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22 Alternative L.J. 33 (1997)
Fishing for the Truth

handle is hein.journals/alterlj22 and id is 35 raw text is: FISHING
TRUTH
Max Wallace                                   The Federal Parliament's Joint Committee (PJC) on the National
Crime Authority (NCA) advertised nationally on 24 February 1997 for
submissions about its evaluation of the operations of the NCA.

Franz Kafka would not be
surprised at the lingering
saga of Mick Skrijel.

Press reports in February (for example, Sun-Herald, 23 February
1997) noted a secret report (the Harrison report) into the Australian
Federal Police (AFP) will be given to the Attorney-General shortly
which will apparently disclose corruption on the part of AFP officers
involved in drug law enforcement.
At the end of 1996 the Australian Law Reform Commission
(ALRC) issued its report 'Integrity: But Not by Trust Alone' dealing
with AFP and NCA complaints and disciplinary mechanisms. The
ALRC recommended the creation of a new agency to investigate and
manage complaints against the AFP and NCA.
The PJC is fully aware of a case that both makes a mockery of the
Australian justice system and stands as a case study of why the new
agency is needed.
Some background
The story began in 1978 and according to the then Senator Peter
Baume, in a speech to the senate on 21 May 1990, the tale was as
follows:
Mr Skrijel alleges, first, that he witnessed a fellow fisherman in South
Australia picking up drugs which had been dropped at sea off a passing
ship. Mr Skrijel saw them picked up and put on a fishing boat which then
landed at Southend, the port from which it was operating. He was informed
by his deckhand, who knew what was going on, that the package contained
heroin. We understand that there was a distribution network extending from
Southend to Adelaide. We understand that there was an organised drug
importing operation, operating from Southend in which drugs were picked
up by fishermen. The first allegation is that when Mr Skrijel made this
known to the appropriate authorities nothing was done about it.
The trauma the Skrijel family has experienced is on a par with the
Chamberlain case; the stonewalling they have experienced recalls the
similar fact experiences of the Milgates as outlined in Brian Milgate's
The Cochin Connection;' the injustice involved has echoes of Timothy
Anderson's experiences.
In his Senate speech, Senator Baume also referred to the then
Premier of South Australia, Mr Corcoran's 1980 direction that Skrijel's
allegations be investigated by South Australian police. One of the
investigating officers was Detective Sergeant Barry Moyse who was
subsequently gaoled in 1987 for his involvement in drug distribution
while he was in charge of the anti-drug phone-in Operation Noah in
1986. He was gaoled for 27 years.2
The investigating officers' report which apparently reflected infor-
mation provided by Moyse was summarised in a letter of 11 February
1981 from the next Premier of South Australia, David Tonkin, to the
then Prime Minister, Malcolm Fraser. In it, with what we can now see

VOL 22, NO. 1, FEBRUARY 9 1997

Max Wallace is a Tutor in Continuing Education, Austra-
lian National University.

Iffamm  __ - __ -  moom

el   ik  -  f,  33

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