With the trial of the spy Witness
K underway, many are wondering if a cloaked trial is merely another layer of
self-preservation.
The first
step in the trial of the former Australian spy known only as Witness K
and his lawyer Bernard Collaery has taken place in the ACT Magistrates Court.
The two are accused of conspiring
to reveal that former Foreign Minister Alexander Downer ordered
an espionage operation against the government of East Timor in 2004 in order to gain an
advantage in oil and gas negotiations with the newly independent state. Lawyers
for both defendants faced off against the prosecution in a small courtroom
presided over by Chief Magistrate Lorraine Walker.
Although the directions hearing
lasted only 15 minutes and covered preliminary formalities, enough was said to
shed light on what is at stake in the case ahead.
The prosecution wants as much of the case as possible to be heard in secret; the defence wants to keep secret only what’s necessary to protect Australia’s national security.
The prosecution offered “proposed
orders” for the magistrate to sign that would effectively ensure a closed
trial.
Witness K’s lawyer, Haydn
Carmichael, responded by supporting the ongoing suppression of K’s real name.
He said that such “anonymity is desired by him and is also a practical solution
to possible questions that might arise as to national security.”
To understand the importance of
this, it’s worth remembering that the Australian Secret Intelligence Service
requires a high degree of operational secrecy. It needs to reassure its agents
overseas that it will never reveal their identities. If foreign governments
were to learn K’s real name, they might be able to identify his agents in their
countries and take countermeasures against them.
Such governments might also be able
to take reprisals against K or his family if the opportunity arose. Failure to
keep K’s identity secret would also affect ASIS’s credibility in its other
operations. People who betray their country would no longer dare risk their
safety by dealing with Australia’s spies.
The opening phase of the trial
showed both Collaery and Witness K are fully committed to keeping these key
pieces of information secret.
However, Carmichael added that
anything on the charge sheet apart from K’s real name “is not subject to a
claim of national security classification.”
Public interest vs national
security
The more expansive secrecy
desired by the prosecution is another matter altogether. If granted, it would
prevent the public from hearing defence evidence that the 2004 bugging
operation could itself be considered a crime – a conspiracy to defraud the
government of East Timor under Section
334 of the Criminal Code of the ACT. The defence would be unable to put
forth evidence that the operation was planned and ordered in the ACT, as well.
This is a much more powerful
legal argument than a moral argument against spying for economic purposes.
This is the background of the
case: Australia and East Timor met as joint venture partners with consequent
mutual fiduciary duties under the 2002 Timor Sea Treaty. They negotiated
production sharing contracts, supposedly in good faith.
The espionage operation occurred
before and after the October 2004 round of negotiations, when East Timor’s
Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri and Secretary of State Jose Teixeira briefed their
cabinet colleagues about their negotiating position. Their briefings were
bugged – an action that is alleged to have given Australia’s negotiators an
unfair advantage.
Cheating or attempting to cheat a
joint venture partner in this way is an offence that would carry heavy civil
and criminal penalties under the laws of the ACT.
A court order to prevent the
public from hearing this would avoid embarrassing the Australian government,
but it is arguably irrelevant to national security.
Witness K’s lawyer also urged the
magistrate to exercise her “independent function” in determining what
constitutes grounds for national security exemptions, and not to accept the
prosecution’s claims at face value.
Underpinning this request is a 1982 case between
the Church of Scientology and the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation. In this case, the High Court was asked to determine whether it
could prevent ASIO from investigating the church in circumstances where it
claimed it did not pose a risk to security.
The High Court found against the
church but added:
"The court is not bound by the organization’s (ASIO’s) opinion as to what constitutes security or what is relevant to it.
Despite claims that intelligence
and national security are too complex to be understood outside the intelligence
community, courts routinely evaluate far more complex evidence in other areas:
elaborate taxation schemes, labyrinthine trust arrangements, recondite mergers
and acquisitions, sophisticated forensic evidence in criminal trials, and so
on.
According to the defence’s
argument, the ACT Magistrates Court is within its power to form its own opinion
and not defer reflexively to the prosecution’s view of what constitutes
national security.
The case has been adjourned until
29th October.
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Photo: Bernard Joseph Edward
Collaery (born 12 October 1944) is an Australian barrister, lawyer and
former politician. Collaery was a member of the Australian Capital Territory's first Legislative Assembly for
the Residents Rally party, from 1989 to 1992. He
served as Deputy Chief
Minister and Attorney-General from 1989 to 1991 in the Kaine Alliance
Government.
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