Corrupt
Police Protected Pedophile Judge
NSW Special Branch disbanded SYDNEY -- For 49 years the NSW Police Special Branch has been
monitoring the activities of left activists in NSW. After the NSW Royal
Commission into Police Corruption heard evidence in February of Special Branch's
involvement in covering up the paedophilic activities of Judge David Yeldham,
the branch was officially disbanded on March 12.
By Francesca Davidson
Special Branch has a squalid history involving fabrication of evidence, false
arrest, perjury by its members and implication in at least two frame-ups,
including the infamous Ananda Marga case of 1978-1985.
Special branches were set up as a supplement to the Australian Security and
Intelligence Organization in the early 1940s amidst anticommunist hysteria and
the Cold War. Their role was to provide security for politicians and to collect
"dirt files'' on political activists.
Tim Anderson was one of Special Branch's victims, wrongfully imprisoned in
both the Ananda Marga frame-up and for the 1978 Hilton bombing. With groups such
as Justice Action, he has campaigned for the abolition of Special Branch for
years.
Anderson told
Green Left Weekly,
"The last time an outsider had a
chance to look at the files, in 1978, they found that there were at least 50,000
inactive files, 20,000 active and around 8000 dossiers. They contain mostly
irrelevant gossip and some political information.''
Anderson points out that Special Branch used its access to privileged
information in a selective and manipulative fashion "to protect a very
conservative and pro-police judge'' such as Yeldham, while it monitored,
arrested and framed "people such as myself who are critical of police
operations''.
Special Branch focused on collecting information on particular trade union,
community and migrant groups. "I've seen demonstrations where Special Branch
would take a placard out of someone's hands and trample it into the ground with
venom. These people were vetted for their political ideas'', says Anderson.
Anderson comments that the Special Branch was notably inactive in the 1980s
when anti-apartheid activists' lives were being threatened by right-wing groups
like National Action. Only when there was a murder in the National Action office
did it begin making arrests, "because many of these extreme right-wingers were
police informers''.
Special Branch always had access to people in positions of power, states
Anderson, "hanging out at police functions, looking out for police hierarchy,
hanging out with politicians and providing security for judges''.
NSW is the last state to have a special security force.
According to
Anderson, after the South Australian Special Branch was abolished in 1978 for
misuse of information, NSW Labor Premier Neville Wran announced an inquiry into
NSW Special Branch. When the Hilton bombing occurred in February 1978, Wran
called off the inquiry. Anderson said, "Wran and the newspapers at the time
defended the Special Branch, saying 'Stay away form our political police because
they're protecting us from world terrorism'.''
What should happen to the existing files remains a debate.
While Anderson
agrees there is a case for handing over particular files, like Yeldham's, to the
Police Integrity Commission, he believes the "dirt files'' should be made
available to the people concerned and then destroyed.
"It's in the spirit of the freedom of information legislation, which
incidentally didn't exist when Special Branch was created, that individuals
should be able to check personal information that the government has on them to
see if it's rubbish'', he says. "Unless the files relate to some real criminal
investigation, they should be destroyed.''
Special
Branch Spied on 60,000
by TRACY SUTHERLAND
The Australian
(June 23 1998)
THE disbanded NSW
Police Special Branch had nearly 60,000 secret index cards on
organizations
The Police
Integrity Commission report tabled yesterday found Special Branch was
"virtually unaccountable" and had an "unacceptable
overlap" between its functions of gathering information on VIPs and
protecting them.
The examination of
a cabinet in the Special Branch records room revealed firearms, weapons and
detonators - some of which had been there for eight years and which the
group's commander admitted to
having no knowledge about.
In total, the
commission examined 58,150 index cards contained in the records room: 26,800
related to individuals nearly 7000 focused on "terrorists'', with the
remainder including organizations, publications and religious groups.
Letters to
newspaper editors, attending demonstrations and parking cars near meetings,
all resulted in reports. The retention of "dirt files" on MPs,
significantly increased the risk of "blackmail or extortion" through
leaks, the report found.
Between 1939 and
1997, Special Branch also established an additional 10,324 in-depth files
however, all but 1079 had been destroyed & emdash; the report found their
destruction might have been illegal. [my emphasis: this means the truth
about the Hilton Bombing may never be know and shows they had a lot to hide.
The commission
noted that the NSW police royal commission found that Special Branch tried to
smother potentially embarrassing information relating to the late former
Justice David Yeldham's sexual behavior in public toilets.
While it found no
evidence of "similar incidents of protection of public officials",
the report found the Yeldham example raised "the possibility that other
incidents involving public figures could have occurred and been smoothed over
by Special Branch, and any records destroyed".
However, the
commission cautioned that the public release of some material could inflame
issues and expose individuals.
Labeling
Special
Branch a "law unto itself", Police Minister Paul Whelan vowed
yesterday to ensure as many people as possible had access to their files.
"The B-grade
gunshoe, cloak-and-dagger days of the old Police Service are gone," Mr
Whelan said. He said the Government would adopt the recommendations concerning
the creation of a new agency and on the use of the existing files. Special
Branch was disbanded in March, 1997 and its records seized.
Original
Article.
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