The Gold Coast Bulletin

CCC defends investigat­ion

- PAUL WESTON

CORRUPTION watchdog chief Alan MacSporran has defended the ongoing inquiry into Gold Coast City Council and expressed “disappoint­ment” with its critics including a State MP.

Senior Coast LNP MP Ray Stevens in a speech in State Parliament strongly defended the council, saying it had become a “whipping boy” for state Labor government­s and the Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) after three inquiries.

Mr Stevens urged the CCC to only ever revisit another inquiry on “hard corroborat­ed evidence” but Mr MacSporran, QC, took him to task in an update to the parliament­ary CCC committee.

Labor MP and deputy committee chair Charis Mullen had questioned Mr MacSporran about Mr Stevens saying Coast councillor­s and the mayor had no case to answer.

“I just wanted to understand whether the CCC has in fact concluded their investigat­ions into this matter to give the member confidence to have made that statement in Parliament,” Ms Mullen said.

Mr MacSporran told the committee: “No, we haven’t and I’ve said publicly at my press conference in respect to Logan last Friday, I made that very point that there are ongoing investigat­ions.

“We have concluded certain investigat­ions into allegation­s made, we have published results of those of which were that they have not been substantia­ted.”

Chair Tim Nicholls at the open committee meeting cautioned that some of the detail was in a report which was part of a “private discussion”.

Mr MacSporran acknowledg­ed that was the case, but continued to address the comments by Mr Stevens.

“I found the remarks by Mr Stevens disappoint­ing. What everyone should understand by now is that, we don’t have the luxury of simply saying to a complainan­t ‘Don’t waste our time, go away’,” he said.

“Every complaint that comes to us is assessed in the first instance. It’s assessed to see if it reaches the threshold of satisfying us there is a reasonable suspicion of corrupt conduct. If there is, we commence an investigat­ion or send it back for an investigat­ion subject to our monitoring.”

The CCC at the end of its assessment reported the results and whether the allegation was substantia­ted charges to be laid.

CCC announced it had not found any corrupt conduct in its probe into Black Swan Lake, the Surfers Paradise Waterglow developmen­t and controvers­ial sale of Bruce Bishop Car Park in Surfers.

Some referrals had been made to the Office of the Independen­t Assessor, one matter involving a staffer referred back to council while the CCC investigat­ion continued on several other complaints. or

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