NewsBite

Nicola Gobbo: Barrister exposed as Lawyer X informant describes 24/7 Victoria Police surveillance

A gangland barrister exposed as a police informer had every facet of her life controlled by police after returning from overseas, a court has been told.

Why Lawyer X is suing State of Victoria

Former gangland barrister Nicola Gobbo lived under “24/7” police surveillance after she was unmasked as an informer, likening her life to “imprisonment”, a court has been told.

On Thursday, the 51-year-old told Victoria’s Supreme Court that she was whisked from the country before a High Court ruling revealed she was Lawyer X.

She is seeking compensation, alleging Victoria Police failed to keep her identity secret after providing information on underworld figures, some of whom she also represented.

It’s alleged she was “induced” into becoming an informant after reaching out to police for help, with her health and career damaged following her exposure.

Nicole Gobbo was revealed as a police informer after a High Court ruling in December 2018. Picture: Supplied/ ABC News
Nicole Gobbo was revealed as a police informer after a High Court ruling in December 2018. Picture: Supplied/ ABC News

The State of Victoria is defending the claim, arguing it cannot be held responsible because she gave information voluntarily and with full knowledge of the risks.

Ms Gobbo is giving evidence via a video link from an undisclosed location due to lingering concerns for her safety, more than five years after her role as an informer during Melbourne’s gangland war was made public.

The former high-profile lawyer can be seen by the judge and bar table, with the public only able to hear her voice projected in the courtroom.

She had changed her name three times and appearance due to security threats, the court was told.

Despite a few interruptions due to technical difficulties, Ms Gobbo told the court that she was living in a hotel room overseas when media reports identified her in early 2019.

“We were living in a hotel room and basically doing tourist kinds of things,” she said.

“Victoria police present in that country were telling me what I could or couldn’t do each day.”

Ms Gobbo is represented by barrister, Tim Tobin SC. Picture: NewsWire / Luis Enrique Ascui
Ms Gobbo is represented by barrister, Tim Tobin SC. Picture: NewsWire / Luis Enrique Ascui

In December the previous year, the High Court ruled it would make her role as Informer 3838 public but allowed a three-month period for arrangements to be made.

Ms Gobbo told the court that police kept her in a “holding pattern”, moving location regularly, before she chose to part ways three months later.

“Ultimately we parted ways because of, um, issues about what the future held,” she said.

“Them not being able to provide me with any kind of actual answers to questions.”

Ms Gobbo told the court that she found a home in a gated community and remained overseas until the end of the year when she had exhausted her visa.

The court was told Ms Gobbo became associated with underworld figures including Carl Williams (pictured). Picture: Supplied
The court was told Ms Gobbo became associated with underworld figures including Carl Williams (pictured). Picture: Supplied

She returned to Australia, telling the court she was greeted by officials at one Australian airport with “hello Lawyer X” and later crossed into Victoria.

Ms Gobbo said she lived under 24/7 constant surveillance by police over 2020 and 2021, likening it to imprisonment.

Officers from a “certain unit”, she said, had complete control over her life, including where to live, where she could go and who she could speak to.

“I literally could not leave the house unless it was for the purposes of being taken somewhere or somewhere Victoria Police had prearranged or pre-approved,” she said.

“I couldn’t leave the premises or even step out the front of the property without getting told to get back inside.”

Ms Gobbo said she would often have an unmarked car situated outside the multiple locations she was housed, hidden cameras, and four to six officers accompanying her to appointments or errands.

She told the court Victoria Police had threatened to remove her children from her care if she did not “abide by any direction given”.

The judge-only trial is expected to last four weeks. Picture: NewsWire / Penny Stephens
The judge-only trial is expected to last four weeks. Picture: NewsWire / Penny Stephens

In 2020, she said, police had promised that she would be relocated to a safe country “within three months”, but it took more than a year to learn that she, and her family, would not be accepted.

“It was an enormously frustrating period because there weren't answers to anything,” she said.

Ms Gobbo said Victoria Police had promised to pay five years of expenses in the “plan-a country” but withdrew this and claimed they had run out of options to resettle her.

She and her family left Australia on their own at the end of 2021, visiting multiple countries they were seeking to settle in.

Ms Gobbo told the court she was contacted by the Office of Special Investigator, former High Court judge Geoffrey Nettle, KC, who was appointed to review the Lawyer X case and review possible criminal cases in 2022.

“I’m broken, I’m tired and broken,” she said.

“I remain really frustrated about not being able to move forward and resolve all the personal things.”

The public outing of Ms Gobbo triggered one of Victoria’s biggest legal scandals, with a royal commission finding in 2020 more than 1000 criminal convictions could be compromised.

The judge-only trial continues.

Originally published as Nicola Gobbo: Barrister exposed as Lawyer X informant describes 24/7 Victoria Police surveillance

Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/breaking-news/nicola-gobbo-barrister-exposed-as-lawyer-x-informant-describes-247-victoria-police-surveillance/news-story/34b66cfc64a593f64f9ebe878f9adb88