FIRST SCHEDULE
"BLACKET: Would you tell the Court your full name, please?
A. My name is Crista Bracamonte.
Q. In 1989, were you known as Crista Van der Merwe?
A. That's correct.
...
Q. Were you and your now husband Ramon Bracamonte the operators of a restaurant in Byron Bay, in a building that also housed the CES office?
A. That's correct.
Q. Where did the restaurant operate?
A. The restaurant was on the top floor.
Q. Is it a two storey or three storey building?
A. It's a two storey building.
Q. With a car park underneath?
A. That's correct.
Q. Do you recall an occasion in early 1989 when you were arrested at home?
A. I certainly do.
Q. What happened?
...
Q. Ms Bracamonte, what happened on the day of your arrest?
A. We were bundled into the car and taken to the police station to be charged. At the house, obviously the police collected various items and took us to the station.
Q. Sorry, they collected various items from your house, is that what you're saying?
A. That's correct.
...
Q. Was any property removed from your house?
A. Yes.
Q. What sort of property what was taken?
A. For example, a diary that my father gave me, some photographs and the various things. Money was taken from the restaurant, pots and pans.
Q. Sorry, we'll come to the restaurant in a minute.
A. Yep.
Q. You say a diary. What was your father's occupation?
A. My father was a mining consultant, and the diary was, he gave me the diary and it had "ICI" on it, it was a mining diary.
Q. Was it used as a personal diary by you?
A. I hadn't written much. He gave it to me but I'm hopeless at using diaries but it was just lying around the house.
...
Q. You were taken and charged with your husband, sorry, then your de facto, you were charged in respect of a bombing at the restaurant?
A. That's correct.
Q. Did you become aware of materials being removed from the restaurant by police?
A. That's correct.
Q. What was taken?
...
Q. Were items taken from the restaurant?
A. That's correct.
Q. When were they taken?
A. They were taken at the time that we were charged.
Q. Were you charged in respect of items removed from the restaurant?
A. That's correct, we were charged with stealing.
Q. What were you charged with stealing?
A. Stealing pots and pans, crockery, cutlery, glasses.
Q. Were you given bail?
A. We were given bail and had to report to the police station on a weekly basis.
...
Q. Did you get back some of the items that had been removed from police?
...
HIS HONOUR
Q. Did you get some?
A. That's correct.
BLACKET
Q. How did you manage to do that? What did you have to do?
A. I had to prove that I'd paid for the items, and I showed them the receipts which I wanted to do initially before they charged us. I said I had the receipts.
Q. Who were the policemen that you spoke to that you told at the time of charging that you had receipts?
A. Peter Thomas.
Q. Notwithstanding your advice, he took the items anyway. Is that what you're saying?
A. That's correct.
...
Q. Who took the items from the restaurant?
A. Detectives, it was Thomas and Connolly, and there was a local officer from Byron Bay as well.
Q. You told us that you had to report weekly for bail, is that right?
A. That's correct.
Q. Did you, at some point in time in 1989, take a tape recorder to the Byron Bay Police Station?
A. That's correct.
Q. Why did you do that? What was the reason for you taking your tape recorder?
A. I did it to protect myself.
Q. How did you come to be attending the police station?
A. I had to go and pick up some goods from the police station, and I made a telephone call to arrange to go and pick it up, and at that time, Detective Thomas picked up the phone and he said, "Come to the station and I want to have a chat with you".
Q. Had you previously had any chats with Detective Thomas when your partner Ramon was not present?
A. That's correct, he escorted me to the restaurant at that time.
Q. When?
A. Before I went to the police station to pick up the goods, and on occasion where he came with me to the restaurant because he wanted to have a look at the diary. I had a diary that I used, a booking book.
Q. Do you know what he wanted to look at the book for?
A. He indicated, he told me that we were not busy, and I indicated that we had forward bookings.
Q. So he attended and you showed him the book, is that right.
A. That's correct.
Q. While you were there on that occasion, did he have any conversation with you concerning Ramon?
A. He certainly did.
Q. What did he say?
A. He indicated that he doesn't know that I was involved but if I implicated Ramon, that they will protect me and they will drop the charges against me.
Q. What did you say when he said that?
A. I said we were innocent, that we were not involved, and I had nothing to implicate Ramon.
Q. When you had this subsequent telephone conversation with Detective Thomas on the occasion that you went down with a tape recorder, do you remember whether that was before or after your committal proceedings took place?
A. That was before the committal proceedings took place.
Q. What happened when you arrived at the police station?
A. I was questioned by Thomas, we were going to a little room, and I had my tape recording in my bag and I had it switched on, and we then had a conversation that you have the transcript of.
Q. That's at 240 of the plaintiff's tender bundle, volume 1. You have a copy of that transcript in front of you, is that right?
A. It's in my handbag.
Q. You've seen it this morning, is that right?
A. Yes.
...
Q. I show you MFI 25. Was that the tape recorder that you took to the police station?
A. That's correct.
Q. With a tape inside it, is that right?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you prepare the transcript of that tape?
A. It was prepared through my solicitors.
Q. Who was that at the time?
A. It was Harry Smith and we had Mr Balzer, Ray Balzer.
HIS HONOUR
Q. Had you listened to the tape and compared it to the transcript?
A. I have but years ago. I haven't really gone through the tape again.
Q. No, but did you do it at one time?
A. I did.
....
Q. Was the transcription an accurate version at the time you listened to it, of what was said at the police station?
A. Yes, that's correct.
Q. Between you and Detective Thomas?
A. Yes.
...
Q. Did Detective Thomas ever say anything to you on that topic?
A. He did, he basically indicated to me that
...
Q. When did you have the conversation with him?
A. We had the conversation at the police station even in the tape talking about the state of, there was he got involved in my husband's Family Court matter, and talked about the state of our house including the material, and that's how it was discussed in that context. He used that against my husband.
Q. Was there any such material in the house to your knowledge?
A. No.
Q. During the course of the discussion that you had with Detective Thomas, he suggested that you had committed fraud. Do you remember that?
A. Yes.
Q. That you somehow cooked the books of the business?
A. That's correct.
Q. Did you feel threatened in any way when you had that conversation?
A. I did. He also inferred that if the Court doesn't find me guilty, there's a lot they can do, he could shake the lights [sic, life] out of me.
...
Q. In respect of the stealing charges, what happened to those stealing charges that were against you, stealing items from the restaurant?
A. They were dropped.
Q. At what stage?
A. Before the committal hearing.
Q. At your trial, did Detective Thomas give evidence?
A. He certainly did.
Q. At what point in the trial?
A. That was at the committal.
Q. Sorry, at the committal, yes. You had a hearing without a jury in Sydney, did you not?
A. That's correct.
Q. Judge Harvey Cooper, is that right?
A. Yes.
Q. Did Detective Thomas give evidence at that trial?
A. He did.
Q. Are you sure about that?
A. Well, I will be honest with you, it's been 25 years.
Q. All right, okay.
A. So I know it was thrown out, but it was
Q. Was there an application made by your legal representative for costs of the proceedings?
A. That's correct.
Q. And this followed your acquittal, is that right?
A. Yes.
...
Q. At the time of your arrest, you mentioned there were Connolly, Thomas and another police officer from Byron Bay?
A. That's correct.
...
Q. MACONACHIE: 25 years is a long time, isn't it, Mrs Bracamonte?
A. That's correct.
Q. You were asked by my learned friend a few minutes ago whether or not Detective Sergeant Thomas gave evidence against you at your trial, do you remember that?
A. That's correct.
Q. And you very quickly said, "Yes, he did", didn't you?
A. I assumed committal trial.
Q. No, you were asked whether he had given evidence at the trial and you were very quick to say that he had done so, weren't you?
A. That's correct.
Q. And it required your senior counsel to ask you the question, "Are you sure about that?"; remember him asking you that?
A. I certainly do.
Q. And then you, as it were, stumbled across a reference to the committal hearing and said, "25 years ago, it's a long time". Do you remember that?
A. I do.
Q. You were very quick to try to tell his Honour anything you could which was favourable to your view of things and unfavourable to anything propounded by Detective Sergeant Thomas, would you agree with that?
A. I agree.
Q. Just one or two questions to try and get the chronology right in my head, if I can be indulged for a moment. What was the date of your arrest? What was the date of your arrest when you were bundled into the car and taken to the police station?
A. To be honest with you, I it was not in May. All I know, I was in the police station in May. I cannot recall the exact date.
Q. Was it in February?
A. It sounds right.
Q. No, I don't want you
A. Sorry, sir, I cannot recall.
...
Q. I will put this to you as being a matter which I assert is the fact and I ask for your response: Did you speak with detectives on 22 March 1989 when a written record of interview was brought into existence?
A. Yes.
Q. Now let me come to another matter, if I may. It was the 31st of May that you saw Detective Thomas and secretly taped the conversation, is that right?
A. That's correct.
Q. Between 22 March and 31 May, did you have any other conversation with Mr Thomas?
A. At the restaurant, yes.
Q. When did you have a conversation with Detective Sergeant Thomas between 22 March and 31 May?
A. I do not know the exact date after this period of time.
Q. Apart from having a conversation at the restaurant in that period of time, 22 March to 31 May, did you have a conversation with Detective Sergeant Thomas at any other place?
A. No, it was at the restaurant.
Q. And you have a clear and distinct recollection of there being only one conversation between 22 March and 31 May with Mr Thomas and that was at the restaurant, is that correct?
A. That's correct.
Q. That's wrong, I suggest to you, ma'am?
A. I have been at the police station on a weekly basis. It is quite possible that I have had a conversation with him when I went inside, but that's the one that I can recall after 25 years.
Q. You were quite categorical a moment or two ago to say that there was only one conversation, weren't you?
A. There was one conversation at the restaurant and there was one conversation at the police station.
Q. And that
A. That was the day when the recording took place.
....
Q. You told us in your evidence in chief that you determined to use surreptitiously a tape recorder to protect yourself; do you remember telling us that?
A. That's correct.
Q. You then said, after telling us that you had determined to protect yourself, or that was the purpose, you said you made a telephone call with the intention of collecting some goods that were yours?
A. That's correct.
Q. And that was after you had determined that you would use a tape recorder to protect yourself, is that correct?
A. No, no. The conversation when he said he wanted to have a chat with me, at that stage I felt it was necessary to protect myself and the only way that I could do it was to record the conversation.
Q. Before you determined that you would take the tape recorder and record the conversation, did you take any legal advice?
A. No, I did not.
...
Q. Did you know in 1989 that the taping of conversations without the knowledge of the person on the other side of the conversation was regulated? Did you know that?
A. No. But at the same time I would have done it even if I knew it was illegal because what he's been doing to me by charging me with something that I didn't do and by telling lies about me has affected me so much that I felt I had to do that this man was not normal and I had to protect myself.
Q. Now, let me take you to the subject matter of the tape recorded material. The essence of it is, would you not agree, that you should give up your husband and you should, as a result, get some kind of protection. That was the burden of it, wasn't it?
A. Yes, I had to implicate my husband.
Q. Yes. Did that just come out of the blue on 31 May 1989 or was there something that happened beforehand which led to that conversation?
A. The conversation Thomas had a conversation with me at the restaurant prior to the 31st of May where he already said to me if I give up my husband and if I give him evidence, then he will not charge me.
Q. And did that come from Detective Thomas without any prior discussion?
A. That's correct. It came from him.
Q. So you were in a business relationship with Mr Bracamonte at the time, weren't you?
A. That's correct.
Q. And you were in a romantic relationship with Mr Bracamonte at the time?
A. That's correct.
Q. And that ultimately ended not ended turned into a relationship of marriage, is that correct?
A. That's correct. We are still married.
Q. Yes, indeed. When was the first time you ever saw Peter Thomas?
A. When I was arrested.
Q. Yes. And you made it clear to him, did you not, that you were in a business relationship with Ramon Bracamonte at the time of your arrest?
A. Yes.
Q. And you made it clear to him, didn't you, that you were in a loving relationship with Bracamonte at the time of your arrest?
A. That's correct. We were living in the same house, on the same room, in the same bed.
Q. I know, and I don't want to move into your private affairs unnecessarily, ma'am, I truly don't, but this is a man that you had seen for the first time on the date that you were arrested, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. You told him in no uncertain terms that you were in both a business and a loving relationship with him, correct?
A. Yes.
Q. And do you want his Honour to understand that you say that without more, he put to you that if you gave up this business and life's partner, you could get some kind of immunity?
A. Well, he basically asked me for evidence against my husband.
Q. That is not the way it happened at all, is it, Mrs Bracamonte?
A. It has happened that way. I object to you saying it didn't happen that way.
Q. Perhaps his Honour is unfamiliar with the detail of this event but it involved, did it not, serious damage to a building in which you and Mr Bracamonte carried on the business of a restaurant?
A. That's correct. There was a bombing.
...
Q. You were aware, were you not, shortly after you were arrested, that the building in which you and your husband carried on the business of a restaurant had been deliberately damaged by somebody strapping gelignite to the foundations and causing the gelignite to explode; you nude knew that, didn't you?
A. I think the whole of Byron Bay at that time knew that and there was newspaper articles and there was also somebody that claimed responsibility that they had a grudge against the CES.
Q. Well, thank you for that. You knew, did you not you knew, did you not, that there had been an attempt made to destroy the building using gelignite; you knew that, didn't you?
A. Yes.
Q. And you knew that it was a very, very serious matter?
A. That's correct.
Q. You knew that, didn't you? And you knew from your discussions from the moment of arrest with Detective Sergeant Thomas and others that you and your husband were suspected suspected of being involved in the cause of that damage; you knew that, didn't you?
A. I was told that, yes.
Q. And that was a matter of great significance to you, that you were suspected of being involved, do you agree?
A. That was horrible.
Q. Did you see Detective Sergeant Thomas at Byron Bay Police Station between 22 March and 31 May 1989?
A. I do not recall on how many occasions I have seen him but I have went to the police station once a week.
Q. Yes?
A. So I would guess I would have seen him.
Q. Do you remember in that period of time, between 22 March and 31 May, speaking to Mr Thomas and saying, "Can I speak to you off the record?"
A. That I can tell you is absolutely false. That is definitely not true.
Q. Do you remember using words like that in the presence of a Detective Connolly?
A. No, I do not remember.
Q. I suggest to you that in response to you saying, "Can I speak to you off the record?", Mr Thomas said, "What about?"
A. I think that's a lie.
Q. Yes, and you said, "The bombing of course". Do you remember that?
A. No. That is a lie.
Q. And Thomas said to you, "What about the bombing, Crista?"
A. That is a lie.
Q. Or, "What about the bombing?"
A. That is a lie.
Q. You said, did you not, "What would happen to me if I was to give evidence against Ramon?" Did you say that?
A. No. I did not.
Q. Did Thomas say: 'That's not a matter for me. It would depend on what evidence you can give and on your own involvement. I can apply for immunity from prosecution for you.' Was that said by Thomas to you?
A. No, the only conversation I had is the one on the tape that really contradict what is being said there.
Q. You said, I suggest to you, "What's the worst that can happen to me?" and Thomas said, "It's not a matter for me. If you give evidence that assists the Court I am certain it would be taken into consideration". Was that said?
A. No, it has not been said.
Q. Did you say, "You know, you were right, we weren't at home at the time of the bombing"?
A. No.
Q. Did you say that?
A. No, I definitely did not say that. That is a lie. A blatant lie.
Q. Thomas said, "What are you saying to me, that you did it and if you give evidence against Ramon what can we do for you?" Did he say that?
A. No, that is a lie.
Q. Did you say, "No, I'm not saying that"?
A. That is a lie.
Q. Thomas said to you, I suggest, "I have told you what I can do. If you want to talk to me about it, think about it and then come and talk to me about it officially". Did he say that?
A. That is a lie.
Q. And you said, "I will"?
A. That is a total lie.
Q. It is in that context, isn't it, Mrs Bracamonte, that on 31 May 1989, you went to the police station, spoke to Sergeant Thomas and taped what was said between you; that is the context, isn't it?
A. The context that you put forward to me is not what happened. I totally disagree with that conversation. The conversation that was at the restaurant is really in line with the conversation that I recorded on tape and if you refer to that conversation that was recorded, it infer that he has already tried to make an offer to me before.
Q. Mrs Bracamonte, when you first spoke to police, you told the police that at the time of the bombing, you were at home?
A. We certainly were.
Q. You told them that?
A. Yes.
Q. You said to him, Thomas, on the occasion to which I refer, "You know, you were right, we weren't home at the time of the bombing"?
A. That is a lie.
Q. Did you have a neighbour at the place at which you lived?
A. We did.
Q. Did it become known to you that he told the police something to the effect that your little car had left home at around about the time or shortly before the bombing occurred?
A. No, that's not correct. The only thing I know there was a neighbour that basically said that they saw the car and we never left. I haven't heard any of that evidence. We didn't.
...
Q. It became known to you, didn't it, in the period between 22 March and 31 May, that the police had received information to the effect that your car was not at home at the time of the bombing? You came to know that, didn't you?
A. Thomas inferred that somebody saw a silver car in the vicinity of Byron Bay.
Q. Yes?
A. But it was not identified as my car.
Q. Yes. But a car similar to yours, you understood, had been reported to the police as being in the presence in the area of the bombing at or shortly before it occurred, is that correct?
A. Thomas indicated that, yes.
Q. Yes, all right. Now, that conversation at Byron Bay Police Station took place on 31 March (as said) 1989, didn't it?
A. The tape conversation? Which conversation are you referring to?
Q. No, I am sorry, I had misled you and I apologise. The occasion on which you said to Mr Thomas, "Can I speak to you off the record?", and you will recall I put that to you and a number of other propositions?
A. Yes, and I keep on saying to you I have never had a conversation with him where I have asked to speak off the record to him.
...
Q. It was in the context of you having said to Detective Sergeant Thomas, "What will happen to me if I implicate Ramon?" that your conversation of 31 May took place. Do you agree with me or not?
A. I I disagree strongly."
SECOND SCHEDULE
"C - Hi, how are you?
T - I'm sorry to inconvenience you.
C - That's all right.
(walking to Detective's Office)
T - How have you been? How's business?
C - Oh, up and down. One day busy, the nest day quiet, but we've been managing.
Pardon.
T - Are you still open on Sunday's?
C - No.
Um, It's hard mate, if the weather is good we work, if the weather is bad we don't work.
T - How's Ramon going?
C - He's been good. Haven't had any problems actually.
T - I've been talking to his ex-wife.
C - Um.
T - She seems like a pretty decent lady.
C - You'd probably know her better than I do.
T - You haven't had any other thoughts about Ramon?
C - Pardon - In which way?
T - What I told you is the truth.
C - What do you mean, how can you say in terms... with Ramon's wife?
T - She said when he became uninterested with her is when her father said "no more money".
C - Did her father give Ramon money?
T - Her father. They're quite comfortable and that's all she said, he wanted to marry her for was the money. The father indicated that he wouldn't give her any more money.
C - Her father doesn't get along with her. He has never seen her for years.
T - You don't give up. You haven't given any consideration to anything I have said.
C - I'll give it some consideration, but the things that you and Sgt. Tutt told me about Victoria, things that she was a prostitute.
T - Yeah I know, Ramon told us that, but that's not true though. She's a very nice lady. She's a VERY nice lady.
C - In terms of the Restaurant, even when El Catalan, I ask Ramon, Victoria's father never give Ramon money. That's before I even came into the picture. He wasn't even aware that he had any money.
T - I've made a few enquiries since I saw you last and I know alot about you. I've been to Sydney on a number of occasions. I've talked to a lot of people. You know this bloke's got you into that much strife it's a joke. I know why he didn't hand his passport in. I've spoken to the Spanish community. I've spoken to some very close friends of his and he made he was getting ready to go. Nodoubt about that. We've made it a bit harder for him now because he hasn't got a passport. His Solicitor is in the shit as far as I'm concerned because he was in Court and he was directed to give that passport up and he's had that in his safe all the time.
C - But that was when apparently Victoria was concerned about her child because they had to take the child off the passport.
T - Yeh but he was directed in the Court to give his passport up. Harry Smith was in Court when that was done and he never did so. Now his Solicitor is in breach of a very, very, very serious trust and when the court finds out that he has, at all times - it was only after he was locked up that it was produced. He could very well find himself struck off the list. The Court regards this very, very seriously. Especially a person with trust like a Solicitor, who was present when the conditions of Bail were made to surrender his passport and this bloke's got it in his safe. He should have hot-footed it back to his office and turned that thing up straight away. It was only that I found out that he had a current passport, that we became aware that there's, now a passport involved. Why do you think he did that?
C - The passport?
T - Yeah.
C - No I never.
T - Did he give any consideration to what money ....... going?
C - Well, it would be hard to understand .... because the thing was that they wanted to take the child off the passport for the custody case. I can't give you anything on that, because I really don't think Ramon has the money to go anywhere.
T - That's the only reason he's hanging around?
C - No, I'm not say that either. He's here because he's committed just as I am, to make the restaurant work.
T - How's your dad been? Is he still propping you up?
C - He's good. He helps me when I need and he has given us seme money.
T - How many nights a week are you trading?
C - Pardon, we are trading six (6) nights.
T - Are you?
C - Yeah, we have say twenty (20) people on Thursday nights. It's very up and down. One night it could be six (6), the next night you could do none, the next night you could do twenty (20) and we've been going around thinking we've beent he only one's that have been quite, but everyone's quite.
T - Have you ever given any thought to this? Did I ever say this to you. You help me and I'll help you. You know what's going to happen. I believe that we'll go ver close - I believe there will be no doubt that you won't be committed to trial on this bombing. I don't think there's any doubt about it.
C - What do you mean by "If you help me I'll help you"? .
T - Since I spoke to you last, your vehicle has been sent around the time, by two people.
C - Our vehicle?
T - I's say, they say.
C - There are a lot of Honda Civics.
T - Both people know you and they say it's your vehicle. Given it any consideration. What did I say "You help me and I'll help you". I know, I don't think there's any doubt that we're right.
C - Like you and Sgt. 'Tutt will be good to me if I can tell you everything I know. You would not charge me, but you charged me.
T - Tell us everything? No, no, no, no, no, no. You know who did it.
C - I really don't.
T - Ramon did it. Ramon did it. There's no doubt in the world about that. Now I don't know whether you were with him or went with him. I've got an idea that you might have helped him and I think I can er.. I'm going to make the same deal with them very shortly.
C - With them, what are you talking about?
T - Well I was going to say to them "You might find yourself standing in the dock beside these two people if my information is correct if you tell me what you know about it - if you give Ramon up, I'll look after you. I hope they don't give you the same and I hope they don't sign. Ramon did it, Ramon did it. There's no risk in the world. How he did it I'm not sure. I don't know whether you were there or you weren't there, but I know you knew about it. You helped him set this thing up.
C - I knew about it?
T - You know what - on your figures, I can show you where you doctored the figures. When all that goes before the Court, you're going to be, you're going to be the ringleader of it. I've got a statement from an Accountant. You know, you're in heaps of big shit Christa, I'll tell you now.
C - I haven't done anything.
T - Oh I don't agree with you. The whole thing's been set up to defraud the Insurace company and you play a major part in it. You had increased the insurance. You doctored the books. I've got your real figures on one page and a doctored page on the next one and a set of doctored ones on the next. You gave me those figures. Ramon's a very quiet and very clever bloke, but I know nothing about that, Christa knows all that.
C - Because I've always done the figures?
T - You're not going to sit there and tell me that you haven't doctored the figures, are you?
C - That's my private books.
T - They're not private anymore. They've become, they're going to become the property of the Court. I'm having independant forensic Accountants looking at them and they will tell me exactly what's ... backwards. At the time of your increase of loss of profits, you were losing Eight Thousand Dollars ($8,000.00) a week.
C - Eight Thousand Dollars ($8,000.00) a week?
T - Minimum.
C - So we haven't done the figures the same way.
How you going (new voice).
C - Good thank you. Well can I talk in front of him or...
T - Yeah.
C - Well, you tell me more about the deal.
T - Well what You're going to do - the deal is this - you can walk out if you me"Ramon up. That's it.
C - How can I say, I mean
T - You know what I mean.
C - I don't know that ..
T - He even said to a person, "We're going that bad," I will cause a calamity".
C - Really? That wasn't said in front of me.
T - Mate, he has thought about it. He has said it before. He has said it to people who are allegedly his friends, are the first people to say to us, Ramon has done it and he's thought about it. He's taken you in. He's obviously taking you in. The only way you can get out of it, is to give him up.
C - That is?
T - That's the deal.
C - That's the deal right? How can I know that what you're saying now today ..
T - You're going to have to take my word for it.
C - Right could you. I mean since I'm already charged, could you? Um ...
T - Certainly, I will go to the Court and say look ..
C - Could you go to the Court or to my Solicitor or go through him, through the right channel? I mean I'm not saying Ramon has done it because I don't have any proof right?
T - This is what I can do. I can apply to the AttorneyGeneral, because you've given me information leading to the conviction of the appropriate person, to have your matter squashed.
C - Go on.
T - And you can see the report on it. I'll do it in your presence. I'll give a copy to your Solicitor. Only on the condition, only on the condition you give Ramon up. I can't go any further unless you do.
C - Can you tell me what his ex-wife had to say?
T - His ex-wife is a very lovely lady.
C - I've only seen the other side of her.
T - Oh, she's lovely mate. She's a very nice person.
C - Basically me ....
T - His ex-wife told me about him - that's another matter I want to talk to him about. He had in insurance job on a motor car.
C - On a motor car?
T - A Six Hundred Dollar ($600.00) motor car which he got Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00)for.
C - Tell me more.
T - Well you know all about it - what he was going to do. He was going to take it out on the road and run off the road and claim the Insurance.
C - What I know, is that he had a heart attack, nearly had a heart attack.
T - Bullshit.
C - It was told to us by the hospital that he took Codral Forte and blacked out.
T - A very prominent member of the Spanish community said that Ramon had said there is no doubt, Ramon did do the wrong thing....
C - Could you give me names, or?
T - I don't want to disclose them at the moment.
C - I know ..
T - He was the bloke also who alerted me to the fact that he was going to piss off, take off from the country.
C - That's interesting because um... Really, honest I don't know anything about that. .
T - He's buggered now because he hasn't go his passport.
C - Pardon.
T - He's buggered now because he hasn't go any passport and he's got no money. He's living off you and your father. Mate he's a grub, I'll tell you right now. He's a deadset bastard and the longer you hang around with him. Well, my old dad used to say to me, mate if you lie down with the dogs, you'll get fleas.
C - I know that.
T - You know - you know that I'm right' in what I'm saying. He's taking you down -to the extend to where you are now standing in this bloody Police Station and charged with a most serious offence.
C - I know that.
T - And I tell you what - in the long run, we will shake the life out of both of you because - I can never guarantee what the Court will do to you, but by the christ there is a lot we can do to you and you come over Christa, as a painted lady - Christa the ringleader.
C - And that's not true.
T - But it looks that way. You're the one who effects the insurance increases - you're the one who does the books.
C - But I did it for a different reason.
T - You might have done it for a different reason, but in light of the bombing, it looks like and people are entitled to assume.
C - I know I know.
T - This is a deadset snowball on the Insurance Company and that's what people will believe.
C - But there's a lot of people.
T - Everybody who's been associated with Ramon will tell you this - if you don't know who did it, you'd be the only silly bastard in Byron Bay.
C - People associated with Ramon or friends or, who are you talking about?
T - People that Ramon considers to be friends of his. People said he as talked about it before.
C - I didn't realise he has as many close friends as that.
T - Well these people are associates anyway - plus friends.
C - It says a lot of things about Ramon that you say that basically, when I came from Sydney I met Ramon as a hairdresser and at the same time from his mouth I heard a lot of things about her being a prostitute.
T - She's not a prostitute, she's never been a prostitute. She's a bloody ... she's very well bred, comes from a very nice family, she's a lovely person.
C - Well as I say, they, I have always been under the impression CONNOLLY - From Ramon?
C - No from other people.
T - Go and talk to her about what Ramon used to tell her about you and you can handle the situation. He's just a bloody deadset con-man.
C - What did he tell her?
T - I'd like your father to be in listening to this conversation. If I made the same deal to your father, I know what he'd tell you to do. Do you want to cut your losses mate and get out of it while you can.
C - What did Ramon tell me about her or it's not permitted. It's really appropriate I presume.
T - It's not important. He's just conned bur same way he's conned you.
C - Well I didn't realise they had any money to be honest with you.
(Over radio "Ballina")
T - She's got plenty.
C - That's another thing, I've never seen her family, as I say, in the time of the Restaurant, needed money, my father has always given it. She was never prepared, although she had a partnership with her husband really.
T - Hey,
C - She cut.
T - Ramon cut her off. She said she tried to talk him out of going into the Restaurant.
C - That's interesting because she wanted to be in Ballina with her child, it was better for the child.
T - Ah no, that was all Ramon's idea. I'm going to do this for the girl. Come up to the country. Live up in the country.... She tells a completely different story than Ramon tells.
C - So you say that allegations at the beginning when you said that you know that she was a prostitute ..
T - That's not right, she's a very kind lady mate and we'll present in Court the same way. She's a School Teacher by occupation.
C - She's still teaching or?
T - No, she's hiding from Ramon. We know that.
C - Why would she hide from him?
T - She doesn't like him. At all. He's treated her like an arse.
C - Then why would she be hiding from him. She's got nothing to fear from him.
T - She does. He's a 'basher. We both know that. You and I know that 'Christa. I'm right aren't I?
C - About.. Are you going to go over the same thing?
T - After today when this Brief is put together it's too lake to do anything. Today you've got to make up your mind.
C - So you're prepared to ....
T - I'm prepared to do this. You tell me exactly what you know about it and what happened and how he did it and I will type up a report to the Attorney General now and at the time we go to Court and say, I want the matter to be adjourned until the Attorney General will make a decision and this lady's given an undertaking to give evidence against that bloke ther and I am seeking an approval to withdraw the charge.
C - Will you give me time to think about it, because I don't have any information that can implicate Ramon.
T - You know how much you know about Ramon. I don't know how much you haven't told me, but you've got to cut your losses. I don't care if you were involved. Just tell me you weren't. Only Ramon did it and I don't care what ... even tell me - this is what we did, this is what we talked about.
C - But I can't lie. I can't lie. In certain things the truth will make it sound ..
T - Christa you must know about it.
C - Not in the ways that you're saying in terms of who did it like the, the letter from the Republican Army and all this
T - I don't know anything about that. That might just have been a side ...
C - I mean.
T - You had nothing to do with that?
C - No basically I didn't have anything to do with the bombing either. We'd been getting strange phone calls. I don't know if that's any help.
T - No, I wouldn't worry too much about it. But listen lady, that a good deal.
C - And I sit in front of you and you.
T - Mate you've got to trust me. I have no doubt.
C - I'm not saying I'm not trusting you. It's just jail.
T - I'll make every effort. I can guarantee there's nothing I haven't given you. I'd nearly say to my Sergeant, you know. Now I know you're involved because you help set it up. In the sense with the Insurances and all that, but that doesn't matter. It's important that we can convict this man.
C - Where would you send him, back to Spain?
T - Spain. He's no good for Australia. He's no good. What's your father think of him?
C - My father doesn't really think about anything at the moment. He's going through a really hard time because I'm his only child that he's responsible for.
T - You know I have a sick feeling that you can write yourself off forever. Now you know that don't you.
C - Yep.
T - You won't get a job, particularly in a business.
C - I know that.
T - You know I'm right. I can guarantee that we can wipe your slate clean. You should have thought about it when I offered it to you before. You would never have been in the dock.
C - Yeah but then when you said to me "Tell me everything you know". I did but I got charged anyway.
T - Yeah, but did you tell me everything you know. What you got to tell me. You gonna have to be frank with me. You can sit down and talk to me. You can tell me, when you discussed it, what you decided to do, who was going to do it.
C - Ramon never discussed the actual bombing with me and once again I am always the one who has done.
T - But he's got to have discussed setting up the Insurance and all that?
C - I always do the Insurance.
T - Yeah but it was increased considerably.
C - Because that's where the money is.
T - But it was set up. See that's where you've got to be careful. If you tell me the whole truth and give me enough, what we've discussed. Now it's going to be hard for you. You have to make up you mid whether you're going with the goodies and looking after me and tell Ramon, I want to get out - I've decided to come clean and I'm going to after ME and secure my future... I'll guarantee you, we will get you committed to Trial and you will to to Trial. That will cost you Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) a day.
C - Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) a day.
T - Yeah and I'll tell you what .. when people can see that increase in Insurance and all the financial problems you had.
C - I'll have to think about it, if while I'm here, if you could perhaps be possible to get that album.
T - Where are they?
C - It's the one there, it's the grey one.
CONNOLLY - It's a presentation one?
C - Presentation one because there's someone really interested in some things. I'd like to get it down
T - And yet, you'll think totally seriously about what I've said to you?
C - I will.
T - Would a photocopy?
C - It should photocopy - if you could keep the photocopy so I could send the nice one.
T - Right oh.
C - What did you want to use it for anyway.
T - Well I think we wanted to show um, the plant equipment, so we need one. I'm sorry.
C - Well if I could make photocopies then or you wouldn't have the negatives would you, cause I haven't got any.
T - See that's another thing that I consider I would do anything for you, if you'd co-operate with me.
CONNOLLY - See where it is will you. Have a look and get it out. You've got to think very seriously about that.
C - I know.
T - You know - good. And I don't care if you go back and tell him that.
C - No, no the thing to do, once again, what I know about is his ex-wife. I mean ..
T - His ex-wife is a very nice lady.
C - I know what you're saying.
T - His ex-wife's said without any doubt in the world at the moment, "I knew the minute I heard that he did the banking. I know that". She said that always said that if I got that bad, I'll get out. He's an enigma freak.
C - She lived with him in Spain.
T - She met him in Spain.
C - No.
T - He swept her off her feet.
C - Apparently he had money.
T - No, he is a car Salesman.
C - A Car Salesman.
T - Yes.
C - I've never heard that.
T - There's more things about him that you don't know. He's no good mate. He's a con-man. He has a reputation as a con-man. The Spanish community him a con-man. They discussed it with him. They want him out of the country. He gives them all a bad name.
C - He was a Car Salesman whe he came her, or in Spain?
T - Spain.
C - What I know is that he came her with money and Victoria basically, well she was with him when he had money and after the money ran out the love ran out.
T - No she's got plenty.
C - Really.
T - Um, her father is will, I don't like to say it, but he's worked hard all his life and he's comfortable well off. She will cane into a bit of money.
C - Why is she? That is right, when the Restaurant, the Restaurant made enough money to pay the bills, but I always had to pay Victoria and the child because he had a family to look after, I mean
T - That's natural.
C - That's natural, but at the same time when the money was really short, why didn't she ask her father ever for any money?
T - Well, her father told her whenever she was with Ramon Bracamonte, he would give her no money. But I'm sorry but you're on your own.
C - I remember when her father came to the Restaurant with his wife. He doesn't live in Ballina and was very nice. She had a very broken childhood, that comes from a broken home. It's quite interesting to hear what you're saying. I need to - I will get in contract with my Solicitor and have a bit of a chit to him and I can mention to him what.
T - You can mention this Christa - if you give me the evidence I'm looking for against Ramon and that's telling me everything you know about it and I'm satisfied with it, I'll make representations to .... to change his mind and get you indemnify to defer prosecution, but you've got to give me Ramon and anybody else who might be involved.
C - If I don't know that part?
T - Just tell me the truth. Tell me where it might have been, how it might have happened. I'm telling you the truth about the car matter, it has been seen,(this part cannot be deciphered).
C - You've got to believe' me. I don't want to be charged with something that I haven't done.
T - Look it's' like two people going to rob a bank. One sits in the car, the other.
C - But I didn't sit in the car.
T - But one goes in.
C - Yeah.
T - The bloke inside pulls a gun and murders somebody and they both get charged with murder, even if the bloke in the car knew nothing of it. And both are entitled to be convicted as being principal in the commission of the crime. By you just setting up the Insurance, knowingly or not.
C - Well I had other reasons for doing what I've done.
T - Yeah but it's quite obvious you knew about it. That's going to be my allegation anyway. My allegation will be that you and he engineered this thing. That you set it up and that he, in some way has stick-light it. Was close enough at the time, had the knowledge to do it. He either did it himself or had an assistant do it. I don't know how he's done it. I don't want you to have to show he'd one it.
C -Um.
T - Who's your Solicitor?
C - Harry Smith.
T - I don't like him to be quite honest.
C - I really find, I don't want to deal with Byron Bay...
T - Harry Smith won't be present when I talk to you again.
C - Right.
T - You've got to come and talk to me and trust me.
C - Right.
T - Ring your father and ask him what you should do. Get him to ring me.
C - I'll give him a call. I would not call my father today because he's having too many problems. My brother had an accident so its just.
T - Car accident. I'm sorry, is he all right?
C - He'll be okay. I think he's in hospital. Sorry.
T - You're right. It's a share to see you get yourself into these situations. Do you think about the years ahead.
C - I do. I do. I'm not please about the things you say about Ramon.
T - He's no saint. You must know that.
C - Not in the sense that you say that Ramon in a con-man. Ramon has always been - I cannot imagine anyone being.
T - Yeah go on, sorry Christa.
C - I just can't imaninge what you've said. That Ramon could be the one person.
T - But that's why he's so successful. I'll tell you what mate, when there's no chance of Ramon being involved, it will be wrong. I'll tell you. And mate.
C - I know I don't know any of his Spanish friends anyway. I only know one. From what I know - I mean everything is you know up front, so it's very hard for me to just accept something that someone's - how you say - just so different, like the Car Salesman. (More talking - cannot be deciphered)
T - She know knows that he was going to marry her to get her father's money. That's what she said.
C - You know she's been married?
T - Yes, he's quite nice her husband. I told her things about you. The' truth about you.
C - Things about me? I hope it wasn't all bad.
T - No I haven't heard anybody say anything bad about you, except you got mixed up with him.
C - But' when you're in love with someone.
T - Yeah but look after yourself now. It's a big decision to make. This is the best I can give you that. You can wipe your slate clean. Don't stand by and go down with a bloke if it's not worth it mate.
C - Right if you can give me a bit of time - I have to
T - Yeah right oh, but you think very seriously about it. (Background noises - lady talking)
T - Listen, I don't know Christa if it is such a good idea to ring the other bloke Harry, because he has an interest in the other bloke Ramon.
C - So you say I should go to someone completely independant.
T - You go to someone totally independant and say, can the Police do it.
C - Well I'm more interested, I don't care about these ones, the ones you got spares of (referring to photos).
MCCANN - Who's your buyer Christa?
C - A lady in Sydney, well basically she is interested to have a look at everything, she may just allow me to stay managing if for her.
M - Oh very good that's nice. You'll get a wage then. No worries.
C - That would be lovely.
CONNOLLY - You can't have the book, what we'll be able to give you is spares which you can have copies of.
C - Unless you can make me photocopies.
CONNOLLY - What about the originals like that.
C - That would be lovely.
CONNOLLY - I'm just going through give you duplicates.
C - The thing is that I need to show to her is ..
M - We have spare of all those.
C - That will be excellent.
CONNOLLY - That's what I'm going through now. Just getting duplicates. I have everything for you.
(conversation in background)
T - That will be all behind you. Over and done with finished.
Conversation with someone entering room)
T - I told Christa I'll make an application to have the matters withdrawn on an indemnity.
PO - On indemnity, oh yeah.
T - and eh, we will, we will
M - It's not you you silly, going the way you're going. I mean you re the brains behind it all. You're the one the one that's put in all the effort to make this restaurant and you're the one that that put all the money up, or your dad..
C - Your father.
T - You definitely ... all your life mate and you know he was going to be there at the end-of it all.
C - I could not say that.
T - I was right about him going, don't you worry about that. That was his next step. He approached somebody about money to go. That's where the passport comes in. That's what we were told. I got it from the Spanish community. He approached the Spanish community about funds to go overseas and they said "no". They contacted the police over there, who contacted me and you know that your offender at bloody Byron Bay, has got a passport and
he is looking for mone to go overseas.
C - And that wasn't money for his child.
T - He is not interested.
C - I heard that he was looking for money to get custody of the child.
T - He is not interested. He won't get custody of the child.
C - No for the custody, I mean access. He needed money to bring his child payments up to date.
T - All of a sudden it is important to get access, because he wants to put himself to Court as being, a loving caring father who's got this poor child. Mate he's good. He is an arsehole.
C - So you're saying he actually has asked someone for money to leave the country or just asked?
M - Why do you think he wants to leave the country.
C - Is that to leave the country?
M - You bet, my word. You'll be left with the bundle, that's what s going to happen to you, with no prospects.
TAPE ENDS HERE.
ABBREVIATI0NS:
C - Christa Van der Merwe
T - Sergeant Thcmas
CONNOLLY - Police Officer
M - McCann
PO - Unidentified Police Officer
DISCLAIMER - Every effort has been made to comply with suppression orders or statutory provisions prohibiting publication that may apply to this judgment or decision. The onus remains on any person using material in the judgment or decision to ensure that the intended use of that material does not breach any such order or provision. Further enquiries may be directed to the Registry of the Court or Tribunal in which it was generated.
Decision last updated: 31 October 2014