Police drop journo probe in spy drama
CANBERRA: Australian police yesterday dropped the investigation of a prominent journalist and government whistleblower over leaked government secrets, ending a case which sparked wide-ranging debate over press freedom in the country.
The federal police said they would not seek any charges against Annika Smethurst, a political reporter for Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, over a 2018 article alleging the government planned to expand its powers to spy on Australian citizens.
They also dropped their investigation into the whistleblower suspected of providing Smethurst with the classified documents on which she based her report.
The decision came six weeks after Australia’s High Court invalidated a search warrant police used to raid Smethurst’s Canberra home in June 2019 as part of a hunt for the source of the leaks. The court ruled the police seizure of data from Smethurst’s phone and laptop was unlawful.
The raid sought to identify the person who gave Smethurst “top secret” documents from the Australian Signals Directorate intelligence agency and other officials. Ian McCartney, deputy commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, said the court ruling prompted a review of the Smethurst case which “determined there is insufficient evidence to progress the investigation”.
“No one will be prosecuted in relation to this unauthorised disclosure,” he said. A day after the Smethurst search, federal police also raided the Sydney headquarters of public broadcaster ABC, trying to track down another whistleblower linked to ABC reporting on alleged war crimes by Australian troops in Afghanistan.
Two ABC journalists remain under investigation in that case. The twin operations sparked a storm of protest from media and civil liberties organisations, with News Corp warning of “a dangerous act of intimidation” that will “chill public interest reporting”.