AFP staff raiding Parliament House earlier this morning
The NBN leak investigation by the Australian Federal Police is once again set to roil politics, with AFP officers, citing “national security”, this morning raiding Parliament House to secure emails from the staff of Labor Senator Stephen Conroy, including emails sent to journalists.
The investigation — initiated by a humiliated NBN Co in response to leaks last year detailing rollout delays, cost blowouts and infrastructure failures in the government business’s implementation of Malcolm Turnbull’s scaled-back broadband project — erupted during the election campaign. Conroy’s Melbourne office and the home of staff member for then opposition communications spokesman Jason Clare were raided in May by AFP officers in the company of an NBN Co employee. Conroy had been Labor’s communications minister in government and point man on communications matters in the Senate in opposition.
[What you need to know about NBN raids — and why it could help Labor]
In an extraordinary breach of protocol, the NBN employee accompanying police officers took images of files and sent them to his employer even though the materials were the subject of an immediate parliamentary privilege claim by Conroy, which should have ensured the materials were sealed until the Senate could determine a position on his privilege claim.
This morning’s raid, conducted by AFP officers who arrived at Parliament House just after 10am, was aimed at Parliament House email servers that contain the accounts of Conroy’s staff. Parliament House staff, led by the Serjeant-At-Arms, tried to prevent journalists from seeing and filming the activities of the AFP officers in the basement area of Parliament House — the vast network of tunnels, storage areas, kitchens and offices that forms an underground mini-city beneath the ground floor of the building (and to which journalists and other APH workers are permitted access).
The raid reached the point of absurdity when Labor staffer were ordered not to film a briefing that AFP officers were intending to give them about the warrant and the search, on the basis of “national security” — despite the search relating to Labor staffers’ own emails, exchanged while they were working in opposition. The “national security” claim also contradicts NBN Co’s consistent claim that the investigation it initiated related to theft of intellectual property.
The warrant served this morning also targetted journalists in addition to emails exchanged between Labor staffers, with emails sent to journalists from Delimiter, The Australian, The Australian Financial Review, The Sydney Morning Herald and “the Australian Broadcasting Commission” (sic) also sought. Under data retention laws, attempts to identify journalists’ sources are subject to special warrant procedures; as this warrant demonstrates, such requirements are straightforward to circumvent by pursuing sources of communication to, rather than from, journalists.
Even before any claim of privilege for the seized documents is adjudicated, Labor says it has strong legal advice that the entire investigation is beyond the power of the AFP given NBN Co staff are not public servants under the NBN legislation and therefore not covered by standard public service confidentiality requirements. This would make the AFP raids illegal.
[The truth behind the NBN raids: whistleblowing is in crisis]
“Its own enabling legislation … clearly and unambiguously states that NBN Co is not a public authority, not part of the Commonwealth and not entitled to any of the immunities or privileges of the Commonwealth,” Conroy said in a statement on the raid early this morning, citing section 95 of the NBN Companies Act, which states the company is not “a public authority or an instrumentality or agency of the Crown (however described); and not to be entitled to any immunity or privilege of the Commonwealth”.
Communications Minister Mitch Fifield told the ABC this morning that it wasn’t up to members of Parliament to determine what the AFP investigates:
“Well, it’s not for members of Parliament to determine what the jurisdiction of the Australian Federal Police is. The Australian Federal Police determine what is and what is not within their jurisdiction. The Australian Federal Police have accepted this investigation, they are undertaking it.”
The government sought to distance itself from the controversial raids, insisting initially it was unaware of the investigation or plans to seize Labor’s documents, until Fifield was forced to admit he had known of the investigation for several months but, he claimed, never informed the Prime Minister. In a major breach of caretaker conventions that went unpunished by the government, NBN Co chair Ziggy Switkowski also ignored advice from his portfolio department, Communications, not to publicly defend the raids during the election campaign.
The Abbott and Turnbull governments have dramatically escalated the pursuit of whistleblowers since coming to power, conducting a series of investigations of leaks to journalists about asylum seeker policies and the abuse of asylum seekers detained by Australia, legislating harsh penalties against whistleblowers (now described as “insider threats”) and instituting a mass surveillance scheme and harassing Witness K, the former ASIS officer who revealed Australia’s illegal bugging of the East Timorese government, and his lawyer, Bernard Collaery.
“Well, it’s not for members of Parliament to determine what the jurisdiction of the Australian Federal Police is. The Australian Federal Police determine what is and what is not within their jurisdiction.”
If true, wouldn’t this mean we are a police state?
My thoughts exactly Keith1. Especially concerning given stories in yesterday’s SMH suggesting that the AFP is rife with sexual harassment and bullying.
Dysfunctional, us??
Turnbull was squealing like stuck pig in this morning’s Oz, accusing Conroy of ‘bullying’ the AFP:
“Senator Conroy this morning was showing yet again that he operates in a parallel universe. I used to describe it as Conrovia; another sphere, another universe.
“The administration of justice takes its course and it’s not for politicians to try meddle in it or bully the police or any other security service into one action or another.”
Someone’s very worried.
Of all Turnbull’s mistakes and cave-ins the most egregious must be the NBN. It is no surprise that this is his line.
As we taxpayers/peasants are footing the bill for Turnbull’s third-rate communications up(?)grade we have a right to know how it’s progressing. So what are the Coalition & the NBN hiding that qualifies these documents as ‘sensitive’.
Was it only a couple weeks ago Turnbull was urging every Australian household to supply our personal information on the Census – the pro-Census lobby arguing that data was perfectly safe & there was no reason not to co-operate if we have nothing to hide. Bare all, folks, it’s for the good of the nation. But don’t bare all if you’re the NBN.
The double standard is alive & thriving.
Also noted Zut. Government money paid to a private company suddenly becomes sacrosanct, but yours and my personal data should be freely distributed and given up by threat of significant penalty, or without question in the case of our telcos.
Government for the corporates, by the corporates.
The exclusion of NBN from being an agency of the Commonwealth by Section 95 of its Act is reinforced by the consistent construction of Section 75 of the Constitution judicial interpretation of which does not treat employees of statutory commercial corporations as “officers of the Commonwealth”. The AFP is on thin grounds when it pursues the NBN approved inquisition as though it is dealing with any other Commonwealth agency whose employees are subject to the Crimes Act. A more important point is the enormity of the intrusion being made by the AFP as an arm of the executive government into the province of the legislative and political arm of our democracy. I was appalled to hear this morning on ABC’s AM Michelle Grattan being mealy-mouthed in her response to the AFP action to execute search warrants into parliamentary staffer records and the Parliaments servers. She seemed neutered by the prevailing ABC obligation to bebalanced to the point of impotence, vaguely gazing from both points of view. The NBN fishing expedition is no mere”political issue”, promoted by Senator Conroy; it is a gross intrusion on representative government; if the AFP be right, why has it not turned the House upside down to establish what Godwin Grech told Malcolm Turnbull, Eric Abetz and others when Grech saw it as his function to brief them on activities unequivocally subject to the criminal sanctions against disclosure binding on an officer of the Commonwealth: he might have been pardoned on grounds of incapacity but that would not exonerate those prominent politicians who were feeding off his disclosures. Any person who values a free media and independent public accountability pursued through a representative parliamentary system should be outraged by this abuse of executive power.
The shadow Attorney-General, Mark Dreyfus [on Lateline tonight], and I, agree with your comments…especially the final sentence.
The police state has arrived!
Is there a Commonwealth criminal charge for all round incompetence?…if so all I can say is that the Federal Police should investigate and charge the NBN on this… after having the Sky Muster set up installed at the end of June just before the election its now been 58 days without connection…no internet… 2 NBN techs who are sub contracted by Hills Ltd have been out and unable to work it out…they mumble some stuff and then wonder and wander off… my ISP Activ8me are just as hapless in working through the byzantine maze that NBN has set up to install the Sky Muster… the process is a direct copy of the Catch 22 film script… there is no way we can get a resolution because of mutually conflicting and dependent conditions… NBN says its working… the customer says its not working… the ISP sort of has to believe the customer… the customer can’t contact the NBN only through the ISP…an NBN technical enquiry has to be closed off before a new Tech can be sent out to investigate…. this is not simple apparently… to close off is not click of the keyboard…it can take a week or two…when it is closed off the customer goes down to the bottom of the list to work there way to the top before another Tech will be sent out… Its unreal… other countries can put a human in space… build and launch satellites… but us Aussie’s haven’t the nous to be able point and align a dish at a satellite…plug in a modem and turn it on…and make it work… depressing really