Sacked Parramatta Council chief executive Gail Connolly has admitted to an anti-corruption inquiry that she shared confidential information about other candidates and interview questions with friends who were later employed at the council.
In her fifth and longest day as a witness at the Independent Commission Against Corruption’s inquiry into the large western Sydney council, Connolly was questioned about deleted text messages and photographs, weekends away with friends and colleagues, and whether she used the death of a family’s pet rabbit to her advantage.
Connolly, along with City of Parramatta employees Roxanne Thornton and Angela Jones-Blayney, is accused of subverting recruitment practices to benefit friends and associates. The three were part of a group known as the Pink Ladies, or Pink Ops, whose members first worked together at Ryde Council in 2018. Connolly was described in one message presented to the inquiry as “Pink Lady No.1”.
Connolly, who was sacked in October, is also facing allegations she misused public funds by having staff leave through deeds of release (agreements made between staff and the council upon a departure), subverted the council’s recruitment and other processes, disclosed confidential information to third parties, and spied on staff and a councillor.