Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Crikey
Crikey
Comment
Charlie Lewis

A short history of AFP scandals and who they’ve benefited

“The [Australian Federal Police] has acted in good faith and professionally at all times during some of the most complex investigations the AFP has ever undertaken,” a spokesperson insisted, as news broke that the federal police are abandoning two criminal investigations into alleged murders involving Ben Roberts-Smith due to potentially inadmissible evidence.

This is the second time an AFP investigation into Roberts-Smith has been compromised, after it was revealed in 2020 that former AFP chief Mick Keelty had been told secret details by serving police and dutifully passed them on to Roberts-Smith.

A statement to the effect of “actually you’re doing an extremely good job and policing is very hard” is not one any law enforcement agency wants to have to release, and comes during a particularly torrid period for the AFP.

Crikey looks back on some of the scandals that have afflicted the AFP in recent years, and the interesting consistency of who seems to benefit from its bungles.

Brittany Higgins

The role of the AFP in the trial of Bruce Lehrmann, who was alleged to have raped fellow former Liberal party staffer Brittany Higgins, which he denies, has been under constant scrutiny. A senior detective who investigated Higgins’ allegation admitted they made a mistake providing sensitive counselling notes to prosecutors and defence lawyers, and Australia’s national law enforcement anti-corruption watchdog is currently investigating alleged leaks to the media by the AFP about Higgins during Lehrmann’s now-abandoned trial.

Indeed, questions are only getting louder regarding how personal texts and recorded conversations picked up by AFP as evidence are now finding their way into the media.

Raids, raids, raids

In June 2019, the AFP raided the home of then-News Corp journalist Annika Smethurst over a story she had published a year earlier concerning a deeply embarrassing revelation for the government: that the Home Affairs and Defence heads at the time had developed a plan to empower the Australian Signals Directorate to spy on and target Australians within Australia. It was a busy week — the very next day the AFP raided the ABC’s Ultimo offices over a series of 2017 stories alleging unlawful killing by Australian troops in Afghanistan.  

This special treatment seemingly reserved for organisations who embarrassed the Liberal Party wasn’t just limited to the media. The Department of Home Affairs offices in Canberra were raided in August 2018 as part of an investigation into leaks against Peter Dutton, home affairs minister at the time, over his interventions to save from deportation a number of foreign au pairs linked to politically connected figures and Dutton’s old colleagues.

Abandoned investigations

There’s an interesting corollary — the investigations the AFP decided weren’t worth pursuing. In 2017, the AFP, at the behest of the Registered Organisations Commission (ROC) — itself acting on a referral from then-industrial relations minister Michaelia Cash — raided the Australian Workers’ Union offices, following up on decade-old allegations of vague financial impropriety that conveniently might have been damaging to then-opposition leader Bill Shorten.

That someone had helpfully ensured that the media would be there to capture it became the focus of an ongoing investigation. By January 2019, the AFP announced no charges would be laid over the matter, after Cash had pursued the cunning legal strategy of refusing to talk to them.

The next month, The Australian’s Simon Benson received a leaked classified ministerial briefing from ASIO and Border Force that warned the contentious medevac bill — then being debated in Parliament, and aimed at allowing refugees to transfer to mainland Australia on medical grounds — would “compromise Australia’s strong border protection regime”.

Benson and the Oz suffered no equivalent raids to Smethurst and the ABC, and by June, the investigation was quietly dropped, perhaps on account of the effort it would take to follow up on all 11 people who received the classified file.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.