Sunday 26 October 2014

Police System...Wood's Royal Commission created





Police System. 
The NSWPF police complaints handlinq model
Part 8A was written in compliance with the recommendations of the Wood Royal 
Commission. It is a comprehensive complaint handling model. All allegations
about police misconduct, from the most minor managerial matters (eg customer
service issues) to the most serious criminal allegations are registered on the
system. A 'complaint' is not defined in the Police Act 1990 and therefore
includes all written allegations of police misconduct. This will include reports
by managers and supervisors that would not generally be considered to constitute
a 'complaint', but are taken to meet the requirements under Part 8A because the
report 'alleges or indicates' conduct that meets the requirements of Part 8A.
A copy of the NSWPF Complaint Handling Guidelines is attached for the
information of the Committee. Also attached is a copy of the Commissioner's
s169A Guidelines, referred to in those guidelines.
Protections under Part 8A of the Police Act 1990 Part 8A protects the identity of complainants (s169A) and provides for criminal
sanctions where reprisal action . is taken (s206), in the same way that the
Protected Disclosures Act does.
However, there is no objective test to be met before the protections are invoked.
A mere allegation is enough. The protections are invoked as long as the
allegation meets the following criterion under Part 8A.


Roger Rogerson wrote....Hatton’s story was John and I had kidnapped Flannery and we forced him into a small aeroplane which I used to then fly and took him out to the sea where John opened the back door and threw him out.
Hence he crashed into the sea and was killed.
I immediately laughed my head off when I read this account in the paper but it was a perfect example of some of the ridiculous rumours that were being fed to Hatton at the time Had he bothered to check he would have found out that the small plane that I flew - a Piper P28-140 - had only one door, a side door, which was physically impossible to open when you were flying in the plane because of the wind pressure against it. But as usual, I just laughed as I knew it was bullcrap.
There were many more stories like this that Hatton started talking about in parliament.

Why did Roger Rogerson fly a plane?

Saturday 25 October 2014

Detective of Interest to Kings Cross

  • Mal Brammer APM - Australia | LinkedIn

    au.linkedin.com/pub/mal-brammer-apm/30/77/1b3
    Sydney, Australia - ‎Senior executive Consultant at Integrity Risk Solutions
    View Mal Brammer APM's (Australia) professional profile on LinkedIn. ... Commander Task Force #4 Drug Enforcement Agency, Patrol Commander Kings Cross  ...
  • Mal Brammer - Australia | LinkedIn

    au.linkedin.com/pub/mal-brammer/4/537/516
    Sydney, Australia - ‎Security and Investigations Consultant and Contractor
    View Mal Brammer's (Australia) professional profile on LinkedIn. ... Crime Authority; NSWPS DEA Task Force Commander and Patrol Commander, Kings Cross].
  • http://nswcnna.blogspot.com.au/2003/02/every-dog-has-his-day.html   Mr Brammer
  • A senior corruption investigator has resigned less than a fortnight after being criticised in a Police Integrity Commission report.http://nswcnna.blogspot.com.au/2003/02/every-dog-has-his-day.html
  • Head ANZ Teller Kings Cross 1984-86

    Head Teller

    ANZ
     –  (2 years)Kings Cross

    Ralph Stern - Australia | LinkedIn


    au.linkedin.com/pub/ralph-stern/2b/698/672
    Sydney, Australia - ‎Property Manager at Bickmore Hutt Realty
    I have worked in Banking with ANZ and BNZ;

    French-Corsican heroin connections to Mexico and JFK assassination

    Thomas Doherty reported on a French connection.

    What I know there were many in this area of the assassination of JFK and all seemed at one point of time to expose little pieces of the cryptic puzzle.

     Lucien Sarti worked for the French-Corsican heroin trafficker and convicted Nazi collaborator, Auguste Joseph Ricord. It was claimed by the journalist Stephen Rivele, that Antoine Guerini organized the assassination of John Kennedy. According to his contact, Christian David, the killing was carried out by Sarti and two other members of the Marseilles mob. It is believed Sarti fired from behind the wooden fence on the grassy knoll. The first shot was fired from behind and hit Kennedy in the back. The second shot was fired from behind, and hit John Connally. The third shot was fired from in front, and hit Kennedy in the head. The fourth shot was from behind and missed.

    Rivele's material was used in the 1988 television documentary, The Men Who Killed Kennedy. As well as Lucien Sarti he also named Sauveur Pironti and Roger Bocognani as being involved in the killing. However, Pironti and Bocognani both had alibis and Rivele was forced to withdraw the allegation.

    However, Sarti is a character who needs to be investigated. Lucien Sarti was officially killed by Mexican police in Mexico City on 27th April, 1972. His death was not reported in the United States at the time. However, it was in France's leading newspaper, Le Monde. It reported that the killing of Sarti was the result of a "close Mafia-police-Narcotics Bureau collaboration" in the United States to "shatter Corsican influence in the worldwide narcotics traffic, and create a virtual monopoly for the U.S.-Italian Mafia connection, whose key figure was Santo Trafficante."

    Peter Dale Scott perceptively points out in the introduction to The Politics of Heroin (Alfred W. McCoy): "If the Washington Post and the New York Times, the supposed exposer's of Watergate, had picked up on stories like the one in Le Monde, then the history of Watergate might have been altered... for the history of Nixon's involvement in Watergate is intertwined with that of his personal involvement in drug enforcement. Nixon's public declaration in June 1971 of his war on heroin promptly led his assemblage of White House Plumbers, Cubans, and even hit squads".

    Henrik Kruger argues in The Great Heroin Coup that the "remarkable shift from Marseilles (Corsican) to Southeast Asian and Mexican (Mafia) heroin in the United States... was a deliberate move to reconstruct and redirect the heroin trade... not to eliminate it."

    Murder Maria Hisshon Unsolved murder


    1975 we had the disappearance of Juanita Nielsen 4 July. 

    Then we had 24th December 1975 25 year old Melbourne dress designer and suspected of being a drug courier Maria Hisshion was murdered.  Her body was weighed down with a 7kg anchor was found in Sydney Harbour on 6th January.

    Maria Hisshon last known movements was dinner with her mother.  She was identified through her jewellery when the body surfaced off North Head two weeks later.  Maria Hisshon had been shot in the head with a .32 bullet and tied to the anchor.   Heroin they say was the link?  Some said she wanted out.  That’s what happens they can’t get out from the mob alive.  This was blamed with the connections to Double Bay Mob?  I linked Juanita Nielsen’s murder to the Double Bay mob just a co-incidence.  Police claimed allegedly Barry Pyne borrowed a boat on the night of her disappearance.  He was to have left Australia.  At the time he refused to answer the Police questions.

    It was reported in the Sydney Morning Herald on 14 February 2007 “Brothel Black Market Worth $500 million”.
    The Banker?  Diamond Jim Shepherd had the heroin in the garbage bins held in a room of his apartment.  He was known as the connection with the heroin and Mr Asia syndicate.  Diamond Jim connected with Terence Clark over the heroin.

    Diamond Jim Shepherd was noted to having his trusty .32 calibre automatic pistol stashed in the city.  Same size bullet which Maria Hisshoin received?
    http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/crime/3727747/An-interview-with-Diamond-Jim-Shepherd

    Between 1974 and 1979 Terrence Clark, Johnstone and their heroin supplier Chinese Jack Choo had built up a drug empire that brought in tens of millions of dollars and stretched across Asia, Australia, New Zealand and Britain.  This was what Juanita was investigating in part I felt for the timing of 1975. 

    Interesting Maria Hisshion murder "Diamond Jim" Shepherd blamed Terrence Clark as doing the murder.
    http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/tv/the-real-underbelly-james-shepherds-world-of-psychos-dope-and-shallow-graves/story-e6frfmyi-1225869823847  This links to Robert Trimbole.


    Monday 20 October 2014

    Gough Whitlam dies 21 October 2014 report by Lenore Taylor The Guardian.com

    Gough Whitlam I thought he would hang on to see the corruption we were unmasking in Kings Cross.  Gough hit the Nugan-Hand Bank, it is the year 1975 when Juanita Nielsen went missing in Kings Cross with the secret payments I right about to the Governor General John Kerr.

    We have seen something, now a person who may know more has died.  Rest in Peace Gough Whitlam


    Gough Whitlam, who was prime minister for just three years but became a defining political figure of modern Australia, has died aged 98.
    The election of his government on 2 December 1972, with the famous “It’s time” election campaign, ended 23 years of conservative rule and its dismissal by the governor general Sir John Kerr on 11 December 1975 remains one of the most controversial events in Australian political history.
    But in just three years the Whitlam government instituted sweeping changes that transformed Australian society as the baby boomer generation came of age.
    In a rapid program of reform it called “the program”, the Whitlam government created Australia’s national health insurance scheme, Medibank; abolished university fees; introduced state aid to independent schools and needs-based school funding; returned traditional lands in the Northern Territory to the Gurindji people; drafted (although did not enact) the first commonwealth lands right act; established diplomatic relations with China, withdrew the remaining Australian troops from Vietnam; introduced no-fault divorce laws; passed the Racial Discrimination Act; blocked moves to allow oil drilling on the Great Barrier Reef; introduced environmental protection legislation; and removed God Save the Queen as the national anthem.
    The former Rudd government minister Lindsay Tanner has written: “Whitlam and his government changed the way we think about ourselves. The curse of sleepy mediocrity and colonial dependency, so mercilessly flayed in 1964 by Donald Horne in The Lucky Country, was cast aside.”
    But the Whitlam government’s economic record is more controversial. It came to power at the time of the first oil shock and failed to contain wages inflation. In 1975 it was embroiled in what became known as the “loans affair” when the minister for minerals and energy, Rex Connor, sought to borrow money for resource projects, outside normal treasurer processes, from Arab financiers using a middleman called Tirath Khemlani. No money was borrowed but the scandal deeply damaged the government.
    Whitlam won a double dissolution election in 1974, with a reduced majority. But from October to November 1975 the parliament was deadlocked, with the opposition using its numbers in the Senate to refuse to pass the budget. When Whitlam visited Kerr to call for a half Senate election, Kerr instead withdrew his commission as prime minister and replaced him with the Liberal leader Malcolm Fraser.
    Whitlam lost the election to Fraser after the national upheaval of the dismissal. He stood down as Labor leader and retired from politics in 1978.
    A towering figure at 1.94m, with a deep resonant voice and an eloquent turn of phrase, Whitlam inspired a generation of progressive politicians and was widely referred to by just his first name. His is remembered for some of the most famous quotes in Australian politics, including while standing on the steps of the old parliament house after news of his dismissal. He said: “Well may we say ‘God save the Queen’ because nothing will save the governor general.”
    He was a graduate of Knox Grammar and Canberra Grammar and joined the airforce after university, before studying law and being admitted to the bar. He married Margaret Dovey in 1942; they had four children.
    He won the western Sydney seat of Werriwa in 1952 and was elected leader of the Labor party in 1967, succeeding Arthur Calwell.
    After leaving politics he worked as Australia’s ambassador to Unesco, accepted several visiting professorships and, along with Margaret, received life membership of the Labor party in 2007.
    Margaret died in 2012. Whitlam, by then using a wheelchair, had moved into an aged-care facility in 2010. He described her as “the love of my life”.
    Prime minister for just three years, he brought in sweeping changes that transformed Australia and inspired a generation of progressive politicians
    THEGUARDIAN.COM|BY LENORE TAYLOR