As a society we understand, without accepting, that there are many industries that have criminal or corrupt individuals working within them.
We also understand that it is incredibly hard for law enforcement personnel to uncover unlawful behaviour in many circumstances within these industries.
This is why we rely on whistleblowers. People within these industries who conscience will not let them sit quietly by, turning a blind eye to behaviour they know is either criminal, corrupt or immoral.
Blowing the whistle on your workmates or your employer is not a decision that is made lightly and often it takes great courage, as often it is the whistleblower that is suffers the most for their actions.
With whistleblowers playing such a crucial role and providing a service that’s value is often beyond measure, it is vital that they be given support and protection by both law enforcement agencies and also by government.
With that in mind I’d like to look at some cases that demonstrate the Coalitions record on protecting whistleblowers over recent years.
It is natural for a parent to seek the best education for their children, I’m sure Freya Newman’s did.
Freya was a student working part-time in the library at the Whitehouse Fashion Institute to help pay her way through Uni. When Freya discovered that Tony Abbott’s daughter Frances was being gifted a $60,000 scholarship while she worked her butt off to pay her way through her education she thought the public would be less than impressed at the “sense of injustice” in it all and blew the whistle.
Freya was right, the public greeted the news with hostility, it was clearly a case of a favour being done because of who Frances’ father was, as it was looking likely Abbott would end up in the Lodge at the next election.
Making matters worse is that once in office the Abbott government sought to deregulate universities in a move that would see some students paying up to $100,000 for a degree. Some students, but not Abbott’s daughter. Others who paid their way through Uni, like Freya, Abbott’s government planned to deal with by attacking their penalty rates, an attack that Malcolm Turnbull plans to continue to this day.

Freya Newman leaves court
Image – Fairfax
So what happened to Freya Newman?
Freya was not treated as a heroine, she was not lauded in the media, there will be no monuments, streets or parks named after her. Instead because she fell outside whistleblower protection laws she was named and shamed publicly then left to deal with mountains of vitriol and the kind of abuse that only those from the far right are capable of dredging up.
Freya was then charged criminally and dragged through the court system. She was eventually granted a good behaviour bond, but it’s fair to say she was left awfully battered and bruised in an emotional sense.
At any stage of the ordeal did Attorney General George Brandis do anything to assist the poor whistleblower or close the loophole that found her in court? Not a chance, probably too busy defending the right to be a bigot…

The Bendigo auditions for “Australia’s Next Top Model” begin with those Brandis defends leading the charge
Currently we have a refugee detainee system in crisis. We know this because there are whistleblowers who have finally had enough of seeing and hearing about murder, rape, beatings, sexual assaults and utter degradation. Not conditions that these people have fled, but conditions they have arrived to be subjected to while under Australian Government supervision.
Welcome to the free world.
However Immigration Minister Peter Dutton made it clear that the government was going to crack down on this type of behaviour. Unfortunately though he was not referring to the crimes against humanity being committed in the detention centres he is in charge of, he was referring to those blowing the whistle about the conditions these poor people are made to suffer.
As I write this I am pleased to say that some have taken the whistleblowing laws into their own hands.
Doctors at Melbourne’s Royal Children Hospital have risked two-year jail sentences to speak out that the conditions in Dutton’s detention centres are harmful to children. In fact the doctors have gone even further, refusing to release children in their care back into Dutton’s detention centres for further psychological damage.It is tragic that a doctor needs to risk two years jail as a whistleblower to ensure a traumatised child can receive adequate treatment.

Staff at Melbourne Royal Children’s Hospital give their opinion on children in detention
We also discovered recently the awful case of a young woman forced to beg the government to allow her to come to Australia for an abortion after she was raped at the detention centre on Nauru. This awful case only came to light after the woman’s lawyer, tired of waiting for a response from the government, blew the whistle to the media.
Another area many of you will know I’m passionate about is animal welfare.
Currently the government is looking to bring forward legislation that has become known as Ag Gag legislation.
Ag Gag is legislation is designed to shut down the reporting of cruelty to animals in the agriculture sector.
Supporters of Ag Gag claim it strengthens trespass laws and protects consumers from bio security hazards by increasing sentences for animal advocates who enter farms and obtain footage of cruelty and may bring an infectious disease in with them that infects livestock.
So great is this threat that it has never occurred once. Every bio-security breach that has ever happened has been as a result of either workers on the farm site itself or occurred during the transport of livestock.
However this proposed Ag Gag legislation not only seeks to imprison animal activists acting to enlighten the public, it also seeks prison sentences and huge fines for industry whistleblowers who report cruelty. This points to the ridiculousness of the Ag Gag proposals. These whistleblowers are working on site already, but only suddenly pose a risk to society when reporting on the cruel and criminal behaviour of their employer?
Farcical
But it gets worse, the proposal also seeks prison and fines for the publishing of footage or photos of cruelty obtained.
This means the editor of The Sydney Morning Herald or The Age or the producers of 4 Corners can be sent to jail for publishing footage from an agricultural facility that shows cruelty. Since when has what’s published on page five of the paper been responsible for a bio-security issue?
Supporters of this legislation point to the recommendation that incidents of animal cruelty be reported within 24 hours and therefore that improves animal welfare. This is highly deceptive, what it in fact means is that if the perpetrator by some miracle ends up in court, given the small amount of evidence that can be garnered in the 24hr window of opportunity, it will be impossible to prove a pattern of behaviour and it will be argued as an isolated incident.

This treatment is apparently fine, it’s taking a photo that is immoral… LNP logic
Image – aussiepigs.com
There is however one whistleblower that the Coalition have been more than happy to embrace, Kathy Jackson.
Jackson is of course the union turncoat and self-proclaimed whistleblower who now finds herself under the investigation of two police forces for alleged criminal conduct, as well as bankrupt after Federal Court ordered her to repay $1.4 Million of allegedly misappropriated funds to union members.
Kathy Jackson is not a whistleblower, in my humble opinion she is little more than a criminal opportunist. Throwing someone under the nearest bus for financial gain and then hoping that her self-proclaimed whistleblower status will keep her behaviour from being put under the microscope.

Kathy Jackson – Thankful she went to the beautician before the police raid
Image – Fairfax
Yet this is the type of “whistleblower” the Coalition support.
It is interesting to note that the parliamentary apology the Coalition made for Craig Thomson’s parliamentary address way back at the start of his saga now makes the Coalition look rather foolish. Every single one of those whom Thomson named and the Coalition made the parliamentary apology to is now either in jail or under criminal investigation by the Federal police organised crime division, Michael Lawler we learn today has even had an independent investigation launched into his behaviour by the government that’s spent the last few years defending him. I have little doubt the “independent” investigation will be more about covering the tracks and ties of former Employment Minister Eric Abetz in the case.
I guess this begs the question “Who was the real HSU whistleblower?”
I wonder indeed…
He’s your problem now Malcolm.




Keep it up – oh, keep it up !!!
‘…hoping that her self-proclaimed whistleblower status will keep her behaviour from being put under the microscope.’
Not to mention a belief that she was untouchable thanks to Liberals and Associates. In fact she was untouchable for a long time. And possibly still would be if it weren’t for wixxyleaks.
The fate of whistleblowers is all the proof anyone needs that governments do not govern for the little people, and certainly not for animals.
Brilliant work, Peter. I wonder if Lawler will be required to hand over the computer he refused to hand over to the investigation into Craig Thomson conducted by the man who retired immediately afterwards, Terry Nassios, and which KPMG demolished. If he is forced to hand it over, will we be surprised to hear that the data has been removed? Australian law is very selective about those it condemns and those whom it fails to condemn, as we have seen in the extraordinary events of a Royal Commissioner being allowed to exonerate himself after organising a pre-commission coaching session for Jackson. For anyone outside the group holding political and legal power that would have been defined as criminal behaviour.
If Lawler does not end up in gaol, we will know that he is one of a protected species of privileged citizens who are not equal before the law in the same way that you and I are. Australia is becoming George Orwell’s Animal Farm” in which “all (people) are equal but some are more equal than others”.
I think the first whistle blower was a chap named Craig Thomson, who when he first took over the job went after Jackson’s ex-husband.
Made him pay back thousands he spent on prostitutes. He then went on to attempt to bring books into order, making enemy of Kathy.
Funny, the crimes of her ex-husband were exactly the same she accused Craig of. Lacking imagination.
Seems Cash has ordered investigation into Lawler today.
You’re not going to win hearts and minds by mistaking snide comments on women’s appearance as cunning debating points. You’ve just lost half of your intended audience, and of your potential crowd funding.
I think one only mentioned woman’s appearance because of the massive change over the last few weeks. One could be concern about what cause such a change,
Going to be interesting viewing on four corners next week
… so can i presume this means that the ALP will vigorously and vocally oppose whistleblower legislation?
will the ALP will make a huge media fuss over this legislation?
… i dont recommend that you hold your breath … with pretty much the same embarrassing messes in their party room, we wont be seeing any credible option – or opposition – to the Coalition from the ALP
… more probably continued corruption and collusion.
… oops … can i add – good post Peter.
thank you for your efforts.
Normally I would agree but not sure that you are correct Vicki.
This is a woman who quite possibly spent members money on the designer labels she wears to front the cameras. They may also have paid for the almost daily blow dry. It’s easy to look like a million bucks when you’re not shelling out from your own pocket.
This photo reveals the real Kathy Jackson, all the labels in the world can’t disguise a bogan.
Call me slow, but I thought it was a doctored photo of KJ. Crikey!!
This is the woman who ruined Mr Thomsons life,for a lousy few thousand dollars, all the while she stole millions,put her in jail and throw the key away,