John Key had a difficult day in Christchurch yesterday
More egg on his face.
A video of a 2011 press conference has turned up with the man himself contradicting his statements of the last few days
Retweeted by Kim Dotcom
More #Whaledumps. More confirmation that #DirtyPolitics is accurate, fair, and not taken out of context.
Retweeted by Robin Westenra
The Whale doesn't work for free http://wikisend.com/download/782394/0045%20S%20J%20Lusk%20-%20251111%20Invoice.pdf …
PM stands by statement on SIS issue
Prime
Minister John Key is sticking to his line that he did not know about
the release of spy agency documents to blogger Cameron Slater,
despite telling reporters in 2011 that he did.
22
August, 2014
Mr
Key has insisted he was not personally informed before the
information, which was damaging to the-then Labour Party leader Phil
Goff, was released under the Official Information Act (OIA) to the
right-wing blogger.
However
audio from a press conference Mr Key gave in 2011, when he answered
questions on the documents, is raising more questions about what the
Prime Minister knew.
Listen
to John Key answering questions in a 2011 media
conference. ( 1 min 43 sec )
John
Key campaigning in Christchurch on Thursday.
Photo: RNZ
/ Alexander Robertson
Yesterday
Mr Key told reporters he was holidaying in Hawaii when when Security
Intelligence Service (SIS) director Warren Tucker was releasing the
documents to Mr Slater, and that he wasn't personally aware of what
was going on.
He
was responding to the release of a letter in which Dr Tucker said he
had informed Mr Key about the matter. The Prime Minister said his
office was told but did not pass it on to him directly. Dr Tucker,
who is now retired, also released a statement saying the reference in
the letter to the Prime Minister meant the Prime Minister's office.
However
at his post-Cabinet media conference in August 2011, Mr Key said Dr
Tucker told him the document was going to be released.
Mr
Key said: "Cameron Slater went to the SIS and under the Official
Information Act, asked for the release of that document. What
happened was Warren Tucker didn't come to me for that, he went to his
legal advisers and the legal advisers told him this is the process
they have to follow - and when he was going through that process it
was at that point he told me he'd release them because he has to tell
me that under the no-surprises policy."
A
spokesperson for the Prime Minister said today he stands stands by
yesterday's statement - that his office knew about the document
release but he personally did not.
The
Labour Party is calling for staff in the Prime Minister's office to
be questioned under oath to determine whether they tipped off Mr
Slater about the SIS documents used against Labour.
The
documents were released after Phil Goff and John Key had clashed
about suspicions of spying by Israeli backpackers. Mr Goff had
criticised Mr Key's comments on the matter, but then had to admit he
had been told about it by SIS director Warren Tucker. However, Mr
Goff said nothing of substance had been said - otherwise he would
have remembered it.
Mr
Goff said today the Prime Minister's former top advisor Jason Ede and
his chief of staff Wayne Eagleson should have to give evidence under
oath to the Inspector General of Intelligence and Security, who is
carrying out an investigation into the matter.
The
Green Party is calling for Mr Key to be interviewed under oath as
part of the Inspector General's investigation.
This is what Key said in his 2011 press conference.
"Cameron Slater went to the SIS and under the Official Information Act, asked for the release of that document. What happened was Warren Tucker didn't come to me for that, he went to his legal advisers and the legal advisers told him this is the process they have to follow - and when he was going through that process it was at that point he told me he'd release them because he has to tell me that under the no-surprises policy."
In the meantime WhaleOil's Cameron Slater is under his own form of pressure
Oh the irony: WhaleOil is being prosecuted for using someone else's private communications without permission. http://nzherald.co.nz/politics/news/article.cfm?c_id=280&objectid=11312691 …
Oh the irony: WhaleOil is being prosecuted for using someone else's private communications without permission. http://nzherald.co.nz/politics/news/article.cfm?c_id=280&objectid=11312691 …
Slater faces prosecution for breaching privacy
Whale Oil blogger Cameron Slater is being prosecuted for the same thing he is complaining about - using someone else's private communications without their permission.
22
August, 2014
And
the prosecution could see the blogger ordered to produce in court
original copies of information used in Nicky Hager's Dirty Politics.
Slater
filed a complaint with the Privacy Commission after Hager used years
of hacked email and social media conversations to write the book,
which paints a picture of a National government which encourages
attack politics through blogs.
But
the Commission has recently decided Slater had breached the privacy
of businessman Matt Blomfield after the blogger published dozens of
posts on Whale Oil based on a computer hard drive he had obtained.
It
passed the case to the office of the Director of Human Rights
Proceedings, which is now prosecuting him over five days in October.
Barrister
Simon Judd, who is prosecuting the case for the Director of Human
Rights Proceedings, said Slater was defending the case by claiming he
was a journalist and not subject to the Privacy Act.
He
said it would be argued Slater was not a journalist - and even if he
was, the material he published on Mr Blomfield was not a "news
media activity".
"If
he's putting stuff on the internet about Mr Blomfield where this is
no public interest and the stuff he is putting on is private
information, we would argue that can't possibly be a news activity."
He
said he believed some material highlighted in Dirty Politics could be
sought from Slater through discovery rules because it had relevance
to the prosecution.
Dirty
Politics claimed there was an arrangement which saw public relations
specialist Carrick Graham feeding posts to Slater's blog attacking
those who challenged his clients.
The
posts included attacks on those campaigning against alcohol, obesity
and smoking.
He
said it could make the case that Slater's involvement in "public
relations work for corporates" was not an activity which was
consistent with claims he was a journalist.
Mr
Judd said if the prosecution was successful then remedies could
includes a financial damages award and an order for Slater to attend
a training session on privacy rights.
Mr
Blomfield claimed Slater obtained a computer hard drive with 10 years
of data on it, including emails, family photographs and legal
documents.
The
material was used to write content for the blog which had a "huge"
impact, said Mr Blomfield.
"It
is not just the feeling of having no privacy whatsoever. It's the
privacy of everyone around you that is taken away as well. It's a
very good way to destroy any relationship you have with anyone in
terms of trust."
He
said the Dirty Politics case was different as it Hager had removed
personal details from the hacked content and it was about public
figures.
"I'm
running my household. They're running the country."
Mr
Blomfield is also suing Slater for defamation with a full hearing
expected next year.
A
High Court decision is pending in the case on whether Slater is a
journalist - a status he is seeking in the belief it will allow him
to withhold information about his sources from Mr Blomfield.
Slater
did not return calls for comment.
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