Is Gladys running, or is she being pushed by AG Speakman SC, who seems to have lost interest in being AG but has taken on role of judge and jury in domestic violence matters -Clearly campaigning for the female vote,but must deal with Zhu Minshen and other baggage

by Ganesh Sahathevan


Troy Grant MP
Premier in waiting Mark Speakman SC  comes with 
baggage that he has refused to explain



The Premier Gladys Berejiklian, and her Minister for Transport Andrew Constance have this week done the unthinkable and admitted to a AUD 3 BILLION blow-out in the cost of the Merto project.

This is in addition to the AUD 1 Billion over-spend on the light rail project which is not meeting expectations.




All this must excite the premier in waiting, the AG Mark Speakman, who has this morning declared that Hannah Clarke’s death was “murder, plain and simple” despite no one being charged, let alone found guilty of her death. Queensland Police investigations appear to be ongoing (unless concluded but not made public).


The AG is the First Law Officer, so regardless of public sentiment he is meant to state and uphold the law.Instead he has told the Sunday Telegraph's Miranda Wood:

Hannah Clarke’s death was “murder, plain and simple” and must not be dismissed as just another act of domestic violence, NSW’s Prevention for Domestic Violence Minister said.

“We need to call it for what it is,” Mark Speakman said in the wake of the killings of Ms Clarke, 31, and her three children in Brisbane this week.
(Miranda Wood, The Sunday TelegraphFebruary 23, 2020 12:00am)


Speakman is a senior member of the NSW Bar, having practiced at the Bar for many years before he was appointed Attorney General NSW. He is a silk, or Senior Counsel, as they are called in NSW. 
He would know better than most what should or should not be said, but it appears that he cares less for all that preferring instead to promote himself in his new portfolio, as NSW’s Prevention for Domestic Violence Minister. 

He is clearly trying to win over women voters, and that kind of preparation must mean that he sees himself soon becoming the premier. The question is: s Glady's cutting her loses and running, or is she being pushed? Meanwhile, how will Speakman manage his Zhu Minshen baggage?
END


NSW Libs received donations of $44,275 from TOP Education Group just before after TOP was granted the "first & only" license issued a private company to award law degrees: AG Speakman and his LPAB refuse to disclose all details in the LPAB Annual Reports


by Ganesh Sahathevan


Troy Grant MP

Mark Speakman

As First Law Officer of the state, Mark oversees 
the administration of almost 200 Acts of Parliament, 
the most of any minister in the NSW Government. 


The Legal Profession Admission Board is a  statutory body chaired by the Chief Justice of New South Wales.Its annual report is tabled in the NSW Parliament by the Attorney General NSW , currently Mark Speakman SC,for approval.

The LPAB's duties include granting licenses for the award of  Bachelor of Laws (LLB) degrees to interested parties ,which until recently were all public universities. In 2015 the LPAB issued a license to grant LLBs to TOP Education Group Ltd, which proudly proclaims the fact that it is the "first and only" private company to have been granted such a license. 

The AG NSW is also the Liberal Member for Cronulla and he,as well as the LPAB , have been queried about the following issues discovered in the LPAB's 2015 Annual Report which relate to the TOP Group application. 

The  LPAB states in its 2015 Annual Report:

In addition, the LPAB received an application for accreditation of a new law degree to be offered by a non-university provider, TOP Education Institute (LLB).
The LPAB considered the advice of its Accreditation Sub-Committee and Legal Qualifications Committee, and also consulted with other admitting authorities through the Law Admissions Consultative Committee (LACC),  before deciding to accredit the new degree with effect from 1 January 2015.
http://www.lpab.justice.nsw.gov.au/Documents/Annual%20Report%202014-15.



With regards the above the LPAB and the  AG have  been asked why in considering the TOP application they  appear not to have considered   TOP  Group's CEO and controlling shareholder Minshen Zhu's  business failures which were a matter of public record in 2015 ,and collated in its 2018 Prospectus issued in connection with the Initial Public Offering (IPO) of its stock and listing on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. Zhu's business failures are listed on page 160 and 167 of the IPO Prospectus. They are failures in small businesses which in turn raise questions about his capacity to fund a much larger venture like TOP.

The LPAB and AG were  also queried about the exclusion from the 2015 Annual Report of material that had been disclosed in the 2012 Annual Report where it is stated  that LPAB member  Dr Gordon Elkington was assigned to TEQSA to assist with the TOP  application for the relevant licenses from TEQSA. 

The exclusion from the 2015 annual report of the information disclosed in the 2012 annual report gives the impression that the LPAB's assessment of the TOP application in 2015 was a dealing with a party with which it had no prior relationship, when in fact it had.

All of the above would be of  concern to both students and investors given the dramatic collapse in TOP's share price, The AG and the LPAB have confirmed in writing that they are not interested in answering any of the questions above.


It has since been discovered that in the 4 months or so prior to the LPAB granting TOP  the license to issue law degrees, TOP made donations worth AUD 44 275 to the Liberal Party NSW Branch.










While  Mr Speakman is AG and the most senior law officer in the state, he is first and foremost a politician.He would not be AG had he not been elected.

It was to his party that the above donations have been made,and his refusal to answer the questions above does raise the perception that something is not quite right. 

His Department Of Justice has in the past shown that the Minister ,his Department Of Justice,and the LPAB can and do work together in the interest of their Minister and vice versa.This has included a recent non-disclosure of complaints against the LPAB and the College Of Law in the 2018 Annual Report.

Hence it is not unreasonable to expect that together they  provide answers to these issues which are of public interest,and which concern their conduct as public servants.


END 



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