O'Malley v Keelty, Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police
[2005] FCA 861
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2005-09-28
Before
Madgwick J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (9 paragraphs)
madgwick J: 1 This is an application for a writ of mandamus to be issued against the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police under s 39 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth). The basis for this application is the alleged failure of the Australian Federal Police ('AFP') to investigate all aspects of some possible breaches of the Telecommunications (Interception) Act 1979 (Cth). 2 In essence, although this was not specifically pleaded, the applicant suspects and alleges that he has been the victim of a breach of s 7(1) of the Telecommunications (Interception) Act 1979 (Cth). The subsection relevantly provides that: '(1) A person shall not: (a) intercept; (b) authorize, suffer or permit another person to intercept; or (c) do any act or thing that will enable him or her or another person to intercept; a communication passing over a telecommunications system.'
Background 3 The genesis of these proceedings is the alleged unauthorised interception of Mr O'Malley's two home telephone lines over several years. The facts that gave rise to Mr O'Malley's concern are as follows. 4 From 1988 to 1996, Mr O'Malley had been employed as an economist in what is now known as the Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources ('the Department'). He held a Grade 4 (lower-middle range) position that was equivalent to a graduate entry level position. During his employment in the Department, Mr O'Malley formed the view that some senior members of the Department were engaging in serious misconduct. Specifically, he felt that 'Z-plated' Commonwealth cars were being purchased in excessive numbers and bestowed upon favoured people within the Department. Subsequently, an inquiry was conducted. The inquiry consisted of a taped interview with Mr O'Malley. It appears that no further steps were taken in relation to this allegation. 5 Also while employed in the Department, Mr O'Malley applied for a promotion. During the selection process, two references were unexpectedly submitted for a competitor from the highest echelons of the Department. Mr O'Malley perceived the fact and timing of these submissions to be unusual and irregular, given the relatively minor nature of the position in question. Moreover, Mr O'Malley formed the impression that one member of the selection committee had an inappropriately close connection with one of the senior staff members who had supplied a reference. These concerns were raised in Parliament and the issue was dealt with in a Senate Estimates Committee hearing. 6 As a result of these two incidents, Mr O'Malley formed the view that his actions had been resented by at least some of the Department's senior members, and that consequently, he had fallen into serious disfavour in the Department. 7 This impression was reinforced by the perceived manner in which the Department later implemented redundancies. Initially, Mr O'Malley volunteered for a redundancy, but subsequently withdrew his offer in order to 'test the mood of the Department'. Mr O'Malley was made excess immediately after this withdrawal. Apparently, the practice within the Department was to provide a standardised employment reference to those who accepted a voluntary redundancy, yet one was not made available to Mr O'Malley. Instead, he was provided with a less valuable, but still formal, acknowledgement of his service to the Department. As a result, Mr O'Malley felt that he had been discriminated against. 8 Mr O'Malley believed, from the combination of these events, that at least one member of the Department had come to feel considerable animosity towards him. This belief then generated the suspicion that this person (or persons) was responsible for tapping his telephone lines, once he later formed the view that calls on his home telephones were being intercepted - see below. 9 After the Departmental incidents, Mr O'Malley enrolled in a Certificate in English Language Teaching to Adults (CELTA) course run by the University of Cambridge through the University of Queensland with the aim of qualifying as a teacher of English to students from a non-English speaking background. While studying in Queensland, Mr O'Malley had a number of telephone conversations with his sister in which they discussed his plans for the future. While Mr O'Malley had also discussed the future with his family, only his sister was privy to his then plan to undertake a certain journey. However, it soon became apparent to Mr O'Malley that at least one other person in Queensland knew of this plan. In July 2003 a tutor in his course relayed that information to a group of students. It was at this point that suspicion became firm belief, and Mr O'Malley hired a private investigator. 10 An investigator, Mr Hippe, was asked to examine Mr O'Malley's telephone lines and determine whether or not they had been tapped. Mr O'Malley says that Mr Hippe discovered a section of wire running off the inside of a telephone pole that fed into the connector box on his land. The main telephone line also ran from this connector box to the applicant's house. It was Mr O'Malley's understanding (following a discussion with Mr Hippe) that, at the conclusion of this inspection, Mr Hippe held a firm view that Mr O'Malley's telephone had been tapped. However, when Mr Hippe's reports arrived, they were not consistent with this conclusion. The first report was equivocal or inconclusive (at best), and the second report ruled out the possibility of telephone tapping all together. Mr O'Malley attributed this inconsistency to interference by, and/or pressure from those persons responsible for the telephone interference. That Mr Hippe would be susceptible to such interference and pressure was explained by Mr O'Malley by reference to the fact that Mr Hippe also worked in Canberra as an investigator for a federal government agency. 11 By this time, Mr O'Malley had also become involved in a dispute with the University of Queensland after he failed the CELTA course. The University had explained his failure by reference to his inadequate attendance, however, Mr O'Malley contended that the University was instead actuated by the confidential information that he had passed to his sister over the telephone. The fact that the course had a global failure rate of only three percent, and that his command of the English language was considerable (especially when contrasted with the rest of the relevant student body, made up of many individuals for whom English was not their first language) provided the foundation for this view. This view was also reinforced by the knowledge that the last person to fail the course at the University of Queensland was an individual with a very severe hearing impediment. From these factors, Mr O'Malley inferred that the antipathetic telephone listener(s) had passed on the confidential information to agents of the University, who in turn, ensured that Mr O'Malley failed the course. 12 Mr O'Malley argues that the disclosure of the confidential information gives rise to a reasonable suspicion that the investigator incident was not simply a case of a consultant who had initially been over-zealous, only to revise and soften that appraisal on reflection once the writing process began. Rather, Mr O'Malley contends that the leaking of the information reinforces his suspicion that Mr Hippe was some how pressured by the people who bore him ill will. 13 The final incident raised by Mr O'Malley involved the attempted sale of his house. Mr O'Malley was the owner of a well-built, comfortable and very presentable house in the ACT. On indicating a wish to sell the house, he was immediately inundated with approaches from real estate agents. However, at one point, two of the agents suddenly lost interest in being selling agents for the property - a phenomenon uncommon among such agents. Mr O'Malley suspected that this withdrawal of interest was a result of pressure applied by his Departmental enemies to the real estate agents in order to cause economic embarrassment to him. Mr O'Malley did not suggest that the agents were part of any conspiracy but that they had been warned away from him. 14 Mr O'Malley also placed significance upon the publication of a newspaper article about a former competitor for a job who had become employed as a "translator" for Hansard in the Federal Parliament. Similarly, Mr O'Malley put forward evidence of a dispute he had with the University of Queensland and the University of Cambridge in relation to a notification of result and the mode of payment of fees for his course. 15 Mr O'Malley contends that all of these incidents exhibit a strange and suspicious pattern; in short: a conspiracy. He approached the police with this information in the hope of prompting an investigation, but was not satisfied with their response.