21 June 2024
Topics: Perth Mint Senate Inquiry report
E&OE
OLIVER PETERSON:
There has subsequently been an inquiry conducted by the Select Committee on the Perth Mint, and a WA Liberal Senator, Dean Smith is the chair of that committee. He’s just released a scathing report into the failures of the mint, and he can tell you more. Senator, good afternoon.
DEAN SMITH:
Good afternoon to you, Ollie.
OLIVER PETERSON:
There are a lot of compliance breaches that you uncovered in your inquiry, Senator Smith, that we may have not known about before.
DEAN SMITH:
It’s interesting you say that, Ollie, because during the inquiry, a significant development took place. And that is that AUSTRAC, which is the federal financial crime regulator, issued what’s called an enforceable undertaking over the Perth Mint that took place in December last year.
That enforceable undertaking means that the Perth Mint is under the sort of the careful watch, if you like, of AUSTRAC and having to provide regular monthly reporting back to AUSTRAC to make sure that it’s not only meeting compliance with our anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws, but also fulfilling its remediation programs. So, what does this mean? It means that there still exists potential financial liabilities across the WA Government for which the WA taxpayer will be responsible, as seen in the report’s findings and conclusions today.
And this is a report that has been supported, it’s conclusions have been supported by the Australian Greens and Coalition Senators. So, it’s far from a political inquiry. This is a broad inquiry that enjoys multi-partisan support, particularly around the recommendations. What we’re saying is that it’s time for the Perth Mint Board to accept responsibility. They have been trying to say that this is just a responsibility of the previous senior management.
We said that is not good enough, Ollie, because it’s a Senate inquiry, it does have tremendous powers. We were able to see a number of documents that I can’t reveal to you and your listeners in terms of what they said. But there’s one document in particular, the 2020 internal audit report, that we’re of the strong view should be put before the WA Parliament so that the WA Parliament can see for itself some of the significant compliance failings that led to that enforceable undertaking.
So unfortunately, WA taxpayers, the financial liability still sits over their head until this matter is resolved. The enforceable undertaking exists until the 30th of April, 2025. That’s assuming that the Perth Mint does actually meet all of its compliance obligations. I think it’s important to remember Ollie that, you know, why was it that the Australian Senate was forced to do this inquiry and not the WA Parliament? And your listeners might remember that then Premier Martin McGowan refused to give the WA Parliament the opportunity of having its own inquiry.
So Senator Reynolds, Senator Brockman and Senator Cox, and myself, set up the Senate inquiry because we didn’t believe that these Perth Mint matters should go un-inquired. Because the Perth Mint, this is an important WA institution. It’s an institution that has tourism importance, but also has an important financial value to the state. And we would expect that it enjoys the highest level of governance and as a result of that, the highest level of public confidence.
OLIVER PETERSON:
Now you got a lack of cooperation from the WA Government, Ministers, and former Premier Mark McGowan, who back in March of last year in Parliament on a hot mic described the Perth Mint scandal as a storm in an effing teacup, Senator Smith?
DEAN SMITH:
Mark McGowan is wrong on that. And if the former Premier had been right, if there was nothing to see here, then AUSTRAC would not have put an enforceable undertaking over the Perth Mint in the way that it did in December last year. The inquiry politely asked the former Premier on three separate occasions to come and answer questions and he didn’t even do us the courtesy of a response.
And why did we want to hear from Mark McGowan? Because, at critical times in this, he was the responsible Minister, because the Perth Mint, the Gold corporation, is a WA owned entity. So, very disappointing. West Australian taxpayers have got good reason to ask, what is it that the WA Government is hiding from? And if they don’t think they’re hiding from anything, then put that 2020 internal audit report before the WA Parliament and empower the WA Parliament to have its own inquiry.
OLIVER PETERSON:
Because you think that’s necessary? That the public has a right to know, Senator Smith?
DEAN SMITH:
The public absolutely has a right to know, because this is an important WA and national institution. But more than that, Ollie, because this enforceable undertaking sits over the Perth Mint. And this enforceable undertaking is just one of four enforceable undertakings AUSTRAC issued last year. In the case of Westpac, which was found to be in breach of similar issues as the Perth Mint, that fine to Westpac was in the order of one and a half billion dollars.
So the failure of the Perth Mint to meet its compliance obligations under the anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws means that there is a potential liability to West Australian taxpayers at this moment.
I’m pleased that West Australian Senators with common sense in our national Senate thought it necessary to have an inquiry that reported today. And we hope the WA Parliament takes a very close look at this.
OLIVER PETERSON:
Senator, thanks you time.
DEAN SMITH:
A pleasure. Thanks Ollie.
ENDS