Tuesday, March 07, 2023

Ex-NSW Liberal councillor is CEO of property developer raided in fraud investigation

ANALYSIS: TRUE.  Jonathan Turley: COVID lab leak is a scandal of media and government censorship


The cultural left has peaked Financial Times 


Ex-NSW Liberal councillor is CEO of property developer raided in fraud investigation

Jeff Egan was a member of the state executive of the NSW Liberal Party and now heads up Toplace, the subject of a parliamentary inquiry.


A former member of the state executive of the NSW Liberal Party is CEO of a property development company that is the subject of a major fraud investigation and an inquiry in the state’s Parliament.  

Jeff Egan is the CEO of Toplace, owned by colourful property developer Jean Nassif who is currently residing in rural Lebanon.

On Tuesday, the NSW Organised Crime Squad raided the company’s offices and three other venues as part of the fraud investigation. The Sydney Morning Heraldreported that police claim Nassif and his daughter Ashlyn secured approval for a $150 million credit application from Westpac by allegedly deceiving the bank with fraudulent pre-sales contracts.


Those new service sector jobs: “I’m a pastor living in rural Arkansas, and I make up to $3,000 a week with my side hustle using ChatGPT to make pitch decks for startups.”  And California man goes to Disney every day for eight straight years.



White House: No more TikTok on gov’t devices within 30 days AP


FISA failures: Biden DOJ’s push to renew powers puts spotlight on controversial actionsWashington Examiner. FISA.


Recent revelations from the robo-debt inquiry where ministers were inhibited from giving unwelcome advice (“Robert made false statements supporting robo-debt despite ‘personal misgivings’ , March 3) makes the civil service run by Sir Arnold Robinson, Sir Humphrey Appleby and later by Sir Bernard Woolley look the acme of public administration. In Yes Minister world, ministers under the control of their departments were referred to as being “house-trained”. Here it is the public servants who are house-trained. In Yes Minister world ministers could be fired, but not public servants, the cabinet secretary was a senior bureaucrat – the head of the civil service. Here, ministers can fire public servants if they tell them things they don’t want to hear, and the cabinet secretary is a politician controlling the ministers. I know where I’d rather live. Nicholas Triggs, Katoomba