ylliX - Online Advertising Network
Police engaged in ‘joint criminal enterprise’ to bring down Tony Mokbel

Police engaged in ‘joint criminal enterprise’ to bring down Tony Mokbel


Fullerton also “rejected significant aspects” of the evidence of former chief commissioner of police Simon Overland as “unworthy of acceptance” over Victoria Police’s apparent failure to obtain legal advice about using a lawyer as an informer.

“There is every likelihood that Victoria Police would have been advised against registering her as an informer at all, so great were the legal and ethical risks in doing so,” she said.

Fullerton stressed that her findings in relation to potential criminal conduct were made on the balance of probabilities, which is a “standard different from and lower than a standard of proof beyond a reasonable doubt”.

Gobbo’s role in the Lawyer X scandal was also described as “a fundamental and deliberate breach of her ethical and [professional] obligations as a lawyer”.

“There is also very likely a psychological dimension underpinning Ms Gobbo’s decision to become an informer, and her apparent enjoyment at being an informer while continuing to practise as a criminal lawyer for the very clients, including Mr Mokbel, against who she was informing,” Fullerton said.

The stinging findings were greeted with a big smile by Mokbel after the court adjourned. His case is now bound for the Court of Appeal, which will ultimately decide whether to quash or uphold his drug trafficking convictions.

Former lawyer and police informer Nicola Gobbo.

Former lawyer and police informer Nicola Gobbo.Credit: ABC

The appeal centres on Gobbo’s involvement in providing police with information about one of her clients, a drug cook, whom she ultimately encouraged to plead guilty and provide police with evidence about Mokbel.

Then-director of public prosecutions Kerri Judd last year refused to bring a criminal prosecution against anyone involved in the Gobbo scandal despite being provided with criminal briefs by the then office of the special investigator.

Fullerton did not publish her full findings on Monday, to allow Victoria Police and other parties to make applications to potentially suppress part of the material.

Loading

The court heard the judgment runs to more than 600 pages and canvasses the evidence of more than 38 witnesses and hundreds of documentary exhibits.

One of the central questions Fullerton examined was what Champion knew about police’s use of Gobbo as an informer, when he knew it and what he did about the information, as Mokbel’s appeals against his convictions were under way in 2012.

“After a close and considered examination of all the evidence bearing upon that question and after applying the legal principles for the independent duty of disclosure at common law by which the director was bound, I was satisfied the [then] director had sufficient information as at September 2012 to activate his independent duty of disclosure – and that he failed to do so,” Fullerton said.

“I was unable to comfortably reach a conclusion as to why the [then] director breached his duty of disclosure, other than it being a result of an error of judgment.”

Get alerts on significant breaking news as happens. Sign up for our Breaking News Alert.



Source link

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *