How the CFMEU scandal unfolded
Our reporting in the Building Bad series, now acknowledged with a Gold Walkley, came after work over 18 years by investigative journalists.
- by Mathew Dunckley and Michael Bachelard
Latest
Series
The Age 170
Celebrating 170 years of The Age
We’ve been asking the questions you want answered since 1854. In this collection, we reflect on the tradition of courageous journalism as we look to the future.
Exclusive
Investigations
Police probe PNG minister in $3 million detention bribe investigation
Documents reveal the country’s former police minister is under investigation over suspicions of bribery.
- by Nick McKenzie and Michael Bachelard
Sacked, prosecuted, exposed: A proud history of muckraking
The Age’s investigative reporters have brought down public officials, revealed corruption, and uncovered organised crime operations and war crimes. As the masthead turns 170, we celebrate their journalism.
- by Michael Bachelard
Exclusive
Investigations
‘It’s almost beyond belief’: Findings blast Australia’s biggest carbon offset scheme
The scheme under question is the fifth-largest nature-based carbon abatement scheme in the world, making the adverse findings of global significance.
- by Michael Bachelard
In the face of condemnation, this rally was a big one
The politicians had worried about a march scheduled just a day before October 7. It was tasteless at best, they said, and dangerous at worst.
- by Michael Bachelard
Exclusive
Investigations
‘Entirely inappropriate’: Top scientist slams watchdog interference in carbon review
Professor Ian Chubb led the review of Australia’s lucrative carbon credits market and he’s far from happy with the conduct of a government agency at the middle of it.
- by Charlotte Grieve and Michael Bachelard
Exclusive
Investigations
How much money the Exclusive Brethren’s ‘ecosystem’ really makes
Recently released financial records show how cash circulates around the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church and its Australian “royal family”.
- by Michael Bachelard and Lucy Macken
Sarah’s mum starved herself to death. It was the only legal way for her to go
Wendy Mitchell spent a decade educating people about living with dementia. Now her daughter wants to tell us about how she died, and why it didn’t have to be that way.
- by Michael Bachelard
Opinion
Courts
‘The system protects its own’: Why most people who are wrongfully convicted don’t get compensated
The prosecutor’s remarks to the jury were “contrary to his responsibility to the court”. But the man jailed as a result still can’t get compensation for how these decisions ruined his life.
- by Michael Bachelard
Lawyer X compensation bill delayed amid fears it is a negotiating tactic
The Allan government has delayed its unprecedented bid to block compensation claims from the Lawyer X saga.
- by Broede Carmody, Kieran Rooney and Michael Bachelard
Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/by/michael-bachelard-hveki