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Berejiklian inquiry day two as it happened: Paul Doorn tells ICAC former NSW premier’s relationship with Daryl Maguire would have been a ‘red flag’

Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published

The day in review

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Good afternoon and thank you for reading our live coverage of the second day of the ICAC’s ten-day hearing into allegations relating to former NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and former NSW MP Daryl Maguire.

Ms Berejiklian and Mr Maguire were in a secret relationship between about 2015 and at least 2018, the ICAC heard last year. Contact between the pair did not cease until September last year.

Gladys Berejiklian and Daryl Maguire were in a relationship between 2015 and 2018.Steven Siewert, James Brickwood

The corruption watchdog is now examining two state government grants or promises totalling millions of dollars that were made to two organisations in Mr Maguire’s electorate between 2016 and 2018 while Ms Berejiklian was treasurer and later premier.

As we have noted throughout the blog, Ms Berejiklian has denied any wrongdoing. She has yet to give evidence at the inquiry, which is ongoing and has not made any findings to date.

Email tendered at ICAC said Berejiklian had shown ‘inclination to support’ Wagga Wagga proposal

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At the end of the hearing today, counsel assisting the ICAC, Scott Robertson, tendered some documents relating to witnesses who are not expected to give evidence during the public hearings over the next eight days.

This included an email on December 6, 2016, from a Yogi Savania in NSW Treasury to Josh Milner, also in Treasury, that said, in part: “FYI Josh. Could you try and get her hands on this from OOS [Office of Sport].

“I spoke to Zach re this. The treasurer has requested this be brought forward and has indicated an inclination to support the proposal.”

Gladys Berejiklian in 2015 when she was NSW treasurer.Dominic Lorrimer

Mr Robertson said the email related to the grant for the Australian Clay Target Association in Wagga Wagga.

Former NSW Premier Mike Baird to give evidence tomorrow

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Former NSW Premier Mike Baird, who was premier at the time of the $5.5 million state government grant to the Australian Clay Target Association in Wagga Wagga, is expected to give evidence at the ICAC tomorrow.

Mr Baird’s former director of strategy, Nigel Blunden, is also expected to give evidence tomorrow.

Former NSW premiers Gladys Berejiklian and Mike Baird. Mr Baird will give evidence at the ICAC tomorrow. He is not accused of wrongdoing.Dominic Lorrimer, Janie Barrett

Neither Mr Baird nor Mr Blunden is accused of any wrongdoing.

Counsel assisting the ICAC, Scott Robertson, asked a NSW bureaucrat, Office of Sport director Michael Toohey, on Monday if he was “aware that the Premier’s office had some concerns or questions” about the urgent funding proposal in late 2016.

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NSW bureaucrat says Berejiklian-Maguire relationship would have been a ‘red flag’

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Former NSW Office of Sport executive director Paul Doorn has agreed it would have been a “red flag” if he had known that an MP pushing for a multimillion-dollar grant in their electorate was in a relationship with the then-NSW treasurer.

As the ICAC heard last year, former NSW Liberal MP Daryl Maguire, then the member for Wagga Wagga, was in a secret relationship with Gladys Berejiklian between 2015 and 2018, when she was treasurer and later premier.

The corruption watchdog is examining why the NSW government decided to award $5.5 million to the Australian Clay Target Association in Mr Maguire’s electorate in 2016/2017 when state bureaucrats did not regard this as a high priority project.

Daryl Maguire and Gladys Berejiklian.SMH

Asked when he first became aware of the relationship between Mr Maguire and Ms Berejiklian, Mr Doorn said: “I think when the media broke the story [after Ms Berejiklian gave evidence at the ICAC in October last year].”

‘We didn’t think it stacked up,’ NSW bureaucrat says of Wagga Wagga project

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Former NSW Office of Sport executive director Paul Doorn says his office was “surprised” that the state government decided to award a $5.5 million conditional grant to the Australian Clay Target Association in Wagga Wagga and “we didn’t think it stacked up”.

As the ICAC has heard throughout today and tomorrow, former NSW Liberal MP Daryl Maguire, then the member for Wagga Wagga, was a vocal proponent of the project but the Office of Sport, a state government agency, did not believe it delivered a benefit for the whole state and the proposal lacked detail.

“We were surprised that it did get funded,” Mr Doorn said.

In December 2016, the state government’s expenditure review committee, including then-treasurer Gladys Berejiklian, signed off on a $5.5 million grant to the club.

Mr Doorn said that based purely on non-political considerations “we didn’t think it stacked up”.

Event used in part to justify Wagga Wagga gun club upgrade was already secured

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The ICAC heard yesterday that there was some suggestion that the Australian Clay Target Association in Wagga Wagga needed state government funding to upgrade its facilities to attract events such as the 2018 world championships for a shotgun event called Down the Line.

But the corruption watchdog has heard today and yesterday that documents showed the championships were already locked in regardless of the upgrade.

Michael Toohey, a director in the NSW Office of Sport, told the ICAC yesterday that there was also an “idea being
thrown around that [the upgrade] ... was going to be relevant for bringing the Invictus Games to Sydney”.

Michael Toohey, right, arrives at ICAC on Monday.Dominic Lorrimer

“I can’t remember the status of Sydney’s bid for the Invictus Games at that point [in 2016] but more material was that Invictus Games doesn’t have shooting events. So ... the claim that this was somehow related to the bid was imaginative,” Mr Toohey said.

The ICAC has heard former NSW Liberal MP Daryl Maguire, then the member for Wagga Wagga, was a vocal proponent of the upgrade and had lobbied the Sport Minister in 2012 and 2016 for funding for the project.

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ICAC’s hearing has resumed

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The ICAC hearing has resumed after the lunch break and former NSW bureaucrat Paul Doorn is back in the witness box.

Today’s evidence at a glance

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Good afternoon and thank you for reading our live coverage of the second day of the NSW Independent Commission Against Corruption’s ten-day hearing into allegations relating to former NSW Premier Gladys Berejiklian and former state Liberal MP Daryl Maguire. The hearing is on a break until 2pm.

If you are just joining us now, here is a guide to the allegations at the centre of this inquiry.

And here is the evidence heard so far today:

  • The ICAC has heard that the former NSW Liberal MP for Wagga Wagga, Daryl Maguire, twice lobbied the state government for millions of dollars in funding for an upgrade of facilities at the Australian Clay Target Association, a gun club in his electorate. He wrote letters to the Sport Minister in 2012 and 2016 urging them to support the proposal.
  • Former NSW bureaucrat Paul Doorn, who was an executive director in the Office of Sport, has told the ICAC that the funding proposal lacked detail and it was regarded within the office as being of low priority. The Greater Sydney area already had an Olympic-grade shooting range that was owned by the government, which was used for the Sydney 2000 Olympics. He agreed that a privately-owned facility had the potential to “cannibalise” major events that might otherwise be held at the Sydney facility. Mr Doorn is a witness at the inquiry and is not accused of wrongdoing.
Paul Doorn, right, outside the ICAC on Tuesday.Janie Barrett

ICAC hearing adjourns to 2pm

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The ICAC has adjourned for lunch and will resume the hearing at 2pm.

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NSW bureaucrat asked if it was ‘career-limiting’ to disagree with government

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As we have heard throughout the morning at the ICAC, and indeed in yesterday’s evidence, the NSW Office of Sport was sceptical about the merits of a proposal to fund a multimillion-dollar upgrade of facilities at the Australian Clay Target Association in Wagga Wagga.

The project had the backing of the then NSW Liberal MP for Wagga Wagga, Daryl Maguire, and the ICAC has heard that the then-treasurer, Gladys Berejiklian, approved the final version of a funding submission for the association to be taken to the state government’s expenditure review committee (ERC) in December 2016.

Paul Doorn arrives at the ICAC in Sydney on Tuesday.Janie Barrett

The Office of Sport, a state government agency, was asked in late 2016 to prepare an urgent funding submission to the ERC, even though it regarded the proposal for upgrading facilities as lacking in detail and of low priority.

The request to draft the submission was made by the office of the Sport Minister, who was then Stuart Ayres. He is now the Trade and Industry Minister and will give evidence at the ICAC later this week. He is not accused of wrongdoing.

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