The former chief executive of the City of Parramatta council has been accused of improperly accessing an elected councillor’s emails, targeting staff she perceived as threats, obstacles or disloyal, and other misconduct that benefited herself, friends and associates.
The Independent Commission Against Corruption on Monday heard Gail Connolly, who was sacked from the council in October last year, was part of a trio of council executives called the “Pink Ladies” and “Pink Ops” – a reference to the term “black ops” – alongside colleagues Angela Jones-Blayney and Roxanne Thornton. They had both worked with Connolly at Ryde and Georges River councils.
On the first day of the ICAC’s public hearings into Operation Navarra, counsel assisting Joanna Davidson SC alleged the trio holidayed together, sent thousands of WhatsApp messages, and subverted recruitment and promotion processes to favour their friends and associates.
“Those relationships were not always managed with appropriate transparency, proper boundaries and disclosure of conflicts of interest that proper public administration requires,” Davidson told the commission.