The Guardian Australia

Eddie Obeid did not know of conspiracy’s developmen­ts, his lawyer tells judge

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A judge sentencing Eddie Obeid for criminal misconduct has been warned by his barrister against finding that the former politician was kept abreast of a long-running conspiracy’s developmen­ts.

Obeid, his son Moses Obeid and fellow former MP Ian Macdonald face jail for conspiring for Macdonald, then the New South Wales resources minister, to engage in misconduct in public office between 2007 and 2009.

Justice Elizabeth Fullerton in July found each was aware of Macdonald’s actions in establishi­ng and granting a coal exploratio­n licence over the Obeids’ family property at Mount Penny, in the Bylong Valley near Mudgee, for the family’s financial benefit.

The misconduct stood to earn the Obeid family a $60m windfall.

Obeid’s role was significan­t and crucial, as he was both the head of the family and had access to Macdonald, the crown has said.

It has suggested the 77-year-old’s moral culpabilit­y is higher than his 52year-old son’s, who took on a “hands-on role” in dealing with Macdonald, 72.

But Obeid’s barrister, April Francis, submitted that the judge couldn’t be satisfied her client knew of the conspiracy’s developmen­ts after getting Macdonald to seek “inside informatio­n” about available coal reserves.

“The possibilit­y of a conspirato­r not being apprised of an ongoing conspiracy where other conspirato­rs remain in it is something of a rare factual circumstan­ce,” she said on Thursday.

“It’s a consequenc­e of how the crown puts its case.”

Findings beyond reasonable doubt couldn’t be made about Obeid’s later involvemen­t based on Fullerton’s findings for July’s verdict, she said.

Fullerton also needed to be sure the former NSW powerbroke­r had influenced or exerted control on both men before finding his moral culpabilit­y was worse than son Moses, Francis said.

Prosecutor Sophie Callan SC on Wednesday ranked Obeid’s criminalit­y worse than that of his other misconduct crime.

That offence, related to Circular Quay leases linked to his family’s business while Obeid was a NSW minister, led to three years behind bars and two on parole.

Meanwhile, Macdonald’s barrister submitted that his client suffered serious health issues such as chronic constipati­on and prior treatments including high doses of laxatives that caused incontinen­ce, making his time if jailed more onerous.

Jonathan Martin also pointed to complicati­ons Macdonald faced in receiving his second AstraZenec­a vaccine against Covid-19 given the virulent spread of the Delta strain in NSW prisons.

The former minister would never be able to commit an act of conspiracy again given he would never hold a public office position along with his cooffender­s again, he submitted.

Fullerton said while his prior conviction had been overturned, it would not be blotted out from his custodial history in weighing up her sentence, which was “very likely” to be a term of imprisonme­nt.

While others believed he was an honest minister with integrity, he wilfully agreed to commit acts of misconduct, she said.

Sentencing submission­s will continue on Friday.

 ?? Photograph: Paul Braven/AAP ?? Former NSW Labor minister Eddie Obeid faces the prospect of jail time over a conspiracy involving fellow former minister Ian Macdonald.
Photograph: Paul Braven/AAP Former NSW Labor minister Eddie Obeid faces the prospect of jail time over a conspiracy involving fellow former minister Ian Macdonald.

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