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Gladys Berejiklian ICAC report LIVE updates: Maguire told former NSW premier he was ‘the boss’ in tapped phone call as both found corrupt by commission

Michaela Whitbourn
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 1.56pm on Jun 29, 2023
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Berejiklian says ICAC report being examined by her legal team

By Michaela Whitbourn

Gladys Berejiklian has responded to the ICAC report that found she had engaged in serious corrupt conduct.

“Serving the people of NSW was an honour and privilege. At all times I have worked my hardest in the public interest,” Berejiklian said in a statement.

“Nothing in this report demonstrates otherwise. Thank you to members of the public for their incredible support. This will sustain me always. The report is currently being examined by my legal team.”

Berejiklian had a team of high-powered barristers acting for her at the inquiry, including Sydney barristers Bret Walker, SC, and Sophie Callan, SC.

A corruption finding may be struck down by the Supreme Court where the ICAC has made an error of law; its reasoning was not objectively reasonable; there is no evidence that could rationally support its finding; relevant matters were not taken into account or irrelevant matters were taken into account; or there was a denial of natural justice.

Pinned post from 9.35am on Jun 29, 2023
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Findings against Berejiklian revealed

By Michaela Whitbourn

The ICAC’s full report has now been released. The corruption watchdog found former premier Gladys Berejiklian and former Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire both engaged in serious corrupt conduct.

The findings against Berejiklian are as follows:

  • Berejiklian breached public trust in 2016 and 2017 by exercising her official functions in relation to $5.5 million awarded to the Australian Clay Target Association (ACTA) in Maguire’s electorate without disclosing her close personal relationship with Maguire, when she was in a position of a conflict of interest between her public duty and her private interest. The ICAC said this could “objectively have the potential to influence the performance of her public duty”.
  • Berejiklian partially exercised her official functions in connection with funding promised to ACTA, influenced by the existence of her close personal relationship with Maguire.
  • Her conduct in relation to the ACTA grant amounted to serious corrupt conduct, the ICAC concluded.
  • Berejiklian partially exercised her official functions in 2018 in connection with millions of dollars in funding promised and awarded for a proposal to build a recital hall for the Riverina Conservatorium of Music, also in Maguire’s electorate. The conservatorium received an initial payment of $10 million. Berejiklian also made a $20 million funding reservation for a second stage of the proposal. Ultimately the second tranche of money was not paid but the ICAC said those funds “could not be spent on other projects until they were released”.
  • Berejiklian breached public trust by exercising her official functions in relation to decisions concerning the conservatorium proposal which she knew was advanced by Maguire.
  • Her conduct in relation to the conservatorium funding promises also amounted to serious corrupt conduct, the ICAC said.
  • In addition, Berejiklian engaged in serious corrupt conduct by refusing to discharge her duty under section 11 of the ICAC Act to notify the commission of her suspicion that Maguire had engaged in activities which concerned, or might have concerned, corrupt conduct. “It undermined the high standards of probity that are sought to be achieved by the ministerial code which, as premier, Ms Berejiklian substantially administered,” the ICAC said.

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Everything you need to know now

By Michaela Whitbourn

Good evening and thank you for reading our live coverage of the Independent Commission Against Corruption’s report in Operation Keppel, its inquiry into former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian and former Wagga Wagga Liberal MP Daryl Maguire.

If you are just catching up now, here’s what you need to know.

ICAC commissioner Ruth McColl (centre) presided over the corruption probe into former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian (left) and former Liberal MP Daryl Maguire.

Serious corrupt conduct findings

  • The ICAC made serious corrupt conduct findings against both Berejiklian and Maguire, who were in a secret relationship during her time as treasurer and premier. That relationship only came to light in 2020 when Berejiklian gave evidence at the ICAC for the first time.

Liberal MP avoids reference to ICAC findings in tribute to Berejiklian

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Liberal MP Tim James, who narrowly won Berejiklian’s old seat of Willoughby in a byelection following her resignation in 2021, has not acknowledged the ICAC findings in a statement this evening.

He writes on Facebook: “Gladys Berejiklian served the people of Willoughby and NSW with distinction for nearly two decades, including during some of the state’s toughest times.

Liberal MP Tim James earlier this year.James Brickwood

“Residents of the Willoughby electorate were fortunate to have such a dedicated and hard-working local member in Gladys.

“I know how much appreciation and respect there is for Gladys across Willoughby, and rightly so.”

Berejiklian is no Eddie Obeid: NSW shadow attorney-general

By Angus Thomson

The Coalition has sought repeatedly to downplay the seriousness of the ICAC’s findings against former premier Gladys Berejiklian by highlighting that she did not make a financial benefit and will not face criminal charges.

On the ABC’s Afternoon Briefing program this afternoon, shadow attorney-general Alister Henskens was pressed on whether he thought politicians should still be held to account for corrupt conduct which did not meet the threshold for criminal charges.

Jailed former NSW Labor MP Eddie Obeid.Daniel Munoz

A finding of corrupt conduct, as defined in the ICAC Act, does not require a criminal offence to have taken place or be capable of being proven in court, although sometimes it will dovetail with criminal behaviour.

“I do not want to be understood to be in any sense suggesting that integrity in government is not important … but when most people think of corruption, they think of bribery akin to personal financial benefits, the kind of financial benefits that Eddie Obeid and others that have been found seriously corrupt received,” he said.

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Berejiklian-Maguire relationship ‘finally broke down’ in 2020: ICAC

By Michaela Whitbourn

The ICAC concluded that the close personal relationship between former premier Gladys Berejiklian and former Wagga Wagga Liberal MP Daryl Maguire did not break down until September 2020, notwithstanding that he had resigned from parliament in August 2018 following his evidence at a previous corruption inquiry.

No findings were made against Maguire as a result of the previous inquiry, dubbed Operation Dasha, although he has since been charged with giving false or misleading evidence to the ICAC during its hearings in July 2018. He has yet to enter a plea.

Former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian outside her home earlier this week.James Brickwood

Maguire and Berejiklian told the ICAC that their relationship started in 2015. However, the ICAC said that “from at least the early part of 2014 onwards”, text messages between the pair were “consistent with physical and emotional intimacy and a romantic relationship having developed” between them.

The corruption watchdog said the relationship between Berejiklian and Maguire persisted after his evidence at the ICAC in July 2018, which triggered his resignation from parliament, and “the prospect of Ms Berejiklian and Mr Maguire getting married was also still a possibility on 13 July 2018”.

Berejiklian was ‘wilfully blind’ to Maguire’s wrongdoing

By Michaela Whitbourn

The ICAC said Gladys Berejiklian was “wilfully blind” to Daryl Maguire’s wrongdoing when the pair were in a close personal relationship while she was premier.

During a tapped call on September 5, 2017, Maguire told Berejiklian, in an apparent reference to a land deal, that “it looks like we finally got the Badgerys Creek stuff done” and he would be able to pay off his debts of $1.5 million. Ultimately, he did not receive the money.

Former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian outside her home this week.Louise Kennerley

In a subsequent call on September 7, 2017, Maguire told Berejiklian that he believed he and an associate had “done our deal”, and Berejiklian replied: “That’s good … I don’t need to know about that bit.”

Berejiklian lied to chief of staff, ICAC finds

By Michaela Whitbourn

The ICAC made a significant finding in its report that the then premier Gladys Berejiklian lied to her chief of staff, Sarah Cruickshank, about the nature and duration of her relationship with the then Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire.

Cruickshank gave evidence at the ICAC that Berejiklian called her on July 13, 2018, after Maguire had given evidence at an earlier ICAC inquiry into Canterbury Council. He resigned from parliament days later on August 3.

Daryl Maguire, Gladys Berejiklian and Sarah Cruickshank. Cruickhank is not accused of wrongdoing.SMH

Cruikshank said Berejiklian told her she had been in a “historical” relationship with Maguire that ended before she became premier in January 2017. In fact, the relationship had continued after this time.

The lie

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Berejiklian ‘displayed a level of deference’ to Maguire: ICAC

By Michaela Whitbourn

The ICAC said in its report that former premier Gladys Berejiklian “displayed a level of deference” to the wishes and demands of her then-partner and Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire.

It pointed to a tapped phone call on Valentine’s Day 2018 in which Berejiklian responded “yes, I know” when Maguire said: “Glad, even when you are the premier, I am the boss, alright.”

Former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian and former Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire.

The commission also noted Berejiklian had intervened in May 2018 to ensure funding for the Wagga Wagga Base Hospital in Maguire’s electorate, after complaints from Maguire.

“I’ve got you now got you the one seventy million in five minutes,” Berejiklian said. Later, she admonished him: “You can’t have me fixing all the problems all the time.”

Watchdog recommends changes to ministerial code of conduct

By Michaela Whitbourn

The ICAC made a series of 18 recommendations for systemic reform in its report on former NSW premier Gladys Berejiklian and the former Liberal MP for Wagga Wagga, Daryl Maguire.

It noted that “the community may conclude that the applicable codes of conduct had little or no effect in discouraging the conduct of Mr Maguire and Ms Berejiklian identified in this report”. It recommended changes to the codes of conduct for ministers and MPs.

NSW upper house president Ben Franklin and lower house Speaker Greg Piper receive the ICAC report on Thursday.James Brickwood

A focus of the amendments would be to clarify the definition of conflict of interest and the disclosure obligations attached to such conflicts.

“In the Commission’s experience, public officials struggle to take an objective view of the status of their personal relationships,” the ICAC said. “It is imperative that they view their circumstances through the eyes of others.”

Berejiklian’s employer Optus acknowledges ICAC report

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Gladys Berejiklian’s employer, Optus, has released a brief statement following the ICAC’s finding that the former premier engaged in serious corrupt conduct.

“Optus acknowledges the ICAC report published in relation to Gladys Berejiklian’s time serving as a Member of the NSW Parliament,” the statement said.

Optus has released a statement on the ICAC report about its employee, Gladys Berejiklian.Eddie Jim.

“We refer you to Gladys’ media statement and have no further comment to make.”

Berejiklian joined the telco’s executive team in February last year in the newly created role of managing director, enterprise, business and institutional.

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Berejiklian should have disclosed Maguire relationship: Opposition leader

By Angus Thomson

Opposition Leader Mark Speakman says he would expect a member of his party to disclose relevant personal relationships such as that between former premier Gladys Berejiklian and former Wagga Wagga MP Daryl Maguire, and resign if an ongoing corruption investigation undermined public confidence.

Speaking at a news conference, the Liberal leader and former attorney-general said the revelation that Berejiklian had been in a “close personal relationship” with Maguire came as a shock to him and others in the parliament.

Opposition Leader Mark Speakman in state parliament today.James Brickwood

“We were all gobsmacked when that emerged,” he said. “If those findings of fact stand up, then, in hindsight, I would have expected as a minister for that to be disclosed.”

Speakman said he hadn’t spoken to Berejiklian, but anticipated her legal team would look at appealing against the ICAC’s finding of serious corrupt conduct.

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