So will Brian Loughnane assert that he didn't read his emails in 2010 or will he, like Senator Sinodinos' lawyer, claim that routing unlawful donations to the NSW Liberal Party through the Free Enterprise Foundation was a legitimate action.
UPDATE
According to a report in The Sydney Morning Herald on 8 September 2014, Liberal Party MP for Mackellar and Speaker in the House of Representatives Bronwyn Bishop has been identified in evidence before the Operation Spicer investigation as being a director of the Dame Pattie Menzies Foundation Trust which received $11,000 from the Free Enterprise Foundation on December 9, 2010, which it then directed to the NSW branch of the party for use in the 2011 state election and The previous day, Mr Partridge has sent a cheque for $125,000 to the Free Enterprise Foundation with a note which read: "We trust this donation will provide assistance with the 2011 NSW State election campaign". Additionally, A $2000 donation to the Dame Pattie foundation from Australian Corporate Holdings, a company connected to Sydney property developer and sailor Syd Fischer, was also passed on to the NSW Liberals.
The same article also pointed out that:
Previously
suppressed emails at a corruption inquiry raise serious concerns about major
donors to the Liberal Party being rewarded with extraordinary access to senior
party figures.
The emails
are from the chief fundraiser of the NSW Liberal Party Paul Nicolaou to Peta
Credlin, one of the most powerful figures in the federal government….
As well as
being chief of staff to Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Ms Credlin is married to
Brian Loughnane, the party's federal director.
The emails
reveal that, in March 2011, while in Opposition, Ms Credlin was advised by Mr
Nicolaou that the managing director of Brickworks, Lindsay Partridge, was
"a very good supporter to the party".
Brickworks
was one of the largest corporate donors to the Liberal Party, giving a massive
$384,000 in a nine-month period from July 2010 to April 2011.
As well as
its brand Austral Bricks, Brickworks also lists property development as a core
business. The ICAC has heard that Brickworks used the Free Enterprise
Foundation, a shadowy Canberra-based organisation, to channel $125,000 in illicit
donations to the NSW Liberals for the March 2011 state election.
3 comments:
They have no shame. This disclosure form tells all: http://searchdecs.efa.nsw.gov.au/Documents/D2010-16954.pdf Will be interesting to see who faces court arising from ICAC evidence.
According to an EFA document (http://searchdecs.efa.nsw.gov.au/Documents/D2011-4277.pdf), Dame Pattie received $37,000 but only gave $27,000 to the NSW Liberals. wonder what happened to the other $10,000.
Incidentally, the original address of the foundation was the same as the NSW Liberal office: Level 9 140 William St. WOOLLOOMOOLOO NSW 2011.
Hope someone in the MSM asks Bronwyn Bishop about this one!
PS The secretary of the Dame Pattie foundation is SIMON JOHN MCINNES, finance director of the NSW Liberal Party who was mentioned today in email despatches with Peta Credlin. (http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/icac-lifts-suppression-order-on-peta-credlin-and-paul-nicolaou-emails-20140908-10dr7v.html).
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