The inspector of the National Anti-Corruption Commission reviewed its decision not to pursue six people mentioned in the robodebt royal commission report, finding commissioner Paul Brereton didn't recuse himself after a conflict of interest.
A review of the decision not to investigate the robodebt referral should be done by an appropriate person, the watchdog's inspector Gail Furness recommended.
Public statement regarding decision to reconsider Robodebt Royal Commission referrals - — NACCgovau (@NACCgovau) https://t.co/0GxyphEguH pic.twitter.com/vxPmqSQO7COctober 29, 2024
Mr Brereton declared he knew, and had a close association with, one of the people but failed to appoint a delegate and remove himself from the decision-making process, the inspector said.
As part of the review, a retired judge opined the decision "was affected by apprehended bias".
It means a reasonable person may think the decision wasn't made in an impartial manner.
No suggestions of actual bias and no findings of intentional wrongdoing or other impropriety were made.
"In light of the conflict of interest, the NACC commissioner should have not only designated a delegate but removed himself from the related decision-making processes and limited his exposure to the relevant factual information," the inspector's report states.
"This was not done."
Robodebt resulted in many welfare recipients being falsely accused of owing the government money. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)
Mr Brereton involved himself in the decision in a "comprehensive" manner, the inspector found.
This was an error of judgment and the commissioner engaged in officer misconduct, which was defined as not being unlawful but arising from a mistake of law or fact, the inspector said.
Between 2016 and 2019, the former coalition government's scheme recovered more than $750 million from almost 400,000 people.
Many welfare recipients were falsely accused of owing the government money and robodebt was linked to several suicides.
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