Howdy dear availees...had a coupla' goes at re-booting this 'ere blog and quite frankly, it's been a bit of a minor disaster...then I realised I haven't even finished posting my testimony as presented to the South Australian Parliamentary 'Inquiry into the Harms and Adverse Outcomes of ICAC Investigations'...this is specifically symptomatic of how burnt-out and even disassociated I'd become with the whole bloggin' thing...easy fixed though with this 4th and final lengthy installment which continues on from previous 3 posts...(indeed, and we rejoin our hero in the Blossom Garden of the Winter Palace as he explains how Magistrate Teresa Anderson recused herself from the 'trial' officially citing "Abuse of Process"-Ed)...well, lovely reference to Monty Pythons' 'Gumbies' sketch, but I don't know about "our hero", but yeah, dear availees, please enjoy...***
3467
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: Why
would she excuse herself? She's identified
there is
an
abuse of process. Why would she excuse herself?
Mr
FLETCHER: Because
she felt that I had proved that to her.
3468
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: You
might have proved it, but why would she discontinue
her
presence?
Mr
FLETCHER: The
only explanation at the time was as the resident magistrate,
because
the stuff I had provided her involved so many local government
authorities and police and—
3469
The
CHAIRPERSON: There
could have been other reasons for her recusing herself.
Mr
FLETCHER: If
I may, that's the quote:
In
light of the
material that has been filed in relation to the abuse of process/stay
of proceedings
application,
Her Honour rules that it is not appropriate for the resident
magistrate in Mount Gambier to hear this matter.
Her
Honour recuses herself and disqualifies herself
from hearing the trial. Set for trial before a new magistrate.
Listed
November
10.
That
was moved to Magistrate White.
3470
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: In
Mount Gambier?
Mr
FLETCHER: Yes.
I would like to table that if I may, because that's—
3471
The
CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
3472
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: I
will move that it be received and published.
Carried.
Friday,
22 October 2021 Legislative
Council Page
485
DAMAGE,
HARM OR ADVERSE OUTCOMES RESULTING FROM ICAC INVESTIGATIONS
Mr
FLETCHER: The
Courts Administration Authority, 3 November 2016, where
Magistrate
Anderson identifies the abuse of process. It's not just me going into
court and saying this
stuff.
Her Honour, at that stage, felt I had proven what I was saying about
being persecuted rather
than
prosecuted to the degree that she was prepared to use that sort of
language. That's the outcome
of
it.
3473
The
CHAIRPERSON: That's
your interpretation. There might be others.
Mr
FLETCHER: No,
I'm saying that's what happened. Anyway, sorry—
3474
The
CHAIRPERSON: It's
alright. Can we get on to the—
Mr
FLETCHER: Which—
3475
The
CHAIRPERSON: Where
were you going?
Mr
FLETCHER: The
conviction. As I was saying, the bottom line of it all is I am
a
private
citizen.
I'm not a public servant or any of those sorts of things. I've been
right through the
ICAC
site, all their various responsibilities, etc.
3476
The
CHAIRPERSON: Under
the act private citizens can also be—
Mr
FLETCHER: That's
not what
it says.
3477
The
CHAIRPERSON: They
can be.
Mr
FLETCHER: But
that's not what it says. That's what I'm saying, as a
private
citizen.
I've been through it. nowhere does it—all
it talks about is maladministration and corruption,
etc.,
public
officials, politicians, etc. At no point is that made clear that a
private citizen is also subject
to
ICAC legislation. As a layperson—that's
that term—nobody
I've spoken to understands that.
That's
what I'm saying, why the specific request I make of
the committee today is
that
it needs to be publicly expressed, as politely as you choose to do
it—I
don't care if you don't use
my
name or my example, whatever—to
go into the public realm, via the media, etc., and say,
'Everybody
needs to be concerned because
you are all subject to this legislation and, given that the
precedent
has been set at $30,000 per count, that's what you've got hanging
over your heads.'
For
my part, that's the threat of it; that's the deliberate threat
implied in the ICAC
legislation.
If you speak out, you're going to lose your house, you're going to
lose your business,
because
you are going to get a fine beyond all reality.
3478
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: You're
saying that private citizens are not subject to the
ICAC
law in regard
to disclosure.
Mr
FLETCHER: Yes,
it's not explained in the ICAC legislation.
3479
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: That's
different, if it's not explained. But do you concede
that
the law does cover private citizens?
Mr
FLETCHER: It
doesn't, because
in the ICAC site it specifically takes it away from
that.
If it were just a law, that covers us all. We are all covered by
speeding laws, drink-driving, etc.
3480
The
CHAIRPERSON: That
section of the act would also cover private citizens
from
disclosing
that there is an ICAC investigation or whatever. It doesn't exclude
private citizens.
Mr
FLETCHER: That
may be the intent. Sorry, I haven't explained myself terribly
well.
You start reading it; all it talks about is how it relates to public
servants, maladministration, etc.,
etc.
Nobody in the community has any idea that even exists.
3481
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: But
if somebody is charged or under investigation, it's
quite
clear that they can't tell their contractor, electrician, or
whatever, that there is an investigation.
Mr
FLETCHER: Too
late if you have already done it, though. Again, I come back to
the
wording of the legislation. It's too late.
3482
The
CHAIRPERSON: No,
you need to be aware of what's in the legislation.
Mr
FLETCHER: Ignorance
is no excuse before the law. I have had that put to my
face
in court.
Page
486
Legislative
Council Friday,
22 October 2021
DAMAGE,
HARM OR ADVERSE OUTCOMES RESULTING FROM ICAC INVESTIGATIONS
3483
The
CHAIRPERSON: There's
also those about those representing themselves as
well,
Mr Fletcher. You may have heard that one.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
have, and I can tell you that if I had half the money made
available
to
me as is being spent on prosecuting me to be able to defend myself, I
would have engaged proper
lawyers.
When I did, they did it free, they did it pro bono, and they did
marvellous, incredible work.
They
are an absolute credit to the community legal service establishment
because, as I say, I would
be
completely lost without the support I got.
3484
The
CHAIRPERSON: So
you are actually one of the first, if not the first, to be
caught
under
that legislation, and you are certainly paying a heavy price for
that. What we wanted to get to
was
the fact that you are considering
an appeal.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
am still trying.
3485
The
CHAIRPERSON: Have
you sought legal advice or are you trying to get legal
advice
about appealing that matter?
Mr
FLETCHER: Again,
I have been back to community legal service, and
it's outside
of
their realm. They just tell me straight out, 'Sorry, this is way
beyond what we can do. We don't
have
the finances, we don't have the expertise.' It is my understanding
that I should have been
afforded
all of my transcripts the moment that I lodged my initial interest in
appealing, the week that
I
was convicted. So why it is 3½ years later that I am still fighting
to try to get them is a mystery.
3486
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: Regarding
the community aid, which helped you at the
beginning
of your legal fight, is it in their charter to fund or help support
people who are subject to
criminal
charges, or was that out of their realm, that that is a reason?
Mr
FLETCHER: It
was the combined problem they had with this being the precedent
case:
there was no case law to refer to, plus there's one and, I think, a
quarter lawyers for the whole
of
the South-East operating out of community legal service. They do
handle smaller criminal matters,
domestic
violence cases and things like that. They
have been quite open. They helped me up to a
point.
3487
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: That
would be on behalf of the victim, not a perpetrator.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
am sorry, I don't know that one. They don't do appeals, I know
that.
Because they don't have the funding or the facilities, the man or
person hours to do it, they don't
help
with appeals and stuff. They straight out just can't deal with that
sort of caseload, that workload.
As
I say, they did what they could to help me, things like when the
police tried to change the charges
the
first day of my actual trial. I went straight to them, and the
paperwork they provided me says this
is
something to be deeply concerned about, not least of all because you
have been asked to plead
to
this stuff and then
they want to change it. The terms they used were 'stay of
proceedings'. They
downloaded
me whatever piece of legislation it was. Again, that's just part of
the smaller process.
To
come back to my main concern, it is the extraordinary effort. I can
understand an
effort
to properly prosecute the precedent case because it is incredibly
important and it does affect
every
single person. I say it again: most people have no idea that ICAC
involves them. They just
wouldn't
even know because they are not a public servant or they don't have a
government contract
or
whatever else; that's stuff that is happening over there. That's how
I felt when I first got involved.
I
have tried, done everything I could, to establish what the heck that
legislation was about, including
lawyers
writing on my behalf, etc., and still—
3488
The
CHAIRPERSON: In
the beginning, yes, it was, and it was fairly new, I imagine
at
the time. But
the act is certainly there, and those provisions are there, and I
guess, Mr Fletcher,
the
opportunity for you perhaps is to see if you can engage some—I
don't know how you will do it—
Mr
FLETCHER: That's
alright. Nobody knows how I can do it, so it's—
3489
The
CHAIRPERSON: —strong
legal advice that perhaps can lead you in that
direction.
I don't know what much more this committee can do, but we have heard
you out.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
would just like to table some more of these documents that I
have
referred
to specifically, if I may.
3490
The
CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
Friday,
22 October 2021 Legislative
Council Page
487
DAMAGE,
HARM OR ADVERSE OUTCOMES RESULTING FROM ICAC INVESTIGATIONS
Mr
FLETCHER: It's
just the first page of the police officer who raided my house,
her
affidavit
to the court, where it identifies this investigation is referred to
as Operation Baritone,
Anti-Corruption
Branch case management. That's a police document.
3491
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: I
move that that be received and published.
Carried.
Mr
FLETCHER: There's
the copy—I
don't think I've handed it up already—of
council
of
20 May 2014, where they published on their website a motion without
notice about having been
investigated
and cleared.
3492
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: I
move that that be received and published.
Carried.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
also have here the three pages from the 2017-18 ICAC report,
which
specifically has a section setting out the prosecutions and outcomes
for all cases held across
that
period, and I'm not in there, even though I fall directly in that
time frame. Again, I refer to the fact
that
my case appears nowhere, so how is anybody to know, even if they do
what I have done and
read
entire
ICAC website, that my case has even happened?
3493
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: I
move that that be received and published.
Carried.
3494
The
CHAIRPERSON: Do
you have you any other documents that you wish to table?
Mr
FLETCHER: Just
two: a copy of the cover page of the minutes of the special
meeting
of Mount Gambier city council, January 2017, where the subject matter
is 'Allegations
regarding
Andrew Lee to be referred to ICAC', which I referred to before—
3495
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS:
I move
that that be received and published.
Carried.
Mr
FLETCHER: —and
the contrast between what is happening in front of me while
I
am standing in court: over here this is happening and over here I am
being charged for it. The final
one
is an
unsigned letter from the Crown Solicitor, from May 2018, threatening
me in all sorts of
ways,
etc., about my blog and having been convicted and so on.
3496
The
CHAIRPERSON: Is
that a subsequent blog that you published?
Mr
FLETCHER: Well,
I'm still blogging. I continue to blog.
3497
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: You're
still blogging, yes.
Mr
FLETCHER: I've
never stopped blogging, and this is I have 'supposedly,
possibly,
perhaps—
3498
The
CHAIRPERSON: Continued
to breach the act.
Mr
FLETCHER: —contempt
of court, but possibly and maybe this will happen'. I just
table
that as a broad template of the many, many sorts of threats I have
received, particularly when
it
comes to the issue of child protection in Mount
Gambier.
I won't name the school. You gentlemen
know
which school it is because you and I have discussed it several times
in your previous
employment,
and we have discussed it. The Crown Solicitor has threatened me many
times about
how
I'm facing criminal defamation
for the things I say, etc. This is going back 15-plus years.
That's
just
the latest iteration of the sort of stuff that I have been subjected
to and it relates directly to that
ICAC—
3499
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: I
move that that be received and
published.
Carried.
3500
The
CHAIRPERSON: We're
running out of time. Can I suggest that you have a look
at
the new legislation that's been passed, and you will see that
parliament has also in that created
an
office of an independent inspector who
can now—
Page
488
Legislative
Council Friday,
22 October 2021
DAMAGE,
HARM OR ADVERSE OUTCOMES RESULTING FROM ICAC INVESTIGATIONS
Mr
FLETCHER: I
did see that. I haven't had a chance to see what that actually—
3501
The
CHAIRPERSON: Well,
can I suggest that you do because that may well be an
avenue
for you to be able—
Mr
FLETCHER: There's
a little light
coming on in my head. With all the stuff I've
been
saying, the office of the inspector could be the sort of person who
might be able to address
these
issues for me personally.
3502
The
CHAIRPERSON: Yes,
you can go to the inspector and present your
case. I'm
not
saying whether the inspector will decide to take it up, but there is
that opportunity that exists now
for
people to be able to take a complaint in relation to matters that
have been dealt with. Those
matters
can be retrospective and going back to the time that you were first
investigated and the
subsequent
prosecution. You may have an opportunity in that regard.
Can I
ask that you consider
that
as soon as the inspectorate is established. It hasn't been as yet; it
will be. Furthermore, perhaps
you
do need to engage or find some way of engaging advice from a
prominent barrister.
Mr
FLETCHER: If
I can be really flippant and say I am that desperate I
have
considered
going to Davis Xenophon.
3503
The
CHAIRPERSON: Nick?
Mr
FLETCHER:
Well, Mr
Davis has helped me with advice, the issue I referred to
before
when Corrections tried to gaol me. He very kindly gave me an
hour-long phone conference
pro
bono to help me with that and it nipped in the bud. Again—
3504
The
CHAIRPERSON: Well,
you may need that.
Mr
FLETCHER: —I
was lucky to get that sort of support. I have tried with
various
people
like Nick. It's a bit of a poisoned chalice really at this stage.
Perhaps, as you say, the
inspectorate
is somebody who can, given those powers, act in that way.
I'm
upset because this has happened to me, but the concern, the harm, the
adverse
outcome,
is the fact that it has happened at all and it could still happen to
anybody, as it stands, with
that
piece of legislation in place, etc. I come back to my original plea,
which is that somehow you talk
to
somebody at The
Advertiser and
just have a really polite article about the committee has
become
aware
that these issues could involve everybody, so people need to be aware
of the ICAC
legislation—something
like that to get it out there into the public realm.
3505
The
CHAIRPERSON: It's
a warning, and you are issuing a warning.
Mr
FLETCHER: A
light—
3506
The
CHAIRPERSON: I'm
sure people would not want to go through the experience
that
you did, Mr Fletcher. As I said, there is that opportunity coming up
with the independent
inspector.
Perhaps you would like to go to legal aid again or perhaps even an
organisation known as
JusticeNet.
I don't know if you have tried them. You have?
Mr
FLETCHER: I
have. That's where I ran into trouble back in 2015 with
someone
claiming
to represent me via JusticeNet. I never spoke to them. They showed up
at court, claiming
to
be acting on my
behalf, and I had never even spoken to him. That just fell apart and
it wound up
back
in Mount Gambier.
The
final thing I want to say is the trauma aspect of things. What I have
tried to do
is:
this is what has happened. This is what can happen. I believe that
it's politically motivated. It's not
an
accident that this has happened. It's been deliberately manipulated.
Whoever has done it, I don't
know.
I couldn't tell you. I wouldn't begin to guess, but there's a degree
of political involvement with
the
ICAC
that has seen me be treated the way that I have, and it has been
deliberate.
So
I'm arguing partly against myself, in saying that this could happen
to anybody,
but
it has also happened to me because I am special and I have been meted
out special treatment.
Those
two realities can exist side by side because this has happened to me,
because it has been
done
to me specifically and—
3507
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: That
begs the question: have you seen other people
publish
online, on their Facebook statuses and so on—
Friday,
22 October 2021 Legislative
Council Page
489
DAMAGE,
HARM OR ADVERSE OUTCOMES RESULTING FROM ICAC INVESTIGATIONS
Mr
FLETCHER: Have
you ever been online?
3508
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: —that
somebody has been referred to ICAC and wondered
what
happens to them?
Mr
FLETCHER: I
have seen stuff. Apparently, there are secret hearings for ICAC
and
you don't know what's in there. All that you see is there has been a
hearing about stuff. The
terrible
case of the police officer that you dealt with recently, who was
charged and he didn't even
know
what he had been charged with—sorry,
he was under investigation, not even charged, and
didn't
even know what he had been under investigation for. So I am aware in
a broader sense that
things
are happening.
The
Troy Bell case is obviously the big one at the moment, the obvious
one, but
what's
really happening? Even as it's in court now, there seems to be all
sorts of confusion about
what's
actually happening.
3509
The
CHAIRPERSON: That's
on appeal to the High Court. The matter will be
dealt
with
after the High Court brings down its decision.
3510
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: I
was more meaning that somebody goes to a council
meeting,
in the council it says that somebody might be referred to ICAC and
you then, as somebody
who
blogs—
Mr
FLETCHER: Yes.
3511
The Hon.
T.A. FRANKS: —write
about that, and you're the one who—
Mr
FLETCHER: I
have blogged about other people and other ICAC things after they
have
been in the public realm—for
example, former Robe council mayor and some other people
involved
with Robe council. A couple of them actually referred themselves
to ICAC
because it shut
down
discussion of it publicly. As I say, another misuse of the ICAC
legislation was that somebody
accused
of maladministration referred themselves because then it couldn't be
discussed. That's the
only
issue.
3512
The
CHAIRPERSON:
We are
running over time.
Mr
FLETCHER: If
I could just make my final—
3513
The
CHAIRPERSON: Yes.
Mr
FLETCHER: Talking
about the harm to me personally, I've been through it, but
it's
been worse for my family. It's caused ructions in my family where
parts of my family look at me
as
a heinous criminal. I now have a criminal conviction for telling the
truth. Every step of the way I've
told
the truth, regardless of what is or isn't in there. I am the only
person involved in all of these things
that's
ever faced any charges for any of it.
The
damage it's caused in my family—my
poor mum thinks I'm going to gaol every
other
day of the week, and not least of all because Corrections is
threatening to gaol me. That
happened
last year. That's
the personal level of harm that I've been through. That's what's
happened
and
it continues because this just doesn't go away for me. It's never
going to go away for me.
Deal
with the inspectorate for however many years while they try to sort
out. There's
the
harm that's happened to me, there's the potential harm to the average
citizen who's got no idea
that
this stuff applies to them. That's just all I'd like to say.
3514
The
CHAIRPERSON: Yet
there are others who would know that and have managed
to
escape scrutiny. I won't go into that.
3515
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: Just
one observation: you got a $540,000 fine.
Mr
FLETCHER: Yes.
3516
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: For
that you get 265 hours—
Mr
FLETCHER: 260
hours.
3517
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: —which
works out to $2,000 an hour.
Page
490
Legislative
Council Friday,
22 October 2021
DAMAGE,
HARM OR ADVERSE OUTCOMES RESULTING FROM ICAC INVESTIGATIONS
Mr
FLETCHER: I'm
a very special person. I tried to say that.
3518
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: Maybe
you are the highest paid community worker in
the
world.
Mr
FLETCHER: And
I didn't
do it, so—
3519
The Hon.
R.P. WORTLEY: Yes,
I understand that, but if you don't do that community
service
you could very well end up in gaol.
Mr
FLETCHER: That
was what happened last year. I was excused for health
reasons
by Corrections back
in 2018: doctors' letters and whatever else. For some reason they
came
back
in February last year and tried to have me gaoled. They wanted an
enforcement of 30 days
for
not
doing it. Even in their affidavit last year it said, 'We excused him
in 2018, but
now we want him
gaoled
because he hasn't done it.' So that is the reality, you face gaol for
not doing community
service.
When
it comes to the actual section 56,
there is no gaol time related to that, only the
fines.
That relates to not getting legal aid.
The letter literally said, 'No gaol time attached to that
offence,
you don't get legal aid.' That was the explanation. So you're right,
but you have to not do the
hours
to be in that—
3520
The
CHAIRPERSON: Okay
Mr Fletcher, thank you. Unfortunately, I think you were
an
easy target for that legislation.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
would like to think I've made it as difficult as possible.
3521
The
CHAIRPERSON: You
became an easy target for them, and certainly because
of
your inability to get strong
legal representation.
Mr
FLETCHER: In
that sense, definitely, yes.
3522
The
CHAIRPERSON: Thank
you for appearing before the committee today. A
transcript
of your evidence will be forwarded to you. Make any corrections you
see fit, okay?
Thank
you for
appearing today.
Mr
FLETCHER: Again,
thank you for accommodating me. I appreciate the chance
to
get some of this on the table.
3523
The
CHAIRPERSON: Good
luck with your challenge or pursuit of an appeal.
Mr
FLETCHER: I
know you can't do anything to help me, I knew that coming in, but
I
would like to think that something can be achieved from me being
here. Let me make the point
again:
if you can make it known that everybody is affected by this
legislation so this doesn't happen
to
another person, that will be something. Cheers.
3524
The
CHAIRPERSON: Thank
you very much, Mr Fletcher.
THE
WITNESS WITHDREW
***and so there you go...it's fairly self-explanatory and again quite lengthy so I'll leave it there and then come back with an overview summary post...
Tomorrow: Reviewing My ICAC Inquiry Testimony
Again thanks to those few who have supported/encouraged me to return to this 'ere blog...pre-emptive apologies if it's a bit clunky and chunky as we get back up to speed, but we're back and that's what's important...
I am Nick Fletcher and this is my blog...cheers and laters...
No comments:
Post a Comment