Oh, this IS classic ..........
Quote:THE eldest son of crooked ex-MP Eddie Obeid admits he might have told a “white lie’’ to the NSW corruption watchdog.
But his family “did not have investor relations’’ with infrastructure company Australian Water Holdings (AWH), he says.
Moses Obeid gave evidence at the Independent Commission against Corruption today as it investigates whether AWH corruptly billed the state-owned Sydney Water for limousine rides, airfares and luxury hotel stays.
It has also been alleged the Obeid family had a hidden stake in the company and that Mr Obeid lobbied NSW ministers and even former premier Kristina Keneally about its operations.
“My family does not own shares in Australian Water and we never have,’’ Moses Obeid told the commission.
“I can put that to you in Bill Clinton fashion: we did not have investor relations in that company.’’
There was a slight pause, before counsel assisting Geoffrey Watson SC asked pointedly: “Was Bill Clinton telling the truth?’’
Mr Watson has indicated he will accuse Moses Obeid of misleading the commission during an interview with ICAC investigators in 2013, when he claimed he knew “nothing, really’’ about Australian Water Holdings.
He also said his knowledge of a related company, Australian Water Pty Ltd, was limited to what he’d seen in the news.
“If it was untrue, Mr Watson, it was a white lie,’’ said Moses Obeid, whose father Eddie Obeid, a former Labor minister, has been found by a previous ICAC hearing to have engaged in corrupt conduct.
Yet Moses Obeid has admitted to signing a heads of agreement document in 2010 that Mr Watson has described as an agreement to buy $3 million worth of shares from former AWH chief Nick Di Girolamo.
Moses Obeid said he believed he was signing off on a simple loan to a family friend.
“I didn’t go through this document chapter and verse,’’ he said, adding that he was “preoccupied’’ with legal disputes when he signed.
“I might have been busting to go to the toilet or something,’’ he joked.
Mr Watson said if that was true, he had skipped a crucial heading.
“They’re three words, the longest of which is six letters,’’ Mr Watson said.
“When you read the words ‘Sale of Shares’, what did you think it meant?’’
The ICAC was earlier told that Mr Di Girolamo left Australian Water Holdings to become a lobbyist who was trying to get the NSW government to approve a coal mine on the NSW Central Coast.
The hearing heard that after leaving Australian Water Holdings, Mr Di Girolamo had lobbied for a Korean mining company Kores for a Central Coast mine Wallarah 2.
His personal assistant Stacey Pittendrigh said Mr Di Girolamo had met Chris Hartcher, the Liberal Minister for Mining, and had sought unsuccessfully to meet the Premier Mr Barry O’Farrell.
Approval for the mine was refused in the dying days of the previous Labor government but the company sought to reapply when the new Coalition government came to power in 2011.
Mr Hartcher and the then Leader of the Opposition were fiercely opposed to the mine in opposition, and were once pictured in T-shirts which read “water, not coal.”
But on election to power, Mr Hartcher proclaimed that mining approvals would be merit-based and handled by an arms-length process of an independent planning assessment committee. This committee is holding a hearing today into the proposal.
Mr Di Girolamo opened an office in the city with Tim Koelma, who resigned from Mr Hartcher’s office in April 2012 after the NSW Liberal Party wrote to the Election Funding Authority alleging a breach of funding laws.
Evidence has been presented to the ICAC that Australian Water Holdings was making regular payments to Eightbyfive, a company associated with Mr Koelma.
The ICAC is investigating if AWH paid Eightbyfive for media and public relations work in return for which Mr Hartcher favoured the interests of AWH.
The ICAC heard that a real estate agent Joseph Georges had lent Mr Di Girolamo $225,000, and that Mr Di Girolamo used the money to pay staff, at his new lobbying venture, including himself $40,000 a month.
Mr Georges said that he had also loaned $700,000 to Australian Water Holdings, with the promise of doubling his money after the mediation of a dispute between Australian Water Holdings and Sydney Water.
He had only recovered $100,000, plus $33,000 in interest.
Mr Hartcher resigned from Cabinet in December when the ICAC announced its inquiry.
Quote:Moses Obeid leaves the ICAC hearings in Sydney. Source: News Corp Australia
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/famous-bill-clinton-phrase-reca...