David Bartlett
On July
17, 2002,
two detectives from the former drug squad were accused in court of stealing
about $10,000 cash during a raid on an alleged drug trafficker.
Sen-Det David Bartlett and
Sen-Det Victor Anastasiadis both denied the allegation, but admitted they were
being investigated by ESD.
Nadim Ahmad, 63, who is charged
with offences involving ecstasy, cocaine and LSD, has accused the drug squad of
stealing the money.
During a preliminary hearing, Mr
Ahmad's counsel, Dr Terry Sullivan, quizzed both Sen-Det Bartlett and Sen-Det Anastasiadis
over the allegedly missing money.
"Did you take it?" Dr
Sullivan asked Sen-Det Bartlett.
"Most definitely not,"
he replied.
"They (the other officers)
didn't give you a cut of it?"
"I beg your pardon."
"Let me finish my
question."
"I am a bit offended by your
question."
Earlier, Dr Sullivan asked
Sen-Det Anastasiadis what procedures were in place to stop police officers
stealing money.
"The honesty of the members
themselves," he replied.
Both officers, who are serving
members in the major drug investigation division, told the court they were aware
the ESD was investigating them.
Mr Ahmad, of Besant St,
Moorabbin, was expected to apply for bail the following day (July 18).
Two other detectives, Stephen
Paton and Malcolm
Rosenes, previously with the drug squad were awaiting hearings pertaining to
drug trafficking.
On June 21, 2004, ABC Radio's PM program reported
that the fall-out from Victoria's police corruption scandal was
spreading.
Nick McKenzie told listeners that allegations in
court suggested that corruption in the former drug squad may have involved
officers who were still serving in the force.
The allegations centred on the relationship between the detectives, a criminal
turned police informer, and the late Lewis Moran.
The informer claimed that drug squad head, Det Snr Sgt Wayne
Strawhorn, the detectives' boss, illegally pocketed up to half
a million dollars.
But in court, the informer also claimed that the other detectives forced
him to cover up the corrupt dealings that he'd had with Strawhorn.
That's a claim those detectives strenuously denied.
The theory that corrupt police rarely act alone
was being tested in the Melbourne Magistrates Court, in the committal of
two men who were allegedly involved in a drug syndicate headed by Lewis Moran.
In 2001, the syndicate was being investigated by Strawhorn.
But defence barrister, Chris Dane QC, had also subjected
four other police officers who worked under Strawhorn
to intense scrutiny
about their own conduct.
Much of the cross-examination related to statements made by a criminal
informer, who was passing on chemicals to Lewis Moran, while being monitored
by the drug squad.
A statement from the informer read that on one occasion, the informer
received money from Lewis Moran that was given to Senior Sergeant Wayne Strawhorn.
STATEMENT EXCERPT: I was paid $10,000 cash by Lewis Moran in return for the
red phosphorus. The money I received on this day was paid to the drug squad.
I therefore believe the money I received on that day was paid to Wayne Strawhorn.
Such a transaction would not have been unusual had it been
properly logged by the drug squad.
But, as evidence from the informer alleged, at least some of the $10,000 he
gave Strawhorn was pocketed illegally, part of a total of up to half a
million dollars the informer said Strawhorn made on the side.
When it came to disclosing that transaction in a statement, the informer told
the Court three still serving officers working under Strawhorn
– Detectives
Martin Allison, Victor Anastasiadis and David Bartlett forced him to lie.
The informer also claimed other statements he'd signed for the drug squad were
false, and that he was pressured to sign such statement.
STATEMENT EXCERPT: …Partly from the fact that Bartlett and
Anastasiadis were
on
Strawhorn's staff, I felt that I didn't have any choice in the
circumstances I found myself in.
Believe it or not, I signed it because I was scared.
Asked by the defence barrister to explain his fear, the
informant told the Court…
" It was gun-in-your-face scared."
CHRIS DANE: Well he didn't actually raise a gun to your face?
INFORMANT: No, Marty Allison didn't do that. I had that happen on a couple of
occasions from Wayne
Strawhorn.
They're all the same gang as far as I'm concerned. Any arguments that I had
with Marty or Bartlett or Firth or Ranna (phonetic), they'd be straight on the
phone to Strawhorn.
They'd pass their phone to me and
Strawhorn would give me a mouthful.
CHRIS DANE: So you had no choice but to commit perjury under the direction of
these officers?
INFORMANT: That's correct.
The detectives named all denied the claims, including Senior
Sergeant Martin Allison.
He told the Court the informer simply had no memory
of the $10,000 transaction at the time he was asked to make his statement.
But Detective Allison was also implicated in other untoward behaviour.
The Court heard he allegedly approved and encouraged contact between the
informer and Senior Sergeant
Strawhorn, before
Strawhorn was charged, but at a
time at which any such contact had been banned.
A taped conversation between Allison and the informer was read out in court.....
INFORMANT: Why does he keep ringing me?
MARTIN ALLISON: 'Cause I asked him to.
INFORMANT: Why, he's not even in the drug squad.
MARTIN ALLISON: Yeah, I know that. Why? The investigation's still running, and
I find it to my advantage because you respond better to him.
Under cross-examination the informer also said detectives
threatened to expose his activities to the Moran family if he didn't
cooperate.
He told the Court detectives Allison and another officer bumped into him while
he was with Lewis Moran, an incident he said, the police found funny.
INFORMANT: It was always a funny topic of conversation for them, for the fact
that I might die and they could just charge Lewis with murder.
NICK MCKENZIE: Another focus of the defence barrister during the committal was
the movement of 35 boxes of Logicin, from the drug squad to Lewis
Moran.
Logicin contains the chemical, pseudoephedrine – a crucial component in the
manufacture of speed.
Detectives David Bartlett and Paul Firth picked up the Logicin from the
Central Property Management Unit of the Victoria Police before giving them to
the informer.
But the Court heard that two detectives mistakenly picked up 41 boxes instead
of 35.
The drug squad detectives maintained 35 boxes were passed on to Lewis
Moran,
and the excess boxes were returned to the Management Unit.
However, the Court was told notes made at the unit showed eight boxes of
Logicin instead of the required six, were returned.
That is, two extra boxes
had been returned.
Under intense cross-examination, Bartlett could not explain
where the extra two boxes had come from, putting it down to an accounting
error.
But, defence barrister Chris Dane QC told the Court the additional boxes
presented the drug squad with the capacity to manufacture amphetamine.
CHRIS DANE: Who are you protecting?
DAVID BARTLETT: Nobody.
CHRIS DANE: You are protecting somebody who has seized a number of boxes.
DAVID BARTLETT: That is not true.
CHRIS DANE: The lot of you were doing it on the side and Wayne
Strawhorn will
have to wear it for the rest of you.
DAVID BARTLETT: That is not true.
Three of the detectives accused of corruption in court
were
still serving, one in the new drug squad. The fourth officer accused in court,
Paul Firth, had been suspended.
On the witness stand, the police repeatedly rejected the informer's claims.
But, a lawyer for internal investigators told the Court there may be issues
raised during the hearing that touch on ongoing investigations.