The Gold Coast Bulletin

Controvers­ial ‘Bloc’ figure dead, at 77

- GREG STOLZ greg.stolz@news.com.au

A CENTRAL figure in one of the Gold Coast’s biggest political corruption scandals has died.

Lionel James Barden passed away, aged 77, on September 19, according to a funeral notice.

Mr Barden, a respected businessma­n and Liberal Party member, was a key player in the 2004 Gold Coast City Council election which the-then Crime and Misconduct Commission found was “corrupted” by “secrecy, deceit and misinforma­tion”.

A CMC inquiry led to the prosecutio­n of Deputy Mayor David Power and prominent

lawyer Tony Hickey. Mr Barden lent his name to a $150,000 trust fund, backed by some of the Coast’s biggest developers, which bankrolled ‘like-minded’ candidates in the election in a group that became known as ‘The Bloc’.

In a 2006 report into the scandal, CMC chairman Robert Needham said considerab­le efforts were made to hide these circumstan­ces because of the belief that the public would react adversely to the knowledge that developers helped the election campaigns.

“While lying to the media generally isn’t an offence, the many false statements made by some candidates during this election substantia­lly corrupted the electoral process,” Mr Needham said at the time.

“The public was forced to go to the polls not knowing the truth about issues that were of legitimate public interest.”

Mr Power and Mr Hickey, lawyer for prominent developer the late Brian Ray, were both charged with misleading the CMC and breaching the Local Government Act.

Mr Power was cleared but resigned from the council in 2007.

Mr Hickey was found guilty of a ‘cover-up’ over the slush fund and fined $6000 but won a District Court appeal against the conviction.

Mr Barden had vowed to clear his name over his involvemen­t in the trust fund, with the controvers­y forcing him to step down from roles with the Abused Child Trust and Telstra.

“I’ll fight it because

I

haven’t done wrong,” he said.

He said he had put his name to the fund with “honourable intent” after concerns by the Coast business community that a “radical (green) group” with a millionair­e benefactor was poised to hijack the council.

“We didn’t want to see what happened in Byron Bay happen here on the Gold Coast,” he said at the time.

Mr Barden, who was privately cremated, was described in the funeral notice as ‘a kind and gentle man and great friend and mentor to many’. He is survived by his wife, Susie. anything

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Lionel Barden, a prominent and controvers­ial figure in the Gold Coast business community, has died.
Picture: Glenn Hampson
Lionel Barden, a prominent and controvers­ial figure in the Gold Coast business community, has died. Picture: Glenn Hampson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia