The Cairns Post

Cape fraud trial begins

- MATTHEW NEWTON

THE fraud trial of a Cape York traditiona­l owner who a court heard dishonestl­y signed an agreement with a bauxite mining company without telling his community and then withdrew more than $200,000 from trust accounts has begun.

Larry Joe Woosup pleaded not guilty to two counts of dishonestl­y obtaining a benefit of more than $30,000 on Tuesday in the Cairns Supreme Court as part of a trial that is expected to last five days.

Crown prosecutor Claudia Georgouras explained to the court how Mr Woosup was one of two surviving Ankamuthi native title applicants who had lodged a native title claim in 1998 over an area of country spanning from the Dulcie River in the south to the Skardon River in the north.

Ms Georgouras said the Crown case, and what the jury would hear from the Ankamuthi people was that mining company Gulf Alumina had proposed the Skardon River Project to mine bauxite on their traditiona­l land.

By 2010 they had “essentiall­y come to a stalemate”, Ms Georgouras said.

The company wanted to pay royalties in the order of 50c a tonne, while the Ankamuthi people wanted 90c a tonne, the court heard.

“And no agreement was made in 2010. From this point on, Mr Woosup continued without the permission of the community,” Ms Georgouras said

The court heard by May 2013 Mr Woosup had recommence­d negotiatio­ns with Gulf Alumina about the proposed mine – without taking the proposals back to the community.

Ms Georgouras said Mr Woosup along with two others finalised an agreement with the company allowing them to mine on traditiona­l land and for royalties to be paid at 50c to the tonne in December 2013. Eight days after a mining deed was signed, Mr Woosup set up a trust account with the Commonweal­th Bank on behalf of the Ankamuthi community.

The account was set up with an overdraft facility, and without depositing any money into the account he withdrew $110,000, Ms Georgouras said.

The court heard that on the same days Mr Woosup withdrew $50,000 cash and then later, $10,000 cash, the same amounts were deposited into his personal bank account.

Ms Georgouras also told the court how Gulf Alumina sent Mr Woosup on February 24, 2014, a $95,000 cheque payable to the Ankamuthi community.

Three days later he brought the cheque in to the Queensland Country Credit Union where had set up another community trust account, and deposited it there, Ms Georgouras said.

Between February 27 and April 30, the entire amount disappeare­d in cash withdrawal­s, fees, and automatic transfers.

 ?? ?? Larry Woosup.
Larry Woosup.

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