Shit just got real if you are throwing your lawyer under a bus – Key shoots his money man live on Radio
By Martyn
Bradbury
http://thedailyblog.co.nz/2016/05/02/shit-just-got-real-if-you-are-throwing-your-lawyer-under-a-bus-key-shoots-his-money-man-live-on-radio/
Shit just got real if you are throwing your lawyer under a bus as Key did this morning on Radio NZ.
Key
buried his own lawyer so far down, Ken Whitney’s forgotten
what sunlight means.
Shredding his
own lawyers reputation doesn’t come cheap. Key has obviously had
explained the ramifications of being seen to have gone soft on
cracking down on Tax Havens after his own personal Trust Lawyer used
his name to get the Minister to eventually cave in and not order a
crackdown.
The
perception of corruption alone is crucifyingly damaging in of itself,
let alone any actual conflict of interest. Kiwi’s may not get
mass surveillance and the twists and turns of Dirty Politics, but
their conservatism detects a crook when they see it.
Thanks
to David Farrar’s polling expertise last time, Key knew exactly
when to cut loose Judith Collins in the middle of the Dirty Politics
tempest, Key’s decision to knife his own lawyer on live National
radio suggests Mr Farrar was up very late last night briefing the
Prime Minister on his latest polling over the weekend.
The
Great White Shark dead eyed ruthlessness of a Prime Minister trapped
is a thing to behold.
SIMON
LOUISSON
April
21st, 2016
John
Key, explaining why he had an account with tax avoidance specialists
Antipodes Trust Group, said he used the firm because his long-term
friend, Ken Whitney, is a principal at the firm and has been his
private lawyer for many years.
Trouble
is Whitney is not a lawyer.
According
to the NZ Law Society, Whitney surrendered his legal practicing
registration in February.
“If
you provide any legal services without a current practising
certificate you must not describe yourself as a lawyer, law
practitioner, legal practitioner, barrister, solicitor,
attorney-at-law or counsel. To do so is an offence under Section 21
of the Lawyers and Conveyancers Act,” the Law Society’s Senior
Solicitor Regulatory, Charlotte Walker, told TS.
When
TS contacted Whitney to ask him if he was Key’s lawyer, he said:
“Yes.”
Later
he conceded he was retired from legal practice, although he said he
was a consultant with Alexander Dorrington Lawyers, the practice that
bought Whitney’s practice, Ross & Whitney, in February 2014,
which he shared with Ian Ross.
Whitney
said he was aware he was not registered. “I’m not calling myself
a lawyer, Mr Key is.”
Alexander
Dorrington do most of the actual legal work on his advice, he said.
Asked
if, given the publicity generated by the revelation that Key had an
account with Antipodes, which specialises in offshore trusts, that
Whitney did not have a responsibility to clarify the situation,
Whitney said: “No, I didn’t feel any need to comment.”
Key,
who surely is also aware of Whitney’s non registration as a lawyer,
has also seen fit not to clarify the situation.
Michael
Macaulay, Director of Victoria University’s Institute of Governance
and Policy Studies told TS that anyone can take legal advice from
whomever they you want to – a friend or a former lawyer – “but
when it comes to matters of such national importance as the trust
issues, which is clearly going to have ramifications for a long, long
time to come, it is just common sense to use transparent, legal
advice.”
“Anyone
who uses a firm for serious legal advice, they should be aware of the
status of that person in that firm, particularly if you are the prime
minister.”
“If
you are taking legal advice and you are using that to make your
public and political judgements, you want to be aware of that status
of that person in that firm.”
Key
said Whitney was “highly ethical” and that was why he chose him
as his lawyer.
“I
don’t deal with people unless they’re highly ethical and they do
things well. He’s changed firms and that might get everyone else
excited but from my point of view it’s situation normal.
“I
have to look down the barrel of the camera and make sure everything’s
right”.
“I’ve
covered my affairs the entire time I’ve been Prime Minister exactly
the same way. My lawyer’s changed firms; that’s the end of the
matter.
“It
wasn’t embarrassing seven years ago, it’s not embarrassing
today.”
Whitney
letting his registration lapse is not a simple matter of oversight.
He surrendered his law practicing registration when he set up
Antipodes, which clearly was done with the intention of cashing in on
New Zealand’s tax haven status, that John Key has been instrumental
in maintaining.
Whitney
openly told TS he specialises in setting up trusts for foreigners. On
its website, Antipodes describes itself as “a specialist provider
of trustee services for foreign trusts using New Zealand as their
jurisdiction of choice.” Such trusts offer “a well-established
vehicle for carefully managing the inter-generational transfer of
wealth”.
It
points to the tax-free benefits, as well as the lack of inheritance
taxes and laws that protect client confidentiality and “limited”
reporting requirements which mean the identities of settler and
beneficiaries do not need to be disclosed.
Whitney
said Antipodes doesn’t give tax advice at all. “We are simply
trust administrators.”
The
aim of his “discreet personal service” is to carve out a slice of
the $25 million to $50 million in fees that John Key thinks is an
important part of the economy, whereby foreigners are able to use New
Zealand’s legal tax-free status for foreign trusts to dodge tax at
home.
The
Companies Office registry show Whitney and Ross are directors of
scores of firms, a good proportion of which have offshore owners and
many of which are no doubt taking advantage of NZ’s lax disclosure
laws and the no tax provisions for foreigners that Key says do not
amount to being a tax haven.
Key
said foreign trusts are a legitimate business and aren’t “the
devil incarnated”.
Given
the release of the Panama Papers, where 11.5 million documents have
revealed a pandemic of tax dodging, Whitney’s timing may have been
inopportune.
There
are very serious questions raised about Key’s relationship with his
“lawyer” and long-term friend Whitney, who is running what
amounts to business that facilitates tax avoidance.
Given
that Key says he has been friends with Whitney for many years, and
Whitney says on his Linked-in profile that he has had expertise in
offshore trusts for years, presumably Key has been fully aware of
Whitney’s dark skill sets.
And
to what extent is Key influenced in his belief that New Zealand is
not a tax haven and has adequate disclosure rules by the fact that
his mate and lawyer has just established a business that is dependent
on such a regime continuing.
As
well, following the public uproar about his claim that New Zealand is
not a tax haven, did it sway his decision to appoint John Shewan, a
declared proponent of low tax and an adviser on the Bermuda tax
haven, to review New Zealand’s offshore tax and disclosure rules?
Key
was blindsided when Parliament’s Register of MPs’ Pecuniary
Interests showed he had a short-term deposit with Antipodes.
He
insisted last week that if the Panama Papers included anything that
showed him in a bad light, it would be out by now, not the most
convincing declaration of innocence.
Since
becoming Prime Minister, Key has put his investments in a blind
trust, the Aldgate Trust. He is also a beneficiary of the Key family
trust. Whitney is a director of Whitechapel, the corporate trustee of
Aldgate.
Questions
have been raised about how much Key knows about his blind trust.
Having as a director of the trustee someone who heads a business
which proclaims to be a specialist provider of trustee services for
foreign trusts using New Zealand as their jurisdiction of choice,
makes you wonder if some of Aldgate/Whitechapel’s funds have been
invested in foreign trusts.
Macaulay
said the Panama Papers exposure, which has revealed people in high
places around the world using tax havens to dodge taxes, had raised
immense issues of ethics and justice and these papers were likely to
be just the beginning.
“I
think this is the tip of the tip of the iceberg. The Panama Papers
are just one set of papers – god knows what exists in other tax
havens around the world,” he said.
“People
need to be transparent about these things because the whole issue is
about secrecy.”
Macaulay
noted that Key said one of the reasons why people use trusts is that
they don’t trust the system “but that doesn’t seem a good
reason to go and hide things offshore, does it?”
Using
offshore trusts may not be illegal in a concrete sense, “but the
question then becomes, how fair are the laws? There you have a
massive ethical gray area because some laws are skewed towards the
benefit of some rather the benefit of all – that’s not an ethical
issue, that’s a justice issue.”
“When
you look at the trillions and trillions of dollars stashed away, we
probably could have solved most social problems many times over.
“The
majority of people in New Zealand have enough to have a reasonable
life, but a lot of people have absolutely nothing and it’s
absolutely wrong.”
Minister Chris Finlayson:I’m no secret fascist
The
Minister responsible for Security Intelligence Services, Chris
Finlayson.
Stuff,
25 August, 2015
A
last-minute change to new health and safety laws would have allowed
hearings behind closed doors to protect national security. The Law
Society said the Crown could introduce evidence which could be
withheld from a defendant or their lawyers.
Finlayson
- who is also the Attorney-General - says the amendment was scrapped
a week ago. And he doesn't like the term "secret courts"
describing it as "hyperbolic."
But
although the Law Society were commenting on an old version of the
legislation, it appears their original fears still stand.
Finlayson
told reporters: "I saw some article in the Dominion
Post that suggested I was some sort of crypto-fascist behind
this particular secret court. But it was nothing of the sort.
"It
was a [Supplementary Order Paper] that was introduced to deal with
the circumstances in which you would deal with a hearing behind
closed doors. Where did the [Law Society] go wrong? Well,
probably, what they did is that they didn't really understand the
legislative history and hadn't picked up on the most recent SOP."
The
bill - which is progressing through committee stages at Parliament -
now makes clear that all parties should have access to classified
evidence relevant to proceedings.
But
it also allows a court to exclude "any person" from the
hearing, or to appoint a special advocate with security clearance to
view classifiedclass="Apple-converted-space" evidence
on a defendant's behalf.
The
Law Society won't comment further until it has received the new SOP.
The
health and safety laws also
now allowsclass="Apple-converted-space" the
directors of the Government Security Service or Security Intelligence
Service to deem that the legislation or regulations do not apply to
their agencies.
'NOTHING
SINISTER' IN THIS
Finlayson
defended last minute changes to the legislation, relating to the
security services.
"Sometimes
issues do arise at the 11th hour," he said. "Did it justify
actually turning it back to the select committee for a hearing? The
answer is no. In the overall scheme of things it's a very small
corner of the legislation, that's just the way in which you deal with
the issue of classified information."
He
says there is "nothing surprising or sinister in any of this."
And he argues current laws don't clearly set out how security
information should be dealt with in the courts.
Anti-terror
laws passed last year to target foreign fighters introduced closed
proceedings for appeals and judicial reviews in cases where a
passport has been cancelled.
And
legislation currently before Parliament
strips coronersclass="Apple-converted-space" of
the automatic right to investigate combat deaths. Under the guises of
protecting national security, the military will investigate deaths
in-house.
Secret
courts - or closed material procedures - are increasingly a feature
of the UK justice system, as the British Government moved to protect
the disclosure of intelligence provided by US agencies. It argued it
was forced to pay compensation because it couldn't reveal some
evidence in court. But critics say it skews some cases in the
Government's favour and is unfair.
'HYPERBOLIC
AND UNHELPFUL'
Finlayson
denies the Government is moving to establish secret courts.
"The
term secret courts is, with respect, hyperbolic and unhelpful. But
there will be situations in a variety of cases - be it a patent case,
an immigration case, I suppose it could arise in a coronial inquiry
where there will be a need to grapple with the issue of dealing with
classified information...Do you deal with it in particular pieces of
legislation or could it perhaps be dealt with generically in the
evidence act? And personally I could see that there is a case to be
made there as well."
He
slammed the Law Society for choosing "to comment on legislation
via press release."
The
Law Society first wrote to Workplace Relations and Safety minister
Michael Woodhouse on August 21, and also notified his office before
issuing their statement.
A
spokeswoman for Finlayson, acting as attorney-general, later said
that a prosecuting authority cannot use classified security
information if the defendant does not also have access to it.
She
later clarified: "There may be situations when a non-Crown
Defendant wants to use classified security information. If they
do not have the appropriate security clearances to allow direct
access to this information, the Special Advocate provisions...are
there to ensure that non-Crown individuals and non-Crown entities can
make use of classified security information in their defence through
use of a Special Advocate."
LABOUR
BACKS LAW SOCIETY
Labour's
David Parker backed the Law Society, saying some of their concerns
remain true.
"First,
that this was introduced without submissions. Second, that there was
no assessment of whether it is an infringement of civil liberties in
breach of the Bill of Rights, given the right to a fair trial. Both
of those criticisms by the Law Society are undoubtedly true and
nothing the Attorney General has provided suggest otherwise."
The
new amendments are "hard to fathom."
"If
that means...that the parties to the proceedings including
the accused,class="Apple-converted-space" have
had to hadclass="Apple-converted-space" access to
all the classified information, not just some of the classified
information, the rest of it becomes a nonsense. Why would you have
the ability ...to make an order excluding an accused person or their
lawyer from part of
the courtsclass="Apple-converted-space" proceedings?"
Welcome to Nazional New Zealand.
---Comment
“All New Zealanders should be very worried” - Law Society
Last
minute changes to new laws initially drafted in response to the Pike
River Mine tragedy could impact constitutional rights, the New
Zealand Law Society says.
26
August, 2015
After
three days of intense debate, the Health and Safety Bill could see
its third and final reading as soon as tomorrow.
The
bill is a 273-page omnibus one which will overhaul New Zealand’s
workplace health and safety system, replacing the Health and Safety
in Employment Act 1992 and the Machinery Act 1950.
But
the Law Society has written to Workplace Relations and Safety
Minister Michael Woodhouse, expressing concern around the last-minute
insertion to the bill of provisions for a closed material procedure
for court proceedings where national security is involved, saying the
provisions should not have been inserted at this late stage of the
legislative process.
The
provisions will allow a person to be tried and convicted of a
criminal offence without seeing all the information relied on by the
Crown and without the right to be present - or to have their
representative present - during all the proceedings.
This
is inconsistent with the fundamental right to a fair trial, the Law
Society said in a release yesterday.
Law
Society president Chris Moore recommended the removal of the
provisions from the Bill, to await the outcome of an inquiry the Law
Commission is carrying out on National Security Information in
Proceedings.
“The
Law Commission has already identified significant issues about the
matters covered by the provisions which have been inserted in the
Bill, and it does not appear that these have been taken into
account.”
The
processes inserted by Schedule 2A directly impact on very significant
constitutional rights, he said.
“Because
Schedule 2A was not in the Bill when introduced, it has not been
subject to the Bill of Rights vetting process and will miss public
consultation and input.”
Mr
Moore felt that the Government’s advisers believed there would be
relatively few circumstances where secure handling of classified
information would be needed as part of any health and safety
investigation or legal proceedings where national security is
involved.
“However,
Schedule 2A has a very wide definition of ‘classified security
information’. The Law Commission – which, it is important to
stress, has been actively researching this very matter – has
identified some major human rights issues in this matter.”
The
Law Society has also advised the Minister that Schedule 2A attempts
to remove the power of the courts to review a determination that
certain information is ‘classified security information’.
“New
Zealanders should be very worried when the powers of our courts to
review any decision made by civil servants are curtailed, as could
happen here.”
The
Law Society said that if the provisions are to be retained in the
legislation, they should be more narrowly cast “at a minimum” and
it strongly urges that the outcome of the Law Commission review be
awaited.
The
Bill has attracted some controversy; with opposition MPs angered by
the Government’s decision to dairy, beef and sheep farms as low
risk, while classifying worm farms as high risk. That has since been
changed.
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