Chapter 5 Conditions that should apply to a person making a disclosure
Introduction
5.1
Once formal processes are engaged, the making of a public interest
disclosure can have serious consequences for the person who has made the
disclosure, the person or persons who are the subject of an allegation, and the
public interest matter to be addressed.
5.2
It is important that legislative provisions encourage the types of
disclosures that are aligned with the objectives of the Act and promote behaviour
that does not put at risk the interests of whistleblowers, other participants
and investigations.
5.3
This chapter deals with the conditions that should apply to a person
making a disclosure and the need for incentives and sanctions to encourage
compliance with procedures and minimise the making of knowingly false or
reckless allegations.
Threshold of seriousness
5.4
Views expressed to the Committee generally favoured the imposition of a
threshold of seriousness for disclosures to receive protection. The Public
Service Commissioner considered that there is a need to limit public interest
disclosure legislation only to the most serious of public interest breaches
including fraud, corruption, illegal activity and serious administrative
failure.[1] A similar view was
advanced by the Law Institute of Victoria (LIV):
The LIV prefers a narrower definition of types of disclosures
as the preferred model. We propose that it should be disclosures of serious
wrongdoing that, if proved, would constitute grounds for criminal prosecution
or at least summary dismissal for serious misconduct that should be caught by
the proposed whistleblower legislation.[2]
5.5
The Ombudsman noted that while a qualifier such as 'serious' or
'significant' could apply to some of the categories of wrongdoing to recognise
that the scheme does not capture trivial or academic concerns, some categories
of wrongdoing are, in themselves, contrary to the public interest and to
qualify those by degrees of seriousness is not appropriate.[3]
5.6
Similarly, the Community and Public Sector Union noted the threshold of
seriousness applied in some state legislation where matters must be of a
criminal nature or justify the termination of employment to qualify. Their
submission argued that such thresholds were too high because some matters may
not be illegal or affect employment but are still improper and important enough
to warrant protection.[4]
5.7
One witness explained to the Committee the tendency of, apparently, less
serious issues to grow into significant matters if not taken in hand at an
early enough point:
I worked for a while each summer in a meatworks in the
smallgoods section, and it was common practice for people to steal a few
kidneys or some sweetbreads; a liver or two would go, and these people would go
out with these little bulging bags under their clothes ... So it gets worse and
worse, and more serious matters occur, and the same culture of secrecy then
extends. The same pressure that is placed upon people not to talk about these
things is readily extended to more serious matters. So the fostering of a
culture in which even trivial matters are properly reported is important for
the protection of the public and for the protection of the public purse.[5]
5.8
Rather than setting a standard of seriousness, another possible approach
could be to describe a graded series of conduct that would then guide how the
disclosure is treated.[6]
5.9
Some contributors to the inquiry considered that there should be no
threshold of seriousness applied to disclosures in order to qualify for
protection.[7] Dr Bowden argued that
qualifications of seriousness should not apply because of the difficulty in
determining appropriate thresholds.[8]
Other qualifications for protection
5.10
Most submissions and witnesses to the inquiry agreed that a basic
qualification for making a protected public interest disclosure is that the
person making the disclosure should have an honest and reasonable belief that
the allegation concerns the kind of reportable conduct referred to in Chapter 4.
5.11
The requirement for an honest and reasonable belief in making a public
interest disclosure is a subjective test in that it depends on the view of the
whistleblower. This can be contrasted with an objective test requiring that the
disclosure ‘shows or tends to show’ wrongdoing. The subjective test is the most
common test in state and territory legislation.[9]
5.12
The Community and Public Sector Union submitted that a person should be
entitled to protection if:
n the person when
making a disclosure honestly believes, on reasonable grounds, that there has
been misconduct or wrongdoing; or
n the person makes a
disclosure not knowing it discloses misconduct or wrongdoing.[10]
5.13
In elaborating on this criteria, the Union explained that reasonable
grounds referred to the information available to the person at the time of the
disclosure, that protection should continue even if an investigation
demonstrated that there was no substance to the allegation, and that whistleblowers
would still be protected if they provided information in ignorance of its
significance.[11]
5.14
Other witnesses supported the subjective assessment for the initial
receipt of disclosures. Miss Jessica Casben, of Australian Lawyers for Human
Rights told the Committee:
The favoured position would be looking at a bona fide
reasonable belief, which would be what the person believed at the time
themselves. That would then be balanced by the more objective test of whether
or not there are grounds as well.[12]
5.15
The Deputy Commissioner of the NSW Independent Commission Against
Corruption, Ms Theresa Hamilton, observed that the requirement that a
disclosure ‘shows or tends to show’ for example, corrupt conduct, under the Protected
Disclosures Act 1994, has been interpreted narrowly and does not provide
protection where a person believes that they had witnessed corrupt conduct. In
such circumstances protection would not apply if it is later established that
corrupt conduct did not occur or that maladministration had actually taken
place.[13]
5.16
The NSW legislation was notable for its inflexibility because it prescribes
the types of matters that must be disclosed to certain agencies and if a matter
is disclosed to the wrong agency, even if the matter and the agency are covered
under different provisions, the person would not be afforded protection.[14]
Frivolous and vexatious disclosures
5.17
Most jurisdictions permit administrative tribunals and oversight
agencies to dismiss matters that are frivolous or vexatious or otherwise
misconceived or lacking in substance. The circumstances would be that the
information discloses no conduct relevant to the legislation or is groundless.
A decision-maker might deem a matter to be frivolous, vexatious or otherwise misconceived or
lacking in substance if it is so obviously untenable that it cannot possibly
succeed, or if useless expense would be involved in allowing the matter to
stand.[15]
5.18
Section 6 of the Ombudsman Act 1976 (Cth) provides discretion not
to investigate certain complaints:
(1) Where a complaint has been made to the Ombudsman with
respect to action taken by a Department or by a prescribed authority, the
Ombudsman may, in his or her discretion, decide not to investigate the action
or, if he or she has commenced to investigate the action, decide not to
investigate the action further:
(a) if the Ombudsman is satisfied that the complainant
became aware of the action more than 12 months before the complaint was made to
the Ombudsman; or
(b) if, in the opinion of the Ombudsman:
(i) the complaint is frivolous
or vexatious or was not made in good faith;
(ii) the complainant does not
have a sufficient interest in the subject matter of the complaint; or
(iii) an investigation, or
further investigation, of the action is not warranted having regard to all the
circumstances.
5.19
The Commonwealth Ombudsman’s Work Practice Manual provides the following
guidance on what may be considered frivolous and vexatious:
Frivolous — of little weight, trivial, not worthy of
serious notice, trifling. For example, complaints about a spelling mistake
which in no way affects the meaning conveyed in a letter from an agency, or the
colour of a person’s shirt, could reasonably be considered “frivolous”.
Vexatious — instituted without sufficient grounds or
for the purpose of causing trouble or annoyance to the other party. The Courts
have described a vexatious claim as one that is ‘productive of serious and
unjustified trouble and harassment’ or a claim that is manifestly hopeless ...
Good faith — an action is taken in good faith if it is
done honestly, even if it is done negligently or ignorantly. Thus a person who
makes a false or misleading complaint, but does so with an honest belief in its
truth, even if ‘honestly blundering and careless’, will be acting in good
faith. Conversely, an act made with knowledge of the deception and with intent
to defraud/deceive or to achieve a collateral outcome is not made in good
faith.[16]
5.20
In practice however, the discretion to decline an investigation on frivolous
or vexatious grounds is rarely used as it ‘implies an element of personal
criticism’. An alternative to using the label of frivolous or vexatious is to
cite s. 6 (1)(b)(iii) of the Ombudsman Act 1976, that investigation is
not warranted in all the circumstances. [17]
5.21
The NSW Council for Civil Liberties expressed concern that the NSW Protected
Disclosures Act 1994 enables an investigating authority to decline or
discontinue an investigation if it is considered that a disclosure is frivolous
or vexatious, and was concerned that legitimate public interest disclosures
could be easily dismissed by recourse to that description.[18]
5.22
Other submissions referred to the need to exclude frivolous and
vexatious allegations to ensure that the public interest disclosure system uses
its resources most effectively by focusing on matters that are clearly in the
public interest.[19]
5.23
In a submission to the Law Reform Committee of the Victorian Parliament,
the Victorian Bar proposed that an applicant may request that a person’s
conduct be declared vexatious in circumstances where habitual and persistent
conduct, without any reasonable ground, adversely affects the interests of the
applicant.[20] Such a provision would
be a relevant consideration in protecting the interests of persons adversely
affected by a purported public interest disclosure.
Penalties and sanctions
5.24
The Committee was asked to consider whether penalties and sanctions
should apply to whistleblowers who, in the course of making a public interest
disclosure, materially fail to comply with procedures under which disclosures
are to be made, or knowingly or recklessly make false allegations.
5.25
The former Australian Public Service Commissioner, Mr Andrew Podger, suggested that, rather than penalties or sanctions, the existing APS code of conduct disciplinary mechanisms and civil liability would be sufficient to deal with
whistleblowers who do not follow procedure or make false allegations:
The APS Code of Conduct could be used to discipline a current
APS employee who does not obey a reasonable and lawful direction or does not
uphold the APS Values and I assume there would be civil law penalties available
where any other whistleblower does not meet the requirement of having an honest
and reasonable belief that the allegation is correct, and has acted recklessly
or with malice.[21]
5.26
On the general issue of penalties and sanctions, the Commonwealth
Ombudsman concurred with the former APS Commissioner and argued that such
disincentives for making a disclosure would run counter to the purpose of new
legislation, that is to facilitate genuine disclosures, rather than creating ‘a
new weapon available to the state to penalise dissent’.[22]
5.27
Provisions on procedures for making a protected disclosure are discussed
in Chapter 7. In practice, non-compliance with procedures can have a range of
consequences depending on what procedure is breached, the nature of the
disclosure and who is affected.
5.28
The Queensland Council of Unions told the Committee that procedures
adopted for making protected disclosure should be simple, clear and informal.
The union noted that there are significant barriers which prevent persons from
making disclosures and the process adopted by the whistleblower protection
legislation should not present an additional barrier.[23]
5.29
The undesirability of formalising exactly what steps must be taken for a
disclosure to attract protection was explained in evidence from the NSW
Independent Commission Against Corruption, which cautioned that, should
legislation contain specific reporting procedures, a person who, for example,
mistakenly approached the wrong agency would lack protection from legal
liability.[24]
5.30
Whistleblowers Australia suggested that the nature of the consequence of
any failure to comply with prescribed procedure should be considered in
determining whether penalties or sanctions are appropriate. For example, a
serious offence could be committed where a breach of procedure results in harm
to the public interest. However, no penalties or sanctions should apply where a
disclosure is found to serve the public interest.[25]
5.31
The Australian Public Service Commission submitted that whistleblowers
who do not comply with public interest disclosure procedures should face some
consequences similar to the sanctions outlined in s. 15(1) of the Public
Service Act 1999, ranging from reprimand to termination of employment.
However, different sanctions would be required for former employees and other
categories of whistleblowers who cannot be demoted or have their employment
terminated.[26]
5.32
The APS Merit Protection Commissioner suggested to the Committee that
sanctions could apply to the agency responsible for investigating a public
interest disclosure if it is found that it has not complied with prescribed
procedure in handling a disclosure.[27]
5.33
In its submission to the inquiry, the Attorney-General’s Department
noted that penalties for those who do not comply with procedures could assist
in improving the effectiveness of a public interest disclosure scheme. The
Department considered that penalties for non-compliance were particularly
important where disclosures related to classified and security sensitive
information due to the potential harm that may be caused:
AGD would support the inclusion of penalties for failure to
comply with any requirements for the protection of classified and security
sensitive information due to the seriousness consequences that inappropriate
disclosure could have to matters such as national security, law enforcement,
intelligence or defence operations, and Australia’s international relations.[28]
5.34
It was put to the Committee that legislative provisions should include
some flexibility to be able to receive reports of disclosable conduct even
where the disclosure is not initially made in accordance with prescribed
procedure.
5.35
According to Deputy Commissioner Hamilton of the NSW Independent
Commission Against Corruption, protection should be afforded to whistleblowers
once a good faith intention to make a disclosure is demonstrated:
At the moment under the Protected Disclosures Act in New
South Wales, if you do not go to the right agency you do not get the protection
... I do not think it is helpful to make people have to be lawyers, in effect,
and know exactly what the definition of corrupt conduct is and exactly what is
serious maladministration. As long as they have a genuine go at going to the
right organisation, I think they should be protected.[29]
5.36
The Commonwealth Ombudsman and the National President of the Australian
Institute of Professional Investigators expressed a similar view, arguing that
provisions should be designed to encourage people to come forward with their
concerns and that disclosures need not strictly comply with procedures where
they are presented in good faith.[30]
False allegations
5.37
A number of contributors to the inquiry considered that people who
knowingly or recklessly make false allegations should not be afforded
protection.[31] Other contributors went
further to argue that such disclosures should be subject to sanction.
5.38
If sanctions for people who knowingly or recklessly make false
allegations should apply, the basis of those sanctions could be from within the
new public interest disclosure legislation or through the application of other
relevant legislation such as the Crimes Act 1914 or the Criminal Code.
5.39
As discussed in Chapter 4, disclosures should not be disqualified from
protection on account of the motive of the person making the disclosure.
However, it was suggested that penalties should apply where a disclosure is
found to be a false allegation and motivated by malice:
… if someone motivated by malice made a complaint about a
professional and it turned out to be an unjustified complaint, then I think
there ought to be sanctions against the person who exhibited the malice,
because they knew perfectly well it was unjustified.[32]
Sections 70 and 79 of the Crimes Act 1914
5.40
At the head of Australian secrecy legislation is the Crimes Act 1914.
Section 70 deals with the unauthorised disclosure of information by
Commonwealth officers and s. 79 deals with the disclosure of ‘official
secrets’. The net result is that ss. 70 and 79 make the unauthorised disclosure
of any government information a criminal offence.[33]
5.41
There was general agreement that a person should not be sanctioned under
the confidentiality provisions of the Crimes Act 1914 for making a
disclosure in a manner that conforms to the public interest legislation. It was
noted that there was need to clarify the law in this area. Mr Christopher Warren of the Media Entertainment and Arts Alliance told the Committee that
there is too much uncertainty with how suspected breaches of s. 70 are treated:
One of the things that causes great uncertainty within the
public sector at the moment if you make an unauthorised disclosure of
information, whether it is a leak or whatever, is that there is no certainty
about what will happen to you. It may be that you will be prosecuted under the
Crimes Act or that absolutely nothing will happen. So I think the practice can
also provide some uncertainty.[34]
5.42
Some submitters to the inquiry argued that s. 70 should be amended so
that it applies only to the most serious breaches rather than being a general
provision against disclosure.[35] Mr Roger Wilkins AO cautioned against allowing people who become dissatisfied with the process to publicise
their disclosure and cautioned about changes to s. 70 of the Crimes Act 1914.
The appropriateness of protecting disclosures to the media is discussed further
in Chapter 7.
5.43
The Committee was advised that, from 1 July 2005 to 30 June 2008, there had been 45 referrals to the Australian Federal Police (AFP) in relation to unauthorised disclosures under s. 70 of the Crimes Act 1914. Of those
investigated by the AFP, four were referred to the Commonwealth Director of
Public Prosecutions.[36]
Rewards
5.44
Personal ethics and values are an important driving factor for people
who speak out about suspected wrongdoing in the workplace. No Australian
jurisdiction currently has a financial reward or other type of intangible
recognition system specifically in place for whistleblowers who contribute to
the public good. According to Whistleblowers Australia:
… surviving a public interest disclosure is a good reward,
surviving with restitution or compensation for harm suffered is better and
surviving without harm is best.[37]
5.45
Some contributors to the inquiry argued in favour of adopting ‘qui tam’
provisions to reward whistleblowers, such as that used in the False Claims Act
in the United States.[38] Qui tam provisions
enable individuals to collect a share of money recovered if they provide
information that forms the basis of a successful prosecution for fraud against
the government. As Associate Professor Faunce explained:
Qui tam is a truncated version of the Latin phrase ‘qui tam
pro domino rege quam pro se ipso’, which translates to English as, ‘Who sues on
behalf of the King, as well as for himself’. Since the medieval period, qui tam
provisions have allowed citizens to act as "private attorneys general"
in bringing civil actions against those who violate the law. Under such
provisions government's pay a reward or bounty to individuals to provide an
incentives for them to provide information.[39]
5.46
Dr Sawyer supported the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act
arguing that it provided strong protection for whistleblowers, recovered over
$20 billion in fraud since 1986, was open to anyone to bring forward a claim
about any fraud against the government and that successful actions had a ripple
effect in reducing fraud across other firms within a sector.[40]
5.47
Associate Professor Faunce argued that while altruistic motives should
be encouraged, qui tam rewards would offer practical compensation for the
hardship that whistleblowers may face:
I think you have to be realistic how much we can expect these
people to carry on doing this if it leads to the destruction of their lives and
loss of employment. I do not see why, if someone believes that the government
is being defrauded, they should not be entitled to receive recompense, just as
any other form of public service is recompensed.[41]
5.48
Others contributors were more circumspect on the issue of rewarding
whistleblowers. Professor Francis considered that while rewards can send an
important message about the kind of behaviour that is valued in an organisation
it may provide an incentive for people to report false or semi-frivolous
allegations.[42]
5.49
The Director of Transparency International Australia, Mr Grahame Leonard AM, expressed doubts about the value of financial rewards for whistleblowers
and the signals that such a scheme could send:
… we would not want to have financial incentives for people
to seek out—you do not want bounty hunters, so to speak—areas where they could
get personal financial gain.[43]
5.50
The issue of qui tam–style rewards for whistleblowers was considered by
this Committee in 1989 as part of a review of the adequacy of existing
legislation on insider trading in financial markets. That Committee heard
concerns about the credibility of evidence that was induced by rewards and
formed the view that such rewards were not suitable in Australia’s context:
The Committee rejects any suggestion that a system of rewards
or bounties be introduced in Australia. Such a system is incompatible with
current attitudes in relation to the credibility of evidence. It is also
incompatible with accepted principles and practice within Australian society.[44]
5.51
Qui tam provisions such as those contained in the US False Claims Act
are a mechanism to eliminate fraudulent claims against the government that any
individual may initiate. While those provisions continue to have an important
role in combating fraud in the US, the main focus of the Committee is in
recognising and supporting those who make public interest disclosures within
the Australian Government public sector concerning the conduct of public
officials.
5.52
Other types of possible rewards for whistleblowers suggested to the
Committee include additional financial increments to salary, tax deductions,
superannuation contributions and recommendations for Australia day honours.[45]
Mr Chadwick of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation noted that bestowing
honours to whistleblowers recognising their contribution as an act of bravery
sends a message about cultural change in the workplace.[46]
View of the Committee
5.53
Qualifications for affording protections to persons making disclosures
should include a reasonable belief, on the basis of the information available,
that the allegation is of disclosable conduct described in the legislation. An
objective test, that a disclosure ‘shows or tends to show’ wrongdoing is an
excessive requirement, would discourage disclosures and should not form part of
the scheme.
5.54
In order to encourage the making of a public interest disclosure,
disclosures should be protected until it is established that the substance of
the issue revealed is frivolous, vexatious, knowingly false, misconceived,
lacking in substance or that the matter should not be investigated in view of
all the circumstances.
Recommendation 10 |
5.55
|
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide, as the primary requirement for protection, that a person making
a disclosure has an honest and reasonable belief on the basis of the
information available to them that the matter concerns disclosable conduct
under the legislation.
|
Recommendation 11 |
5.56
|
The Committee recommends that the Public Interest Disclosure
Bill provide authorised decision makers with the discretion, in consideration
of the circumstances, to determine to discontinue the investigation of a
disclosure.
|
Recommendation 12 |
5.57
|
The Committee recommends that protection under the Public
Interest Disclosure Bill not apply, or be removed, where a disclosure is
found to be knowingly false. However, an authorised decision maker may
consider granting protection in circumstances where an investigation
nonetheless reveals other disclosable conduct and the person who made the
initial disclosure is at risk of detrimental action as a result of the
disclosure.
|
5.58
In order to promote a culture of disclosure, penalties should generally not
apply to whistleblowers who do not comply with procedures. However, in cases where serious
consequences arise from a person who knowingly makes a false allegation, or
leaks official information, then the person should be liable for penalties
under the Criminal Code Act 1995 and the Crimes Act 1914.
5.59
The Committee considers that the new public interest disclosure system
should focus on the removal of disincentives to making a disclosure. This is
consistent with the goal of fostering open communication within agencies and a
pro-disclosure culture where public officials can feel comfortable about
raising concerns as part of normal business practice.
5.60
Australia’s honours system should continue to recognise and celebrate
those who have made a difference in their fields. The Committee considers that
recognising whistleblowers where they have made a contribution to the integrity
of public administration sends an important message about the value of an open
pro-disclosure culture. Agency heads should actively consider recognising
whistleblowers within their organisation through their own existing rewards and
recognition programs.