Canberra man jailed for fraud linked to organised crime
A Canberra man has been jailed for 2.5 years after receiving $136,535 for his role in an elaborate $13 million fraud scheme that links to transnational and serious organised crime groups.
Date published
March 2023
A Canberra man has been jailed for 2.5 years after receiving $136,535 for his role in an elaborate $13 million fraud scheme that links to transnational and serious organised crime groups.
Operation Bordelon was the investigation into the criminal syndicate who allegedly were using labour hire and payroll companies associated with the building and construction industry to defraud the Commonwealth. Twelve other people charged in relation to the investigation remain before the court.
Related countermeasures
Match data with the authoritative source and verify relevant details or supporting evidence.
Services such as the Identity Matching Service can be used to verify identity credentials back to the authoritative source when the information is an Australian or state and territory government issued identity credential.
This countermeasure is supported by the Office of the Australian Information Commissioner's Guidelines on data matching in Australian government administration.
Put in place processes for staff or external parties to lodge tip-offs or Public Interest Disclosures.
Investigate fraud in line with the Australian Government Investigation Standards (AGIS).
Coordinate disruption activities across multiple programs or entities to strengthen processes and identify serious and organised criminals targeting multiple programs. It can also include referrals to law enforcement agencies for those groups that reach the threshold for complex criminal investigations.
These are penalties for customers, staff or third parties that commit fraud or do not comply with rules, processes and expectations.
Submit a case study
We'd like to hear from you if you have a case study to share.