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Monday, October 10, 2016

John Hatton AO: Morally bankrupt banks must be investigated

Morally bankrupt banks must be investigated

The similarity with the call for a royal commission into banks and the one into the NSW Police Force in 1995 could not be more striking. That inquiry exposed endemic corruption. A total of 380 officers left the force and a number were convicted. The then police commissioner, Tony Lauer, however, retired on a full pension.
Prior to the royal commission a NSW parliamentary committee was established to examine the relationship between Lauer and police minister Ted Pickering. As an independent MP committee member, I witnessed lying, prevarication and cover-up.
The commission forced massive reform of culture, practice and structure. The subpoena of documents, witnesses, forensic examination, whistleblowers and expert cross examination revealed what the chief investigator Nigel Hadgkiss called the biggest exposé of corruption in any police force in the world.
Now, 21 years on, the focus is on the unconscionable actions of banks. As with police corruptions and the sexual abuse of children, the victims' stories must be told, investigated and acted upon.
The bankers in charge massaged the recent parliamentary committee hearings. Without a royal commission, they remain in control of the information, evidence, process and the witnesses.
John Hatton (former independent member for the South Coast) Nowra
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