The evidence of Margerison of how he intended to distribute his Synergy 360 profits is unclear but leaves this open as a possibility. On May 11, 2017, Robert told Milo he had been “chatting to the Singaporean High Commissioner, Kwok Fook Seng” about Singapore’s $2 billion investment in defence facilities in Shoalwater Bay and Townsville in Queensland.īut Shorten also queried whether Robert had used his status as a public official in the expectation of a later financial reward, even if it was never paid. The Liberal MP used his personal email account, for instance, to encourage Milo to contact the Singaporean High Commissioner in Australia, to whom Robert had spoken about Singapore’s $2 billion investment in Shoalwater Bay defence facilities in Queensland. Other examples raise further questions about whether Robert helped Milo gain business. attended a meeting at Margerison’s home on the Gold Coast in November 2017 with Milo and top executives from Unisys.helped another of Milo’s clients, tech giant Unisys, secure a meeting to promote its border security offerings to a parliamentary committee that oversaw the peak federal corruption watchdog.met Milo and tech giant Infosys before and after the agency he supervised as minister, Services Australia, finalised a $135 million project with Infosys in November 2019.used his status as a federal MP in 20 to help Synergy 360 sign up corporate clients.Over a series of investigations, this masthead has revealed the former MP: Robert has quit parliament and a date has been set to choose his successor at a byelection on July 15, but the questions about his business dealings will not go away. A key question remains: why was the MP for Fadden so keen for Synergy 360 to succeed?
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