Will the NSW Independent Casino Commission (NICC) take the historic opportunity afforded by the outcome of the Bell inquiry into Sydney’s Star casino, and kick Star out of the building?
Adam Bell SC’s report, released today, finds Star “presently unsuitable to be concerned in or associated with the management and operation of a casino in NSW”. The NICC has issued Star a “show cause” notice and will decide on its response once Star has responded.
Yesterday Christine Lacy in The Australian reported that while Star would be found by Bell to be unfit to hold a casino licence, it would be allowed to keep doing so subject to strict conditions.
If that turns out to be the case, it would be another example of what is emerging as a clear pattern of corporate evasion of the consequences of egregious misconduct — just as the pattern of the original misconduct was.
In recent years, two powerful and politically influential industries — finance and gambling — have been exposed as having engaged in conduct so extraordinary, and so poorly regulated, that royal commissions and major independent inquiries were needed to deal with it.
Both industries gave jobs to former politicians, senior bureaucrats and staffers, bought political favours with massive donations, and ran rings around regulators deliberately weakened by governments. Both flouted the law and common decency over many years in the name of profit.
But another pattern is now established in dealing with such conduct being exposed: dismiss some executives, a chair, some board members; profess to have learnt some lessons and to have put in place internal processes to ensure it never happens again. Then it will be back to business as usual. The companies concerned won’t face any serious threat; they’ll be allowed to continue operating, and no individual will face the courts and incur the risk of jail or a massive fine.
If Star is allowed to conditionally retain its licence, it will be because Star’s rival Crown got that treatment. Crown lost its Barangaroo licence but got it back relatively quickly, with conditions (in Melbourne — despite astonishing revelations of Crown’s links with organised crime, money laundering and tax dodging — it didn’t even lose its licence).
Remember that in both finance and gambling, major inquiries arose only because of the media’s assiduous work exposing misconduct and criminal behaviour, which resulted in enough political pressure that governments had to respond. The purported regulators had failed miserably in their jobs.
The NICC thus faces a major test. Will it break the pattern? Or will it continue to be the case that if you’re in a politically influential and generous industry, you need not fear fallout from even the gravest misconduct?
Individuals and small companies engaging in crimes in finance and gambling that investigations have exposed face dramatic repercussions: jail, massive fines, and getting kicked out of the industry. Money laundering for organised crime, enabling child abuse, entertaining organised crime figures, defrauding clients and misleading other financial institutions deserve nothing less. But large corporations in Australia escape consequences.
It illustrates how state capture not merely delivers policy and fiscal outcomes big companies want from governments, but also shields them from accountability when exploiting their power at the expense of the public interest.
State governments are just as vulnerable as the federal government — indeed, the relationship of Crown with the Victorian government under both sides of politics is the most obvious example of state capture in the country, more blatant than even the relationship between fossil fuel companies and the federal Coalition and Labor.
The NSW Independent Casino Commission should shut Star down; the licence can be placed on the market subject to punitive regulatory restrictions intended to prevent money laundering and links to organised crime. Anything less will be state capture.
Should Star lose its licence in Sydney? Let us know your thoughts by writing to letters@crikey.com.au. Please include your full name to be considered for publication. We reserve the right to edit for length and clarity.
Yes. Federal and state governments have shown beyond any doubt they are opposed to anything approaching effective regulation. At most they set up weak and under-resourced regulatory agencies with inadequate powers, then appoint agency heads who know their job is to simply keep their head down and not get in the way. Ministers enthuse endlessly about ‘light touch’ regulation and expect the regulators to work ‘in partnership’ with the regulated. It’s useless by design. Regulation is performing exactly as intended.
Perhaps the government would prefer to solve the problems identified in the article by limiting the ability of the media to stir up trouble and cause embarrassment to those who run the country. Given that the resulting formal inquiries never result in any real action what’s the point of it all? Let’s just pretend everything is all right and save the trouble and cost of holding all these inquiries whose recommendations are routinely ignored.
No more inquiries? But won’t somebody think of the poor lawyers?
No worries, they can be kept busy taking the pesky journalists to court.
The first indication that the battle is list is agreeing to see this as the gambling industry rather than the money-laundering industry. The latter is probably the most successful, highest growth industry in the world this century, corrupting every layer of government in every country in the world. Gambling is just an everyday addiction, like commenting BTL in Crikey.
Anyone who wants a casino license is ipso facto not fit to hold one…
If Star lost the NSW license what would this mean for the multi-billion dollar casino/residential project currently under construction at Brisbane’s North Bank? Too big to fail…?
If you can propagate the delusion that you are too big to fail, then regulation is a mere annoyance and an occasional cost of doing business any bloody way you want, including illegally. In my view, it is this embedded reluctance/refusal to jail corporate managers that is the root cause of the sad paucity of corporate talent in Australia. No ethics and no talent.