An open secret finally hit the headline this month......
Monday, 16 April 2018
One of those asssociated with the company behind the second push for a Yamba Mega Port allegedly used an alias when giving sworn evidence before a NSW parliamentray committee
An open secret finally hit the headline this month......
The
Sydney Morning Herald, 12
April 2018:
Disgraced former senior
tax official Nick Petroulias gave sworn evidence to a parliamentary inquiry
under a fake name, it has been alleged in State Parliament - and seven MPs
sitting across the table never twigged.
The Greens are now
demanding a formal inquiry into the circumstances surrounding the appearance at
the inquiry into Crown land, held in August 2016.
Mr Petroulias' face was
splashed across the country's media about eight years earlier, when he was
imprisoned for corrupt conduct during his stint as assistant tax commissioner.
But in Parliament on
Thursday, Greens MP David Shoebridge alleged that Mr Petroulias used the alias
"Nicholas Peterson" to give sworn evidence before the upper house
committee, of which Mr Shoebridge was a member.
If the allegations are
proven, it will mean Mr Petroulias was able to pull the wool over the eyes of
seven politicians, including inquiry chair Paul Green of the Christian
Democrats.
Mr Shoebridge pointed
out that in his verdict handed down in 2008, Justice Peter Johnson found Mr
Petroulias had refused to acknowledge his "clear and gross
wrongdoing" and "clear impropriety and deceit".
The standing committee
was tasked with looking at a range of issues relating to Crown land in NSW,
including Aboriginal involvement in its management.
"Mr Peterson"
appeared before the committee with three other men who all identified as
members of an organisation called "United Land Councils".
The organisation, they
explained, was focused on the economic development of Aboriginal land by
linking land councils across Australia and attracting "large-scale
international and domestic investment".
Described as the
organisation's "strategy and legals executive", Mr Peterson gave
evidence about a property deal he was working up with an Aboriginal land
council near Newcastle.
The same deal was the
subject of a Fairfax Media special investigation last year. It is now being
probed by the Independent Commission Against Corruption, which has been told
that Mr Petroulias played a "central role" in the transaction.
At the inquiry, Liberal
MP Catherine Cusack questioned Mr Peterson about his relationship to the land
council, asking whether it was a "mediation role".
"Yes, we are trying
to bring them together to try to get it on a massive scale," he said.
"Could you come
back to us on notice as to which land councils in NSW are part of your
organisation?" asked Liberal MP Scott Farlow.
"Sure," Mr
Peterson replied.
The ICAC inquiry has
separately heard that Mr Petroulias has gone by several names - including
Nicholas Piers, Pearson and Peterson - since his release from prison.
Fairfax Media obtained
bankruptcy forms from 2015 in which he described himself as a "disabled
pensioner", with his debts estimated at an eye-watering $104 million.
Labels:
NSW Parliament,
United Land Councils Ltd
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