has involved taking Watson through the names of CFMEU officials, all involved in incidents which occurred prior to the union being placed into administration, and all of whom were no longer employed by or representatives of the union in Queensland.

Ravbar locked door from the inside, berated woman: Watson

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The inquiry has returned from lunch and is now moving on to hostility towards women, what CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson SC has described as the “single worst aspect” of what he saw in his work.

The most high-profile instance of this from his report involved a public servant who arrived at the CFMEU offices in Bowen Hills in 2020 as part of a delegation before being asked to come into a separate room by union president Royce Kupsch.

Secretary Michael Ravbar then entered and locked the door from the inside, which Watson explained to the inquiry meant the door could be opened from the inside with the handle, but not from the outside.

The CFMEU’s Michael Ravbar outside state parliament in 2024.Matt Dennien

Kupsch is said to have remained and stood beside Ravbar, between the woman and the door, as the latter berated the woman and got closer to her face using abusive and denigrating language suggesting she was being watched by the union and “should be dragged out of here”.

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‘A silly protest’ that got ‘out of control’

By Matt Dennien

The inquiry is now wrapping up for lunch after touching on one CFMEU protest related to the Master Builder Association’s support for an amalgamation of two super funds.

This resulted in what CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson SC describes as a “silly protest” which got “quite out of control” and saw the riot squad contacted.

“By this stage, when I was writing the report, I can just remember the feeling, overwhelming feeling, this has lost control,” Watson says.

Watson’s evidence will resume at 1.45pm AEST.

Inquiry urged to probe agreement between CFMEU and ‘police association’

By Matt Dennien

CFMEU administration investigator Geoffrey Watson SC tells the inquiry he believes it should probe a memorandum of understanding he saw during his work between police and the union relating to industrial sites.

Pressed on the matter by counsel assisting Mark Costello KC, Watson says while he did not have a firm recollection of the parties to the agreement, he is “confident that it involved the police association” and the CFMEU, though not limited to it, covering police action on “industrial sites”.

“It wasn’t really within my remit. But it was of great interest to me that there’s all this going on, why the police weren’t engaged,” Watson says of one high-profile incident detailed in his report, in which CFMEU members blockaded non-union workers from accessing a site.

“But it was almost that the police would stop at the boundary, and that was something to do with the memorandum of understanding.

“I didn’t understand. I thought that the criminal law was across, up and down, and everywhere in Australia.”

‘There’s a bullet with your name on it’: Cross River Rail a hotspot for threats, violence

By Matt Dennien

Turning to instances of union hostility towards contractors and employers, counsel assisting Mark Costello takes Geoffrey Watson SC to the Cross River Rail “hotspot” for CFMEU violence.

CFMEU members protest at a Cross River Rail construction site in Brisbane in July 2024.Brisbane Times

In one incident, an industrial relations representative for one of the project’s contractors – a category Watson says has been a particular target – was told by a CFMEU official “there’s a bullet with your name on it”.

Speaking about a personal campaign towards another industrial representative, Watson says the person had spoken with him for a while and was “very open” before he was contacted by a private law firm acting for contractor CPB and “all of a sudden, they all clammed up”.

“A lot of the major contractors, they just will whinge from the sidelines but they will not assist in finding solution,” Watson says – with the exception of one which he says did not wish to be named.

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‘This is emulating Setka’s effective campaign down in Victoria’: Watson

By Matt Dennien

The hearing turns its attention to investigator Geoffrey Watson SC’s Queensland work regarding CFMEU hostility towards employers.

Watson begins by tying the issue of hostilities towards the largely civil construction-focused AWU with what he describes as no longer a theory but “exactly what has happened”.

“I think the point has to be made and underlined that this is just emulating [former Victorian CFMEU secretary John] Setka’s effective campaign down in Victoria,” Watson says of what he views as a conscious campaign to push the AWU off civil construction sites.

“If you’ve only got one union covering all of these areas, they’re given far, far too much power in those negotiations … You can imagine the pressure that’s placed on scarce labour resources here.

“This is not a matter of abuse between unions. It’s a matter of economic significance to the people of Queensland. I’ll go a step further and say the people of Australia, too.

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