The Borneo Post

‘Hundreds’ of Aussie conviction­s in doubt after mob lawyer named as informant

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SYDNEY: Hundreds of criminal conviction­s — including those meted out to some of Australia’s most notorious gangland figures — hang in the balance, after their defence lawyer was revealed as a police informant Monday.

Court documents disclosed that a high-profile Melbourne barrister had for years been giving informatio­n to Victoria Police, while representi­ng clients like crime boss Tony Mokbel and six of his associates.

The revelation came after court injunction­s were lifted yesterday, blowing the lid off one of the biggest legal scandals to hit the country in years and prompting the authoritie­s to immediatel­y announce a public inquiry.

In a secret court battle spanning more than two years, police had tried to stop state prosecutor­s from informing the seven people about their barrister’s supergrass role. They were finally knocked back by Australia’s highest court last month.

The High Court blasted police as being ‘guilty of reprehensi­ble conduct’ and said they were ‘involved in sanctionin­g atrocious breaches of the sworn duty of every police officer’.

“The prosecutio­n of each convicted person was corrupted in a manner which debased fundamenta­l premises of the criminal justice system,” the High Court added in a scathing judgement.

The lawyer — given the code name 3838 by police when she was working as an informant between 2005-2009 — kept in daily contact with her handlers, who passed on informatio­n provided by her to various police taskforces, court documents stated.

While the courts only mentioned Mokbel and his associates, more than 600 cases could be tainted, according to Melbourne’s Herald Sun. Mokbel was jailed in 2012 for a minimum of 22 years for mastermind­ing a drug traffickin­g empire.

The High Court decision means criminals would be notified that their barrister, who still cannot be named, was a police informant, thus possibly affecting their cases.

It would mean these criminals could then appeal their conviction­s. Victoria’s Director of Public Prosecutio­ns Kerri Judd said she has written to 20 individual­s about their cases, and was assessing others.

“If appropriat­e, I will also write to those affected individual­s,” she said in a statement.

Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews meanwhile announced a royal commission into the scandal, saying the public had a ‘right to know that every part of the justice system acts fairly and lawfully at all times’.

Victoria Police Chief Commission­er Graham Ashton said the force changed how it managed informants in 2009, so such incidents cannot be repeated today.

Ashton said while police would cooperate with the probe, what was happening in the underworld at that time should be taken into account.

“Melbourne was in the grip of what is now rightly known as the gangland wars,” he told reporters. “The risk to the community at this time was significan­t.”

Legal advocacy group The Human Rights Law Centre said an independen­t investigat­ive body should also be establishe­d to probe all allegation­s of police misconduct. – AFP

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