Wednesday, July 02, 2025

Uncovered: How UK police are hiding their Palantir work

 Uncovered: How UK police are hiding their Palantir work Democracy for Sale


"If it isn't written down, it did not happen."

The first rule in Trump’s Washington: Don’t write anything down

A new culture of secrecy in government is taking root – among career staffers and new political appointees alike.


UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s office has told civil servants not to answer questions in public or speak to the media.

AUDIO: ATO reveals 90 millionaires paid no tax in 2022-23



Cow Most Sacred

Why military spending remains untouchable. 


How we use machine learning to find passports and unlock one key to offshore secrecy

Passports are often a critical part of the jigsaw for investigative reporters digging into offshore companies, so ICIJ partnered with artificial intelligence experts to build a detection tool.

Tuesday, July 01, 2025

Scientists find Earth’s mantle beating like a heart, slowly tearing Africa apart


Mexican chefs were sold the Australian dream by Merivale. It was all ‘smoke screens and make-believe’

For skilled Mexican chefs seeking a better life, Merivale was the perfect sell. The reality was something else entirely.

Mexican chefs


Khamenei’s Speech to Iran Karl Sanchez


Scientists find Earth’s mantle beating like a heart, slowly tearing Africa apart

Researchers found that the mantle beneath the Afar region “pulses like a heartbeat,” driving tectonic rifting.



China uses dissidents-turned-spies to infiltrate overseas activist groups, as authorities flounder

Last week in Canada, world leaders jointly condemned transnational repression as a threat to sovereignty. But at home, many are unprepared to deal with China’s far-reaching intimidation of its dissident diaspora, ICIJ’s China Targets investigation has found.


0Noah Kalina on the observer’s paradox: “I’ve come to the unfortunate realization that I can’t experience anything anymore without thinking about how I’ll document it.”


Miracles happen

LAs Nils Pratley (not my favourite financial commentator) says in The Guardian this morning:

It's a miracle. Babcock International, the defence contractor with a specialism in kitting out the UK's nuclear submarines, has emerged from the depths. After about half a decade in which the story was mostly about cost overruns, acquisition indigestion, accounting woes, pension deficits and too much debt, Babcock is suddenly back in the FTSE 100 index and is a hot stock. The share price has more than doubled this year.

Billionaires’ wealth surged $6.5tn over past decade, Oxfam reports

Losing the Lambo a bigger threat than jail: Crims feel financial sting 

Shane Wright  June 29, 2025
The nation’s criminals are growing more worried about losing their ill-gotten gains than ending up in jail, as the taskforce charged with tracking down illegally obtained assets reveals it has now seized more than $1.2 billion worth of property, Lamborghinis and luxury handbags.

 

Antoinette Lattouf’s win is a wake-up call for workplace intersectionality


Billionaires’ wealth surged $6.5tn over past decade, Oxfam reports The Guardian


Bombogenesis’ triggers severe weather warning for Sydney, NSW


From Maroubra French school and Embassy to cafes at Hight of Killarney: Petit Paris: How a sleepy Sydney suburb became the French capital of Australia

Killarney Heights might be a sleepy suburb in Sydney's Northern Beaches, but for much of Australia's French community, it is their chosen home.


Using AI Right Now: A Quick Guide Which AIs to use, and how to use them


Carl von Clausewitz and the Clausewitzian Viewpoint of Warfare: A Theoretical Approach

An overview of Clausewitz’s thinking winds up showing how the US has ignored it, with the bad results Clausewitz predicted.


US soldiers drop live grenades from drone in Germany, say tactic will soon be part of normal training Stars and Stripes


UK launched huge operation to find suspected Russian double agent in MI6 The Guardian. “Exclusive: Operation Wedlock lasted up to 20 years and took MI5 teams across world amid panic about ‘another Philby’”


Monday, June 30, 2025

Senior public servant abused position to get family member APS job: NACC

 Senior public servant abused position to get family member APS job: NACC

By Brittney Levinson  

June 30 2025 

A former senior public servant abused her position in Home Affairs to parachute a family member into a job, saying she would "talk [him] through the lie" during the recruitment process.

The National Anti-Corruption Commission found a former senior executive service officer engaged in corrupt conduct on multiple occasions, including by praising the family member to colleagues, creating the job request and approving it herself and forging a witness signature.

The investigation centred on the official's transfer of her sister's fiance to Home Affairs, which began in 2023.
The NACC found the official's involvement in the job transfer included promoting her sister's fiance as a candidate for a position in Home Affairs and praising him to colleagues.
The official was also found to have created the job requisition - a formal request that hiring managers fill out to create a new position or to fill a vacancy - and approved it herself.
She forged a witness signature in order to fast-track the onboarding process, the investigation found.
During the process, she deliberately concealed the family relationship from others, the NACC found.
In a separate employment process, the official was also found to have provided interview questions to her sister in advance.

'We'll talk [him] through the lie'

Several email and WhatsApp exchanges between the family members were detailed in the NACC's investigation report.
In late 2022, the senior public servant, who was given the pseudonym Joanne Simeson in the report, attempted to refer her sister's fiancé, given the pseudonym Mark Elbert, for an FOI position in Home Affairs.
Ms Simeson asked her sister to send through Mr Elbert's updated CV so she could pass it on to the relevant branch head.
In a text message, Ms Simeson told her sister the assistant secretary was keen to meet Mr Elbert and that "we'll talk [Mr Elbert] through the lie".
The sister responded that Mr Elbert was "so bad at lying he's too honest", to which Ms Simeson replied, " ... well he's gonna have to do better or I'll get in trouble".
When asked by the NACC what she meant by getting in trouble, Ms Simeson said it was in relation to her decision not to disclose her relationship to Mr Elbert.
She said she believed if the connection was known, Mr Elbert would be shown patronage.
Mr Elbert did not end up considering the FOI role.

'He cannot say our surname'

In early 2023, Ms Simeson suggested a different role to Mr Elbert, this time in the global initiatives branch of Home Affairs.
Ms Simeson emailed a director within the branch, suggesting they arrange a meeting with Mr Elbert about the role.
The director asked how Ms Simeson knew Mr Elbert, to which she said he was a "friend of a friend".
Later, Ms Simeson wrote to her sister, updating her on the process.
"I told them I knew [him] through a friend. Technically not not true he just needs to play along! Also I'm the boss so they will do whatever I say," Ms Simeson wrote.
Ms Simeson told the NACC the above was a "joke between two sisters".
In another message to her sister, Ms Simeson wrote:
"He won't say you're my sister ... Okay so make sure [he] sells his ability to write briefs. Pick up subjects quickly. Good team member. Loves international work. Able to work across time zones. You are not my sister. He cannot say our surname. Or where you work."
Ms Simeson told the NACC she wanted Mr Elbert to be assessed on his own merits.
Mr Elbert accepted the role and in June 2023 attended to Home Affairs office to collect his laptop.
Ms Simeson wrote to her sister in all capitals, saying: "HAHAHAHAHA I JUST WENT TO HUG HIM THANK GOD HE STUCK HIS HAND OUT [FIRST]".
The sister replied, "GAHAHAHAH ... What a good boy he's such a good boy."

Public servant resigns from APS

Releasing its findings from the investigation, known as Operation Kingscliff, the commission deemed the conduct as serious because of the seniority of the public official, the deception involved and the significant benefits of securing a role in the public service.
It found the conduct was systemic because the behaviours were repeated and because nepotism, cronyism and undeclared conflicts were areas of concern within the APS.
The NACC confirmed the senior official has resigned from the APS. 
"Had she not done so, the commission would have recommended that her employment be terminated," it said in a statement.
The commission found Mark Elbert and Ms Simeson's sister did not engage in corrupt conduct.
It found while Mr Elbert did not volunteer information about his relationship to Ms Simeson, there was no evidence that he lied about it.
National Anti-Corruption commissioner Paul Brereton said the commission had received many referrals about recruitment and promotion in the Australian Public Service.
Nepotism and cronyism were among the most frequently observed corrupt behaviours, according to the most recent public service census.
National Anti-Corruption commissioner Paul Brereton. Pictures by Karleen Minney, Jamlia Toderas
National Anti-Corruption commissioner Paul Brereton. Pictures by Karleen Minney, Jamlia Toderas
Mr Brereton said the investigation illustrated the systemic risks in APS recruitment. 
"It reinforces the need for strong corruption prevention measures - including mandatory conflict of interest disclosures in all recruitment processes, and prevention of improper disclosures of official information," he said.
Brittney Levinson

Brittney Levinson

Politics and public service reporter
Brittney is part of the federal political bureau, covering politics, the public service and economics. Brittney joined The Canberra Times in 2021 and was previously the property reporter. Got a news tip? Get in touch: brittney.levinson@canberratimes.com.

The New York Times and BBC surge in Australian newsroom rankings

 


Aussies recently looked overseas for their news instead of local outlets, new rankings show