Government Response to the Report of the Taskforce on Reducing the Regulatory Burdens on Business
April 7, 2006Good Friday Appeal, Victorian opposition, industrial relations, petrol prices, protest at King’s Domain, AWB inquiry – Doorstop Interview, Camberwell
April 14, 2006Interview with Ross Stevenson & John Burns
3AW
Wednesday, 12 April 2006
8.25 am
SUBJECTS: Underworld crime, tax
STEVENSON:
26 after 8, that is The Untouchables music because Elliott Ness joins
us on the line, good morning Elliott.
TREASURER:
Good morning Ross.
STEVENSON:
People are thinking, that sounds like the Treasurer, Peter Costello. You are
the new Elliott Ness.
TREASURER:
Well, what is happening in Melbourne I think is a disgrace, a public disgrace.
You have got gangsters that are going on trial and disappearing, gangsters that
are being shot during trials, witnesses that are being executed, and it appears
that nobody can do anything about it. Well, one of the, at the federal level
of course one of the things that we can do is we can enforce tax laws against
criminals and try and hit them with tax assessments to unsettle them and take
some of their ill-gotten assets off them. But it is no substitute for charging
them with murder and locking them away by the way.
STEVENSON:
(inaudible) that is how they got Al Capone all of those years ago, you have
hit Tony Mokbel with a $4 million tax bill.
TREASURER:
Well, I can’t go into details about individual people but where somebody
makes an income from an illegal activity, even though the activity is illegal
you can still be taxed and so if the Tax Office can find a stream of income
that somebody has, even if it is illegal income and even if he should be put
in jail for getting it, if they don’t put you in jail for getting it at
least you can hit them with a tax assessment and make them cough some of it
back to the taxpayer. You can also incidentally hit them with the confiscation
of proceeds of crime.
STEVENSON:
It is called a (inaudible) statement, isn’t it, Peter? Was this your
idea to sort of fire this up again or…
TREASURER:
Well, you know as I…
STEVENSON:
…(inaudible) big TV shows?
TREASURER:
No, as a Victorian I am, you know I am pretty scandalised actually by what
is happening. I think there has been an attitude in the press that this is like
a live scene out of The Godfather and people have thought that it is
not all that serious. But the thing that gets me is the reason they are killing
each other of course is they are killing each other for the right to sell drugs
to our kids, to destroy the lives of our kids. That is what it is all about.
People say oh well, it doesn’t matter if criminal figures kill each other,
well it does actually because the only reason they are killing each other is
so they can make money out of addicting our kids to drugs and that is why it
ought to be closed down and stopped. Now, I re-emphasise again, this is not
the answer. The answer is to convict these people and put them in jail for murder
and amphetamine production and all sorts of crimes. But it is at least one thing
that the Commonwealth Government can do to stop this shocking trade.
STEVENSON:
Elliott, we thank you for your time.
TREASURER:
Good to be with you (inaudible).