ACT Greens logo overlaid on an image of Shane Rattenbury.

Following is the text of the letter to Mr Shane Rattenbury, ACT Attorney General and Member of the  ACT Legislative Assembly.

14 March 2024

Mr. Shane Rattenbury 
Attorney General for the ACT 
GPO Box 1020 
Canberra ACT 2601 

Dear Mr. Rattenbury,

As you are no doubt aware, I stood trial in the ACT Supreme Court in March 2017 due to a referral to ACT Policing made by the ACT Solicitor-General, Mr. Peter Garrison. This referral was based on an affidavit I allegedly filed with the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal (ACAT) in 2013. My application to the ACAT did not proceed to a hearing because the president lacked the authority to order the Treasury and Economic Development Directorate (CMTEDD) to produce a document that the Directorate denied possessing. This denial came despite the Commonwealth Ombudsmans office having found that CMTEDD held the document in question. The matter would have rested there had it not been for Mr. Garrison, who took it upon himself to refer my alleged affidavit to ACT Policing. At the time of the referral, it is inconceivable that Mr. Garrison was unaware that the document he referred to the police was not the same affidavit filed with the ACAT by my solicitors in 2013.

The affidavit I filed in 2013 was prepared by a solicitor, reviewed by another solicitor, and settled by a barrister. The affidavit that Mr. Garrison referred to the police bore no resemblance to a document prepared and settled by three different lawyers. It was full of grammatical errors, factual inaccuracies, mistakes in content, and annexure errors. It is inconceivable that such a document would have passed through the hands of three qualified lawyers and been filed at a tribunal without these errors being discovered. Equally, it is inconceivable that Mr. Garrison, in referring this document to the police, was not aware it was not the document served on his office by my solicitors in 2013.

Ultimately, I stood trial in the ACT Supreme Court in 2017 on 16 counts stemming from allegations made by Mr. Garrison related to my alleged affidavit. I am sure youre aware that I was acquitted of all charges, 16 to zero, and that I have raised concerns on numerous occasions about the conduct of Mr. Garrison, Ms. Tu Pham, and Mr. Angel Marina, all past and present ACT Government employees, both leading up to and during my trial.

Specifically, I note the following issues with both the evidence and conduct of the aforementioned ACT Government witnesses:

1. Ms. Pham gave evidence contradictory to what she presented to the Commonwealth Public Service Commission in 2003 and repeated verbatim in the ACT Magistrates Court in 2006. When my barrister challenged Ms. Pham about the inconsistencies, she stated her memory seemed better in 2017 than in 2003 about events from 2002.

2. Mr. Marina denied writing a letter that Mr. Howard Ronaldson, the former Chief Executive of ACT Treasury, confirmed under oath during my trial he received on 9 May 2002. Mr. Ronaldson confirmed the signature on the top of the letter was his, consistent with his document-handling practices. Mr. Marina claimed the document contained a copy of his signature later affixed. All related documents were available with original signatures, except the one Mr. Marina alleged his signature was copied from—a very convenient coincidence, wouldnt you say?

3. The DPP attempted to tender as evidence the minutes of a meeting that did not occur.

4. The DPP also attempted to introduce as evidence a document allegedly from CMTEDD archives, containing an original signature, which included proven inaccuracies and information that was selectively informed.

5. A number of documents purportedly containing my original signature were produced by CMTEDD, even corroborated by AFP forensics as genuine. However, these signatures did not match any other signatures of mine found over multiple decades, including those on passport applications, drivers licenses, and bank documents. The forensic analyst claimed I have a poetic signature” and a workday signature.” I am not aware of, nor do I employ, two distinct signatures. More significantly, my alleged workday signature” appears exclusively on documents originating from the CMTEDD archives—again, very convenient and troubling.

6. About a year before my trial, a former colleague, Mr. Martin Deste, provided me with documents related to bullying and harassment claims against Mr. Angel Marina. I initially requested these documents through a freedom of information request to CMTEDD, receiving only a document schedule without the actual complaints. I instructed my legal team to apply to the ACT Supreme Court for the complete set of grievance materials lodged against Mr. Marina. The Directorate instructed Kathryn Law Jamison, a solicitor with the ACT Government Solicitors Office, to oppose this application. Ms. Law Jamison informed the court there were no documents to hand over, only a few scribbled handwritten notes that did not constitute official grievances. When my trial commenced, my legal team again applied for the documents, and a Directorate barrister presented the court with pages matching material Mr. Deste had provided a year earlier. It is clear Ms. Law Jamison lied to the ACT Supreme Court to hinder my defence.

7. I was informed by Mr. Deste that in the week leading up to my trial, the ACT Solicitor-General, Peter Garrison, was expressing pleasure and declaring that I would be sentenced to jail for a long time. This behaviour is inconsistent with the professional and impartial conduct expected from the second most senior law officer in the ACT.

8. Mr. Robert Lewis, also a former CMTEDD employee, provided false testimony. Mr. Lewis had previously claimed he aided his line manager in drafting a job application and gave a statement to ACT Policing asserting an exchange of emails between himself and his manager. Mr. Lewis provided the dates of these alleged emails to police for their inquiry. However, when the police requested these emails from InTACTs server, none were found. The reason? The alleged email exchange simply did not occur. This raises the question of why Mr. Lewis would make such a statement knowing its untruthfulness, as proven when police could not locate any such emails.

Furthermore, it is my position that the police conducted a racially biased and targeted investigation intended to achieve only one outcome.

Yours,

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