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Parramatta Eels to be investigated by Police Fraud Squad for alleged tampered documents

PARRAMATTA star Corey Norman was allegedly handed cash in the car park of Top Ryde while officials were allegedly liquid-papering over dodgy invoices, it has been revealed.

The Parramatta Eels club is under fire yet again, this time regarding documents which were allegedly whited out.
The Parramatta Eels club is under fire yet again, this time regarding documents which were allegedly whited out.

PARRAMATTA officials allegedly liquid-papered over dodgy invoices, while crucial tapes of Eels board meetings mysteriously disappeared during the NRL’s forensic investigation of the club, explosive documents reveal.

The Sunday Telegraph can ­reveal the liquid-papering allegations — contained in extraordinary diary notes by the NRL’s integrity unit boss Nick Weeks — have now attracted the interest of the state’s Police Fraud Squad and NSW ­Liquor and Gaming.

Further new documents attached to the NRL’s Breach Notice against the club also make the allegation that star player Corey Norman was handed cash in the car park of Top Ryde Shopping Square by former Eels recruiter Peter Nolan.

The fresh documents have emerged on a day Parramatta’s season was effectively ended, with the extraordinary deduction of 12 competition points, the cancellation of the registration of the Eels’ five most senior officials — led by chairman Steve Sharp — and a $1 million fine.

But the club’s difficulties are just beginning. Fraud Squad and NSW Liquor and Gaming investigations are in full swing, with both bodies making their presences felt at the club’s HQ in recent weeks, and the Tax Office also investigating. Meanwhile, three separate proposals to overthrow the entire Parramatta Leagues Club board are pending.

“Liquid Paper-Gate” is already under the microscope. Mr Weeks’ diary notes refer to a confidential conversation with the club’s lawyer, John de Mestre, about an apparently doctored invoice from Zibara Clothing.

Nick Weeks, head of the NRL Integrity Unit, with NRL CEO Todd Greenberg at yesterday’s press conference into the Parramatta Eels. Picture: Bob Barker
Nick Weeks, head of the NRL Integrity Unit, with NRL CEO Todd Greenberg at yesterday’s press conference into the Parramatta Eels. Picture: Bob Barker

The NRL alleges Zibara issued inflated invoices to Parramatta totalling hundreds of thousands of dollars, despite the fact that in some cases no goods and services were provided in exchange for the money. These inflated invoices ­allowed Eels players to receive third-party agreements.

In a diary entry from April 16 this year, Mr Weeks, who was gathering evidence for the NRL investigation, told of a conversation he had with Mr de Mestre where the latter talks of “a Zibara invoice that had been liquid papered”.

Mr Weeks’ diary entry also revealed Mr de Mestre had told him the recording of all but a minute of a crucial January 2014 board meeting — where, according to board minutes, plans to cheat the salary cap had been discussed at length — had been deleted: “JDM … told me that the recording of the January 2014 board meeting didn’t work and that only 1 minute had been recorded.”

Mr de Mestre was last night ­unable to comment.

Meanwhile, the new allegations on payments to players have emerged from a signed statement by former Eels CEO Scott Seward, ­obtained by the NRL as part of its investigation.

Mr Seward said in his statement the $3000 a month was to cover Norman’s rent, alleging that Mr Nolan, now a recruiter with the Broncos, made some of the payments in person. “On one occasion I recall Nolan telling me he handed Norman a cash payment in the car park at Top Ryde,” he said.

Norman’s manager Paul Sutton had no comment yesterday. Both Mr Nolan and Mr Seward did not return calls.

The extraordinary allegations and penalties against the Eels have turned also key Western Sydney ­advocates against the club’s board.

Western Sydney Leadership Dialogue chairman Chris Brown said: “This entire episode has been a stain on Western Sydney’s reputation. Everybody who’s been involved should have the decency to bugger off. That means the entire board has to go.”

TIMELINE

March 9

EXPLOSIVE internal minutes from March 2014, signed off by Eels chairman Steve Sharp, show the Parramatta board openly discussed strategies to skirt salary cap rules by rewarding third party agreement (TPA) providers with corporate boxes.

March 11

ARL Commission chairman John Grant announces a full forensic investigation “to get to the bottom of the allegations”.

April 6

FRESH revelations suggest past and present players, including Corey Norman, Chris Sandow, Will Hopoate, Reni Maitua, Willie Tonga, Justin Hunt, Nathan Peats, Lee Mossop and Cheyse Blair, were guaranteed hundreds of thousands of dollars in third-party payments.

April 27

TEXT messages emerge proving Eels CEO John Boulous was actively involved in discussions about a proposed $75,000 third-party agreement deal with Parramatta Council, which included Tim Mannah, Jarryd Hayne, Will Hopoate and Nathan Peats, in 2014.

May 3

THE NRL provisionally announces the club will be docked 12 competition points, stripped of its Auckland Nines title, five senior officials suspended and fined
$1.25 million for systematic salary-cap breaches.

Yesterday

THE NRL officially punishes the Eels, docking the club 12 competition points, issuing a whopping $1 million fine and revoking the club’s favourable for and against points differential.

Original URL: https://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/sport/nrl/parramatta-eels-to-be-investigated-by-police-fraud-squad-for-alleged-tampered-documents/news-story/a284a6bac579c513196d6adc92497167