49. He had another meeting with Mr Fragopoulos at the end of January 2001. Mr Fragopoulos asked him to go with him to Amsterdam, Madrid and South Africa to follow up two leads. One was the money issue concerning Dr Phillips. The other was the possibility of exporting fish from Australia to Europe. Mr Fragopoulos said that he saw significant potential arising from the effect of Mad Cow disease on the meat market in Europe. Mr Godfrey agreed to accompany Mr Fragopoulos. He arranged to take time off from his consultancy responsibilities from the end of February 2001. Mr Fragopoulos booked the air travel for both of them, and paid for it. They discussed Mr Godfrey's role as assisting as required with any contractual matters which might arise. Mr Godfrey said that he indicated to Mr Fragopoulos that because he was forgoing income in Australia, he would charge a consultancy fee for the period of absence. He indicated to Mr Fragopoulos what his rate would be. He said that he could not recall the rate he quoted, but he quoted a daily rate, a lower rate than he was charging for the Olympic work in Sydney. He said that the rate would include a component for his absence based on Australian Taxation Office rates for overseas travel. He rendered an invoice to Mr Fragopoulos in May 2001 which specified the rates. The invoice also included hotel costs and taxi fares. He charged for nine days at $2,200.00 per day, plus travelling allowance of $1,561.63, plus outgoings for hotels, taxis and meals. The invoice also included Qantas airfares of $8,231.80. A copy of the invoice was tendered without objection. The total amount of the invoice was $38,500.00 including $3,500.00 GST. The copy invoice in evidence is dated 2 May 2001 and printed on the letterhead of ICBM company. I had some difficulty understanding aspects of it. Firstly, the invoice included airfares, inconsistently with Mr Godfrey's evidence that Mr Fragopoulos paid for the airfares. Secondly, the total came to precisely $35,000.00 notwithstanding a number of small expense items, such as taxi fares of, for example, $19.13 and $27.92. I asked Mr Godfrey whether there had been a rounding figure inserted to bring the total to $35,000.00 but he denied this. It seemed to me at the time, and still seems to me, to beggar belief that by coincidence the total of so many small detailed amounts could lead to such a precise total.