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‘Fraud’: Drugs bombshell rocks AFL as secret Melbourne plot exposed

The AFL is in crisis with whistleblower testimony released in Parliament exposing an alleged plot of secret drug activity, cover ups and fraud.

Joel Smith, Simon Goodwin and Gillon McLachlan.
Joel Smith, Simon Goodwin and Gillon McLachlan.

The AFL has been accused of a “multi-hundred-million-dollar fraud” with bombshell testimony exposing an alleged systematic “cover up” of drug taking in the league.

A whistleblowing doctor has come forward with allegations the league facilitated a secret, off the books, drug testing operation designed to stop players from testing positive for cocaine.

Federal MP Andrew Wilkie on Tuesday night dropped a bomb on the football code in Parliament, providing claims from Melbourne Demons club doctor Zeeshan Arain, exiled former Melbourne Football Club president Glen Bartlett and Joel Smith’s father Shaun.

Joel Smith is facing allegations of Anti-Doping Rule Violations (ADRVs) for “Trafficking or Attempted Trafficking” of cocaine to third-parties.

Sports Integrity Australia (SIA) in February announced Smith was found to have cocaine and benzoylecgonine – the drug’s major substance – in his system after the Demons’ Round 23 win over Hawthorn on August 20, 2023.

That scandal may be just the tip of the iceberg, as informed by the bombshell address Mr Wilkie delivered to the House of Representatives on Tuesday night.

Mr Wilkie said he had signed testimony from all three whistleblowers.

Mr Wilkie’s address, made under the protection of parliamentary privilege, included several shocking claims, including:

— Drug abuse and illicit behaviour is prevalent across the AFL.

— Efforts were made by AFL executives and others to cover up Demons coach Simon Goodwin’s alleged cocaine use.

— Bartlett believes senior AFL executives hid their concerns about the alleged drugs use for 18 months.

— The Melbourne Football Club ran a secret operation of drug testing players at Dorevitch Pathology in Heidelberg (Melbourne’s north) in order to catch them from potentially testing positive when tested for doping violations by SIA agents.

— Former chief medical officer of the AFL, Peter Harcourt; was aware of the operation.

— There is evidence of wilful inaction by AFL chairman Richard Goyder and former CEO Gillon McLachlan.

— The AFL’s illicit drug policy is a “systemic failure” to protect players.

— An allegation the league has committed “a fraud on the governments that provide millions of dollars in support to the AFL”.

Joel Smith of the Demons. Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos.
Joel Smith of the Demons. Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos.
Simon Goodwin, Senior Coach of the Demons. Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images.
Simon Goodwin, Senior Coach of the Demons. Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images.

Mr Wilkie finished his bombshell address by calling directly for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to intervene.

“I call for intervention at the highest level and ask the Prime Minister to personally intervene in this matter, to study the documents in my possession and to do everything he can to restore and protect the reputation of our beloved game, because right now the term ‘white line fever’ has taken on a different and sinister meaning at the AFL,” Mr Wilkie said.

Mr Wilkie said Dr Arain claims the AFL wanted players to compete at all costs.

“If there are no illegal drugs in the player’s system they are free to play, and if there are drugs in their system the player is often asked to fake an ­injury,” Mr Wilkie said.

“They are advised to lie about a condition, while the ­results of the off-the-book tests are kept secret and are never shared with Sports Integrity Australia or WADA (World Anti Doping Agency).

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“In other words, hundreds of thousands of Australians will watch the game not knowing that the game has been secretly manipulated by the AFL and thousands of Australians will bet on that game not knowing the game has been secretly ­manipulated by the AFL.”

Wilkie said AFL players were leaving the sport “broken” and with “addiction issues”.

“I’ve also obtained a signed statement from retired player Shaun Smith, the father of player Joel Smith, who is of course under investigation for alleged cocaine trafficking to his teammates,” Mr Wilkie said.

“In his statement, Shaun maintains that his son had not been a cocaine user prior to joining the AFL and attributes his son’s situation to the AFL’s aiding and abetting of illegal drug use.

“To quote Shaun: If I had known that there was a massive drug problem at the AFL when my son was 14, I would have said ‘You’re playing baseball. You’re playing something else.’ To quote Shaun again: Something is not right when you get so many broken players.

Joel Smith, Simon Goodwin and Gillon McLachlan.
Joel Smith, Simon Goodwin and Gillon McLachlan.

“But too many players are coming out broken, with addiction issues that had not been addressed and in fact had been enabled, because the players are currently being treated as corporate cannon fodder, being expected to play at all costs, regardless of their health.

“In other words, for some players Aussie Rules turns out to be a game that destroys their lives forever. That must stop, because those of us in the know are sick of hearing AFL executives talk about player welfare, when we now know they are actually sabotaging player welfare.”

Goodwin in October strongly denied accusations he used illicit drugs.

The premiership-winning coach was in October asked during a live radio show if he uses illicit drugs, he replied “never”.

“I do not use illicit drugs. I give everything I can to my family and my team in a way that dedicates my life to my football club and to have this play out over three years where my reputation has been caught up in a board room battle,” he said.

He went on to say: “It has been documented over and over and over again in the public and it’s been really hard for myself, my family and enough is enough. I don’t use illicit drugs and I never will.”

Demons captain Max Gawn in February denied there is an illicit drug culture at the football club.

AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon at the time also said the league’s illicit drug policy was “under review”.

Federal MP Andrew Wilkie’s full address to parliament

I rise to bring the House’s attention to deeply troubling allegations of egregious misconduct within the AFL provided by former Melbourne Football Club president Glen Bartlett, former Melbourne team doctor Zeeshan Arain and Shaun Smith, father of Melbourne player and now alleged drug trafficker Joel Smith.

The allegations include: the prevalence of drug abuse and other illicit behaviour across the AFL; off-the-books drug testing of players at Dorevitch Pathology in Heidelberg, facilitated by the former chief medical officer of the AFL, Peter Harcourt; the resting of players testing positive in these secret tests ostensibly on account of injury; wilful inaction by AFL chairman Richard Goyder and former CEO Gillon McLachlan; and the removal of Mr Bartlett as president of Melbourne after he suggested to Mr Goyder and Mr McLachlan that AFL officials be regularly drug tested. The allegations are credible and detailed and provided in signed statements which have been given to me and which clearly identify the sources of the information.

The allegations are obviously deeply troubling, particularly the allegation of the systemic failure by the AFL to effectively test for and prevent the use of prohibited drugs or to support or, where necessary, sanction players and officials found to have used prohibited drugs. It’s deeply troubling because such appalling behaviour endangers the lives, safety and future of players and officials, subverts the official drug testing conducted by Sport Integrity Australia on behalf of the World Anti-Doping Authority and is a fraud on the governments that provide millions of dollars in support to the AFL, directly and indirectly, through tax breaks, grants and beneficial capital works conditional on the AFL being a signatory to and complying with the World Anti-Doping Code. This is not conjecture, with Dr Arain describing the matter clearly in this signed statement here. He states:

The off the books testing took place in Heidelberg Dorevitch. The former Chief Health Officer of the AFL, Peter Harcourt, gave me the contact of the guy at Heidelberg who would do the testing. Here is what happens as it has been described to me.

26/03/2024 MP Andrew Wilkie speaking in the Federation Chamber about drugs in AFL.
26/03/2024 MP Andrew Wilkie speaking in the Federation Chamber about drugs in AFL.

The AFL wants a player to play at all costs, and so the cover-up begins. If there are no illegal drugs in the player’s system, they are free to play. If there are drugs in their system, the player is often asked to fake an injury. They are advised to lie about their condition while the results of the off-the-books tests are kept secret and never shared with Sport Integrity Australia or WADA. In other words, hundreds of thousands of Australians will watch the game not knowing that the game has been secretly manipulated by the AFL. Thousands of Australians will also bet on that game not knowing that the game has been secretly manipulated by the AFL. So the next time you hear a player has a hamstring injury you could be forgiven for wondering what’s really going on.

But as Dr Arain also explains, this isn’t just a Melbourne problem; it’s an AFL problem, with multiple players coming to Melbourne from other teams with pre-existing cocaine dependencies more than suggesting that drug testing workarounds are in fact commonplace elsewhere in the AFL. Moreover, the documents in my possession also indicate a shocking unwillingness by senior AFL executives to address drug abuse by players and executives, particularly in relation to cocaine usage. For instance, here are very detailed notes of a telephone meeting between Gillon McLachlan, Richard Goyder and Glen Bartlett.

Two things jump out at me from this record. The first is the cavalier way the AFL executives discussed Mr Bartlett’s concerns about alleged cocaine use by Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin, which is reflected in this signed statement by Mr Bartlett where he says he believes efforts were made by AFL executives and others to cover up Mr Goodwin’s alleged cocaine use, specifically hiding their concerns about the alleged drug use for up to 18 months. That seems to me to be well explained by Mr Bartlett’s testimony where he states: They all knew my views on this issue and that as an employment lawyer I would have taken appropriate action to deal with the alleged illegal behaviour and would have refused to turn a ‘blind eye’ to it. The second thing that jumps out at me is that Mr Bartlett made it clear to Mr Goyder and Mr McLachlan that he planned to tackle cocaine abuse at his club at every level, including at the executive level, and, eight weeks after that, Mr Bartlett was unexpectedly pushed out of the AFL, despite having just recently been asked to serve as president for three more years. I will say that again. The highly regarded President of the Melbourne Football Club, Glen Bartlett, was dumped by the AFL just eight weeks after a meeting with AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan and AFL Chair Richard Goyder where he suggested mandatory drug testing for AFL executives.

I’ve also obtained a signed statement from retired player Shaun Smith, the father of player Joel Smith, who is of course under investigation for alleged cocaine trafficking to his teammates. In his statement, Shaun maintains that his son had not been a cocaine user prior to joining the AFL and attributes his son’s situation to the AFL’s aiding and abetting of illegal drug use. To quote Shaun: If I had known that there was a massive drug problem at the AFL when my son was 14, I would have said ‘You’re playing baseball.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Picture: NCA NewsWire / Martin Ollman.

You’re playing something else.’ To quote Shaun again: Something is not right when you get so many broken players. And Shaun is absolutely right. The men and women of the AFL and the AFLW deserve so much better than the way they are currently being treated by AFL executives. Remember, when players enter the AFL, they are often barely out of their teens, and the culture they go into matters. But too many players are coming out broken, with addiction issues that had not been addressed and in fact had been enabled, because the players are currently being treated as corporate cannon fodder, being expected to play at all costs, regardless of their health.

In other words, for some players Aussie Rules turns out to be a game that destroys their lives forever. That must stop, because those of us in the know are sick of hearing AFL executives talk about player welfare, when we now know they are actually sabotaging player welfare. Australian Rules football plays an incredibly important role in this nation’s culture. To many footy fans, Aussie Rules is one of the most important things in their life. Indeed, many of us watch the games almost religiously. We take our children to Auskick clinics week after week. And, to be absolutely clear, I’m stoked that Tasmania is set to finally have an AFL team.

But it’s exactly because of all that we expect the AFL to act with integrity and not for us to be left standing and sitting here tonight wondering just how many young lives have been ruined by illegal drug use known to but not acted on by the AFL. To be clear, the AFL is not a private company, and these matters are no ordinary drug scandal. No. The AFL is an entity regulated by the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission and receives hundreds of millions of dollars in direct and indirect tax breaks, government grants and beneficial capital works. But the AFL is also big business, sustained in part by helping players secretly break the World Anti-Doping Agency code.

As a result, it is not an exaggeration to say that the off-the-books testing scheme I’ve described sees the AFL effectively involved in a multi-hundred-million-dollar fraud on governments and taxpayers. Aussie Rules football is far too important to our nation for it to be damaged by the actions of some in the AFL, which is why tonight I call for intervention at the highest level and ask the Prime Minister to personally intervene in this matter, to study the documents in my possession and to do everything he can to restore and protect the reputation of our beloved game, because right now the term ‘white line fever’ has taken on a different and sinister meaning at the AFL.

Read related topics:Melbourne

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/fraud-drugs-bombshell-rocks-afl-as-secret-melbourne-plot-exposed/news-story/bfa7fe6ef9963268a566307ed8cdc8c3