Senate debates
Wednesday, 16 August 2006
Committees
Privileges Committee; Report
5:07 pm
Robert Ray (Victoria, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Hansard source
Yes. But we did not name Mr Reith and we did not ask questions on notice that would identify him. We knew his son was involved, and we desisted. How did that information get into the public domain? How did it reach the newspapers? We now know that it was the AFP that put it there. They had done the investigation. I do not think they found any criminal activity, so it was leaked to a newspaper. Time and time again we see this occurring.
We cannot expect, when we commit errors—we are supposed to set the example for the community—not to be exposed. I accept that. But I think it is bad for the police to commit the leaking. I suspect it is illegal. I suspect it is against all their codes of ethics to do so, and I do not think they should be allowed to do it. It is really a question of police integrity. I do not know if that, in the present instance, is what Senator Johnston was going on about. Nevertheless, I think we should say that we oppose the police leaking these particular matters for ambush.
I have had to raise elsewhere the question of the combined state and federal police and ASIO raids on terrorist matters. Clearly, I am not going to say that I do not support those raids, and I believe that each of those search warrants was justified. I also commend the police these days for the way in which they execute them in a far more culturally sensitive way, as they have been doing recently. But in the instances I mentioned from my state of Victoria the cameras were there. Who tipped off the TV stations to be outside a home? After all, the police were executing a search warrant. It was not an arrest. It was a search warrant. You can imagine what all the neighbours thought when they saw the four or five TV channels outside.
The state police especially have a relationship with the media. They need to use the media to assist them with their inquiries and activities. But it should not extend, in these instances, to tipping off the media and having them expose people. That is not the way our society is supposed to operate, and it will lessen people’s confidence in the police force if we allow it to continue.
Question agreed to.
The response read as follows—
APPENDIX ONE
RESPONSE BY MR KARL J. O’CALLAGHAN, APM
COMMISSIONER OF POLICE, WESTERN AUSTRALIA
PURSUANT TO RESOLUTION 5(7)(b) OF THE SENATE OF 25 FEBRUARY 1988
On 14 June 2006 Senator Johnston made a number of accusations against the Western Australian Police Service and me personally.
The central theme of the Senator’s address was a desire to demonstrate that the WA Police Service is dedicated to engaging in partly politics.
In support of this theory, the Senator refers to five examples:
The Prosecution of Paul Omodei
Mr Omodei was prosecuted and convicted for an offence relating to an incident whereby Mr Omodei discharged a firearm which injured his son’s thumb. Upon conviction Mr Omodei was fined and received a spent conviction.
The Senator argued that Mr Omodei should not have been charged because it was an accident. According to the Senator, the only reason Mr Omodei was charged was because he is a Liberal party politician.
I should point out that it is not my practice, nor is it the practice of any sensible Commissioner to interfere in decisions concerning who should be prosecuted. I was unaware Mr Omodei had been charged until after the fact. Once made aware, at no stage did I interfere in the process.
The Prosecutions of Jonathan Daventry
Mr Daventry works for the Federal Member for Curtin, Julie Bishop. Mr Daventry was charged following an altercation between Mr Daventry and a 72 year old constituent, who suffered a fractured skull.
The matter proceeded to trial in the District Court whereby Mr Daventry was acquitted.
The Senator maintains that the only reason Mr Daventry was charged was because it was “political”. Once again I was only aware of Mr Daventry’s case after publicity that he had been acquitted.
More importantly the Senator failed to inform the Senate that the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) had conducted the prosecution of Mr Daventry. Surely had the DPP formed the view that there was no prima facie case against Mr Daventry or no reasonable prospect of success, the prosecution would have been withdrawn.
The Prosecution of Mr McDonald
Mr McDonald is a union official for the CFMEU who was charged with making threats at a construction site in 2003.
After the case had been heard but prior to the Magistrate handing down her decision, the charge was withdrawn by a police prosecutor.
Mr McDonald was charged before I became Commissioner of Police. I was not aware that Mr McDonald had been charged until after the charge was withdrawn. Like the Senator, I too want answers as to why this case was withdrawn in unusual circumstances. The matter is now the subject of an investigation by the Corruption and Crime Commission. The one thing of which I am certain, however, is that I did not intervene in this prosecution in anyway. The Senator describes the police conduct as “corrupt”.
I can only assume, given the theme of the Senator’s address, that he believes that the charge against Mr McDonald was withdrawn because he is a labor party affiliate.
Interestingly, had I intervened to procure the withdrawal of the charge against Mr Omodei, as the Senator implicitly suggests should have occurred, I would have been subject to the very same allegation that the Senator levels against me with respect to Mr McDonald’s case.
It is not surprising that I deliberately do not involve myself in decisions about who gets charged and who does not. Those are matters for the investigating officers and the DPP, if need be.
Matt Birney
In 2005, Mr Birney was the Leader of the Opposition in Western Australia. In May 2005, Mr Birney undertook a preliminary breath test and was found to have exceeded the legal limit. Mr Birney was taken into custody and tested a second time whereby a reading of 0.047 was returned, which is under the legal limit of 0.05. Mr Birney was not charged with in the police force if we allowed to continue. an offence. Mr Birney also made a complaint against the police.
There exists a long standing arrangement whereby the Police Minister receives briefing notes concerning any operational matter of interest. The fact that the Leader of the Opposition had been taken into custody and complained about the conduct of the police was considered of significant interest. The WA Police simply provided the briefing note to the Minister. The WA Police did not make the information public nor did they advise the Minister to make it public.
The Senator also sought to make much of my radio interview where I indicated that I was unaware who had provided the information about Mr Birney to the Police Minister.
The briefing note was sent by my Ministerial Liaison staff not by me personally. When apprised of that fact, I immediately confirmed that that was the case to set the public record straight.
As a consequence of the controversy surrounding the provision of the briefing note to the Minister, I sought advice from the State Solicitor’s Office as to the propriety of the practice. The advice I received confirmed that the practice is legitimate.
Burglar Beware Advertisement
In 2004, I appeared on a television commercial informing the public that DNA testing would be carried out in relation to every burglary.
Unbeknown to me at the time the advertisement was shot, there was a backlog in the testing of DNA samples. While DNA testing was being carried out, for a range of reasons, some of which that did not involve the WA Police, the testing was occurring at a slower rate than intended.
This situation prompted the Senator to advise Parliament that the “campaign was and continues to be founded upon a lie” and “amounts to a fraud being perpetrated upon the public of Western Australia.”
Historically, Western Australia has had a high burglary rate. The campaign was designed to reduce burglary by a combination of deterrence in warning criminals of the risk of being caught and detection by implementation of the new technology.
Various strategies have been used to address the delay. Recently, in one week alone, 150 DNA matches for burglary related offences occurred.
Objectively, there is no basis on which is can be said the campaign is either a “lie” or a “fraud”.
Conclusion
It is of concern that the Senator did not see fit to afford me natural justice before publicly denigrating my reputation and that of the Western Australia Police.
Parliamentary privilege was designed so as not to stifle robust debate and to encourage candour. Its purpose is not to enable politicians to unfairly denigrate a person or bodies reputation by advancing an ill-conceived theory with impunity.
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