Jozef Imrich, name worthy of Kafka, has his finger on the pulse of any irony of interest and shares his findings to keep you in-the-know with the savviest trend setters and infomaniacs.
''I want to stay as close to the edge as I can without going over. Out on the edge you see all kinds of things you can't see from the center.''
-Kurt Vonnegut
Carlton president Luke Sayers has been cleared by his old firm over claims that he had given a travel company a special deal with PwC.
The top tier consultancy firm investigated claims made by a whistleblower in February.
But on Friday, PwC wrote to Mr Sayers saying he was in the clear.
The company declined to comment but it was understood that the whistleblower’s complaint was taken seriously.
However, PwC did not find there was evidence that Mr Sayers had done anything wrong.
While Mr Sayers was running PwC, he was accused of helping Hello World get the firm’s lucrative travel account.
It was alleged that as a result of that deal he was given access to senior politicians, but PwC dismissed those claims.
Mr Sayers ran PwC for almost a decade and has been grilled in a Senate inquiry over what he knew about the firm selling secret government advice for profit.
PwC had to sell its government consulting arm, worth up to $1 billion, for $1 after those claims were made public.
Jetsetting jewellery dealer Alex Mendieta-Blanco was famous for having Delta Goodrem at his party. But he was also convicted of a scam worth up to $1bn. This is how his empire worked.
All day long, couriers weighed down with backpacks full of gold caught the lift up to playboy jewellery dealer Alex Mendieta-Blanco’s office on the 11th floor and returned to ground level lighter – and richer.
The task, a simple part of a complex web involving high-speed gold dealing, stolen jewellery and vast claims for tax refunds, was lucrative.
Runners were paid $500 a kilo – a fraction of the $77,000 a kilo the precious metal is worth but enough to make some extremely wealthy.
“It was like Pulp Fiction,” one person who regularly sold gold at the nondescript office building in the Melbourne CBD said.
“I would put up to 40 kilos of gold in a backpack, and then walk 15 metres and sell it again.”
Colombian-born Mendieta-Blanco made enough money from slinging gold to enjoy a luxurious lifestyle full of fast cars, designer brands and first-class travel.
At his peak, before he was handed four months jail for receiving stolen goods in 2020, the Melbourne-based businessman even hired pop star Delta Goodrem to play at his birthday party.
While Mendieta-Blanco pleaded guilty to receiving $29,000 worth of stolen gold jewellery, the true scale of his business empire, which had close links with a large-scale GST scam, was far larger.
Documents obtained by the Herald Sun show that in 2016 Mendieta-Blanco’s company Sell Your Gold, which traded as Gold Buyers Melbourne, turned over $64.4m worth of gold – more than twice the $25.7m it turned over the previous year.